Auxetic Structures With Distorted Projection Slots In Engineered Patterns To Provide NPR Behavior And Improved Stress Performance
20170370581 · 2017-12-28
Inventors
- Katia Bertoldi (Somerville, MA, US)
- Christopher Booth-Morrison (Otterburn Park, CA)
- Mehran Farhangi (Montreal, CA)
- Farhad Javid (Somerville, MA, US)
- Minh Quan Pham (Saint-Laurent, CA)
- Michael J. Taylor (Medford, MA, US)
Cpc classification
F23R2900/00018
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F23R3/002
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F05D2250/75
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F05D2260/202
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F01D5/186
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
B23P2700/13
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
F05D2300/501
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
B23P15/00
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
F05D2300/605
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F05D2250/713
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
International classification
Abstract
Auxetic structures, effusion-cooling auxetic sheets, systems and devices with auxetic structures, and methods of using and methods of making auxetic structures are disclosed. An auxetic structure is disclosed which includes an elastically rigid body with opposing top and bottom surfaces. First and second pluralities of elongated apertures extend through the elastically rigid body from the top surface to the bottom surface. The first plurality of elongated apertures extends transversely with respect to the second plurality of elongated apertures. The first and/or second pluralities of elongated apertures have distorted shapes projected through the elastically rigid body at an oblique angle. The elongated apertures are cooperatively configured to provide a desired stress performance while exhibiting negative Poisson's Ratio (NPR) behavior under macroscopic planar loading conditions. By way of example, the auxetic structure may exhibit a reduction in stress concentration proximate the elongated apertures and a Poisson's Ratio of approximately −0.0001 to −0.9%.
Claims
1. An auxetic structure comprising: an elastically rigid body with opposing top and bottom surfaces and first and second pluralities of elongated apertures extending through the elastically rigid body from the top surface to the bottom surface, the first plurality of elongated apertures extending transversely with respect to the second plurality of elongated apertures, each aperture of the first plurality of elongated apertures having a distorted shape projected through the elastically rigid body at an oblique angle, wherein the first and second pluralities of elongated apertures are cooperatively configured to provide a desired stress performance while exhibiting a desired negative Poisson's Ratio (NPR) behavior under macroscopic planar loading conditions.
2. The void structure of claim 1, wherein each aperture of the first plurality of elongated apertures is angled approximately 40-75 degrees with the top surface of the elastically rigid body.
3. The void structure of claim 1, wherein a projection vector of each aperture of the first plurality of elongated apertures is at least substantially parallel to a direction of loading of the elastically rigid body.
4. The void structure of claim 1, wherein each aperture of the second plurality of elongated apertures has a distorted shape projected through the elastically rigid body at an oblique angle.
5. The void structure of claim 4, wherein a projection vector of each aperture of the second plurality of elongated apertures is at least substantially parallel to a direction of loading of the elastically rigid body.
6. The void structure of claim 1, wherein the desired stress performance includes a reduction in stress concentration proximate the plurality of elongated apertures.
7. The void structure of claim 1, wherein the NPR behavior includes a Poisson's Ratio of about −0.0001 to about −0.9%.
8. The void structure of claim 1, wherein the elongated apertures have a predetermined porosity of about 0.3 to about 9%.
9. The void structure of claim 1, wherein the elongated apertures are engineered with a predefined porosity, a predetermined pattern, or a predetermined aspect ratio, or any combination thereof, to achieve the NPR behavior.
10. The void structure of claim 1, wherein each of the elongated apertures has an aspect ratio of approximately 5-40.
11. The void structure of claim 1, wherein the first or the second plurality of elongated apertures, or both, each has an S-shaped plan-view profile.
12. The void structure of claim 11, wherein the first and second pluralities of elongated apertures are arranged in an array of rows and columns.
13. The void structure of claim 12, wherein the rows are equally spaced from each other and the columns are equally spaced from each other.
14. The void structure of claim 1, wherein each of the elongated apertures has a major axis perpendicular to a minor axis, the major axes of the first plurality of elongated apertures being substantially perpendicular to the major axes of the second plurality of elongated apertures.
15. An effusion-cooling auxetic sheet structure comprising: a metallic sheet with opposing top and bottom surfaces and first and second pluralities of elongated apertures extending through the metallic sheet from the top surface to the bottom surface, the first plurality of elongated apertures having a first set of geometric characteristics and a first pattern, the second plurality of elongated apertures having a second set of geometric characteristics and a second pattern, the first plurality of elongated apertures being orthogonally oriented with respect to the second plurality of elongated apertures, the elongated apertures having distorted shapes projected through the elastically rigid body at an oblique angle, wherein the first geometric characteristics and pattern of the first plurality of elongated apertures are cooperatively configured with the second geometric characteristics and pattern of the second plurality of elongated apertures to provide a desired stress performance while exhibiting negative Poisson's Ratio (NPR) behavior under macroscopic planar loading conditions.
