Gas turbine engine rotor assembly and method of using same
11674394 · 2023-06-13
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
F05D2260/36
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F05D2260/4031
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F01D5/066
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F01D5/022
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F05D2240/24
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F05D2250/73
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F01D5/025
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
International classification
F01D5/02
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
Abstract
The rotor assembly can have a first disc having a first body extending circumferentially and radially around the axis, a first set of circumferentially distributed blades protruding radially from the first disc, and a male spline extending axially relative the first body, the male spline extending around and along the axis, and a second disc having a second body extending circumferentially and radially around the axis, a second set of circumferentially distributed blades protruding radially from the second disc, and a female spline extending around and along the axis, the female spline receiving the male spline in a spline engagement.
Claims
1. A gas turbine engine rotor assembly configured to rotate around an axis, the rotor assembly comprising: a first disc having a first body extending circumferentially and radially around the axis, a first set of circumferentially distributed blades protruding radially from the first disc, and a male spline extending axially relative the first body, the male spline extending around and along the axis, and a second disc having a second body extending circumferentially and radially around the axis, a second set of circumferentially distributed blades protruding radially from the second disc, and a female spline extending around and along the axis, the female spline receiving the male spline in a spline engagement; wherein the female spline includes a plurality of elongated, axially oriented grooves defined in a radially inner surface of the second disc, the grooves being circumferentially interspaced from one another, and the male spline includes a plurality of elongated, axially oriented keys protruding radially outwardly on a radially outer surface of the first disc, each one of the keys being snugly engaged within a corresponding one of the grooves to form the spline engagement; wherein the first body and the second body have complementary cylindrical surfaces defining a spigot engagement therebetween.
2. The rotor assembly of claim 1 wherein the first disc has a disc appendage protruding radially from the first body, the first disc appendage having the male spline, the second disc has