16. A method of manufacturing an auxetic structure, the method comprising: providing an elastically rigid body with opposing top and bottom surfaces; adding to the elastically rigid body a first plurality of apertures extending through the elastically rigid body from the top surface to the bottom surface, the first plurality of apertures being arranged in rows and columns, each aperture of the first plurality of elongated apertures having a distorted shape projected through the elastically rigid body at an oblique angle; and adding to the elastically rigid body a second plurality of apertures extending through the elastically rigid body from the top surface to the bottom surface, the second plurality of apertures being arranged in rows and columns, wherein the first and second pluralities of apertures are cooperatively configured to provide a desired stress performance while exhibiting a negative Poisson's Ratio (NPR) behavior under macroscopic planar loading conditions.
17. The method of claim 16, wherein each aperture of the first plurality of elongated apertures is angled approximately 40-75 degrees with the top surface of the elastically rigid body.
18. The method of claim 16, wherein a projection vector of the first plurality of elongated apertures is at least substantially parallel to a direction of loading of the elastically rigid body.
19. The method of claim 16, wherein each aperture of the second plurality of elongated apertures has a distorted shape projected through the elastically rigid body at an oblique angle.
20. The method of claim 19, wherein a projection vector of the second plurality of elongated apertures is at least substantially perpendicular to a direction of loading of the elastically rigid body.
21-29. (canceled)
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0013]
[0014]
[0015]
[0016]
[0017]
[0018]
[0019]
[0020] The present disclosure is susceptible to various modifications and alternative forms, and some representative embodiments have been shown by way of example in the drawings and will be described in detail herein. It should be understood, however, that the inventive aspects of this disclosure are not limited to the particular forms illustrated in the drawings. Rather, the disclosure is to cover all modifications, equivalents, combinations and subcombinations, and alternatives falling within the spirit and scope of the invention as defined by the appended claims.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE ILLUSTRATED EMBODIMENTS
[0021] This disclosure is susceptible of embodiment in many different forms. There are shown in the drawings, and will herein be described in detail, representative embodiments with the understanding that the present disclosure is to be considered as an exemplification of the principles of the present disclosure and is not intended to limit the broad aspects of the disclosure to the embodiments illustrated. To that extent, elements and limitations that are disclosed, for example, in the Abstract, Summary, and Detailed Description sections, but not explicitly set forth in the claims, should not be incorporated into the claims, singly or collectively, by implication, inference or otherwise. For purposes of the present detailed description, unless specifically disclaimed or logically prohibited: the singular includes the plural and vice versa; and the words “including” or “comprising” or “having” means “including without limitation.” Moreover, words of approximation, such as “about,” “almost,” “substantially,” “approximately,” and the like, can be used herein in the sense of “at, near, or nearly at,” or “within 3-5% of,” or “within acceptable manufacturing tolerances,” or any logical combination thereof, for example.
[0022] Aspects of the present disclosure are directed towards auxetic structures which include repeating patterns of angled slots that provide negative Poisson's Ratio (NPR) behavior when macroscopically loaded. Poisson's Ratio (or “Poisson coefficient”) can be generally typified as the ratio of transverse contraction strain to longitudinal extension strain in a stretched object. Poisson's Ratio is typically positive for most materials, including many alloys, polymers, polymer foams and cellular solids, which become thinner in cross section when stretched. The auxetic structures disclosed herein exhibit a negative Poisson's Ratio behavior.
[0023] According to aspects of the disclosed concepts, when an auxetic structure is compressed along one axis (e.g., in the Y-direction), coaxial strain results in a moment around the center of each cell because of the way the adjacent apertures are arranged. This, in turn, causes the cells to rotate. Each cell rotates in a direction opposite to that of its immediate neighbors. This rotation results in a reduction in the transverse axis (X-direction) distance between horizontally adjacent cells. In other words, compressing the structure in the Y-direction causes it to contract in the X-direction. Conversely, tension in the Y-direction results in expansion in the X-direction. At the scale of the entire structure, this mimics the behavior of an auxetic material. But many of the structures disclosed herein are composed of conventional materials. Thus, the unadulterated material itself may have a positive Poisson's Ratio, but by modifying the structure with the introduction of the distorted-NPR-slot patterns disclosed herein, the structure behaves as having a negative Poisson's Ratio.
[0024]
[0025] As seen in
[0026] Also disclosed are gas turbine combustors that are made with one or more walls from a material with any of the specific auxetic structure configurations disclosed herein. In some embodiments, the NPR slots are generated in a metal body directly in a stress-free state such that the apertures are equivalent in shape to collapsed void shapes found in rubber under external load in order to get NPR behavior in the metal body without collapsing the metallic structure in manufacturing. Various manufacturing routes can be used to replicate the void patterns in the metallic component. The manufacturing does not necessarily contain buckling as one of the process steps. The auxetic structures disclosed herein are not limited to the combustor wall; rather, these features can be incorporated into other sections of a turbine (e.g., a blade, a vain, etc.).
[0027] In a conventional combustor wall, holes used for cooling air flow and damping also act as stress risers. In some of the disclosed embodiments, as the wall material at a hot spot presses against its surrounding material, e.g., in a vertical direction, the negative Poisson's Ratio (NPR) behavior will make the wall material contract in the horizontal direction, and vice versa. This behavior will reduce the stresses at the hotspot significantly. This effect is stronger than just the impact of the reduced stiffness. Stress at hot spot gets reduced, for example, by 50% which, in turn, leads to an increase in stress fatigue life by several orders of magnitude. The stress reduction by the NPR behavior does not increase the air consumption of the combustor wall. The longer life could be used as such or the wall material could be replaced by a cheaper one in order to reduce raw material costs.
[0028] It has also been demonstrated that the replacement of circular combustor cooling holes with a fraction of elongated and angled air passages of 2-3% reduces thermo-mechanical stress by a factor of at least five, while maintaining cooling and damping performance. For example, elliptical cooling holes in the combustor have been predicted to result in a five-fold decrease in the worst principal stress. Inducing NPR behavior, thus, adds further functionality to the cooling holes of the combustor in that the NPR behavior generates a five-fold reduction in worst principal stress as compared to traditional cooling holes. In stress fatigue of a combustor-specific superalloy, halving the component stress increases the fatigue life by more than an order of magnitude. In some embodiments, the superalloy may be a nickel-based superalloy, such as Inconel (e.g. IN100, IN600, IN713), Waspaloy, Rene alloys (e.g. Rene 41, Rene 80, Rene 95, Rene N5), Haynes alloys, Incoloy, MP98T, TMS alloys, and CMSX (e.g. CMSX-4) single crystal alloys.
[0029] It has been shown that optimized porosity offers increased cooling function. As used herein, “porosity” can be defined to mean the surface area of the apertures, AA, divided by the surface area of the structure, AS, or Porosity=AA/AS. It may be desirable, in some embodiments, that the porosity of a given void structure be approximately 0.3-9.0% or, in some embodiments, approximately 1-4% or, in some embodiments, approximately 2%. By comparison, many prior art arrangements require a porosity of 40-50%.
[0030] There may be a predetermined optimal aspect ratio for the elongated apertures to provide a desired NPR behavior. As used herein, “aspect ratio” of the apertures can be defined to mean the length divided by the width of the apertures, or the length of the major axis divided by the length of the minor axis of the apertures. It may be desirable, in some embodiments, that the aspect ratio of the apertures be approximately 5-40 or, in some embodiments, approximately 20-30. An optimal NPR may comprise, for example, a PR of about 0 to about −0.9 or, for some embodiments, about −0.5. Aspects of the disclosed concepts can be demonstrated on structural patterns created with a pattern lengthscale at the millimeter, and are equally applicable to structures possessing the same periodic patterns at a smaller lengthscale (e.g., micrometer, submicrometer, and nanometer lengthscales) or larger lengthscales so far as the unit cells fit in the structure.
[0031] Turning next to
[0032] S-shaped through slots 312, 318 are arranged in an array or matrix of rows and columns, with the first plurality of elongated apertures 312 extending transversely with respect to the second plurality of elongated apertures 318. Note that hidden lines indicating the internal structural configuration of slots 318 have been omitted from
[0033] The illustrated pattern of elongated, angled slots provides a specific porosity (e.g., a porosity of about 0.3 to about 9.0%) and a desired stress performance (e.g., lower stress concentration factors) while exhibiting a desired negative Poisson's Ratio behavior (e.g., a PR of about −0.0001 to about −0.9) under macroscopic planar loading conditions (e.g., when tension or compression is applied in the plane of the sheet). When the auxetic structure 300 is stretched, for example via tensile force F.sub.T along a vertical axis Y, axial strain in the vertical direction results in a moment around the center of each cell, which causes the cells to rotate. A cell may consist of two laterally adjacent vertical slots aligned with two vertically adjacent horizontal slots to form a square-shaped unit. Each cell rotates in a direction opposite to that of its immediate neighboring cells. This rotation increases the X-direction distance between horizontally adjacent cells such that stretching the structure in the Y-direction causes it to stretch in the X-direction. The first plurality of S-shaped through slots 312 have (first) engineered geometric characteristics, including a predefined geometry and a predefined aspect ratio, while the second plurality of S-shaped through slots 318 have (second) engineered geometric characteristics, including a predefined geometry and a predefined aspect ratio, that are cooperatively configured with (third) engineered geometric characteristics of the aperture pattern, including NPR-slot density and cell arrangement, to achieve a desired NPR behavior under macroscopic loading conditions.
[0034] Each slot of the first and/or second pluralities of elongated S-shaped through slots 312, 318 has a distorted shape that is projected through the elastically rigid body at an oblique angle. By way of explanation, the profile of each angled NPR slot that appears on an outer surface of the auxetic structure's body can be a distorted projection of an original, unadulterated image. According to the illustrated example, top-surface and bottom-surface profiles 312A and 312B, respectively, of S-shaped through slot 312 are generated by projecting a standard “S” shape 320 at a desired oblique angle through the thickness of the elastically rigid body 310. In so doing, the profiles 312A, 312B of the NPR slot 312 that appear on the top and bottom surfaces 314, 316 of the body 310 are distorted from the original image 320. The degree of distortion can be varied depending, for example, on the desired angle and/or the desired orientation of the slot, e.g., to provide a desired cooling performance or a desired stress-mitigation. Top-surface and bottom-surface profiles of S-shaped through slots 318 can be generated in a similar manner. It is envisioned that the surface profiles of S-shaped through slots 312 are identical to the surface profiles of S-shaped through slots 318, e.g., for applications where the body 310 of the auxetic structure is relatively flat and the angle of projection is common for both sets of through slots. Contrastingly, the surface profiles of S-shaped through slots 312 can be distinct from the surface profiles of S-shaped through slots 318, e.g., for implementations where the body 310 of the auxetic structure is curved and/or the angle of projection of S-shaped through slots 312 is distinct from the angle of projection of S-shaped through slots 318.
[0035] Slot 312 is shown in
[0036] Auxetic structure 300 provides a reduction in stress concentration proximate one or more of all of the elongated apertures 312, 318. Patterned angled S-shaped slot structures provide significantly better effusion cooling characteristics than conventional circular holes while providing lower stress concentration factors. Projecting cooling holes onto a surface of an auxetic structure forms elongated through slots (e.g., ellipses or s-shaped slots), which can result in high stress concentrations at the opposing tips of the slots. Macroscopic patterned voids, such as those illustrated in
[0037] Projecting the distorted slots along the loading direction allows a void arrangement that would otherwise exhibit a significantly positive Poisson's ratio (e.g.,
[0038] Distorted NPR slot shapes, for instance, Z-shaped slots 412A (
[0039] As an exemplary implementation of the disclosed features, one can consider a combustor liner with sheet metal walls, in which conventional round effusion holes or normal effusion slots are replaced with a pattern of angled, distorted S-shaped through slots forming an auxetic structure. Cooling air fed through the slots removes the heat from the structure and produces an even distribution of cooling air over the surface. These angled slots, which have an increased internal surface area, enhance film cooling performance and improve mechanical response. Moreover, angled and distorted NPR slots are capable of sustaining higher flame temperatures, and help impart to the sheet a much longer life compared to the conventional sheet with normal effusion voids.
[0040]
[0041] Aspects of this disclosure are also directed to methods of manufacturing and methods of using auxetic structures. By way of example, a method is presented for manufacturing an auxetic structure, such as the auxetic structures described above with respect to
[0042] In some embodiments, the method includes at least those steps enumerated above and illustrated in the drawings. It is also within the scope and spirit of the present invention to omit steps, include additional steps, and/or modify the order presented above. It should be further noted that the foregoing method can be representative of a single sequence for designing and fabricating an auxetic structure. However, it is expected that the method will be practiced in a systematic and repetitive manner.
[0043] The present invention is not limited to the precise construction and compositions disclosed herein. Rather, any and all modifications, changes, combinations, permutations and variations apparent from the foregoing descriptions are within the scope and spirit of the invention as defined in the appended claims. Moreover, the present concepts expressly include any and all combinations and subcombinations of the preceding elements and aspects.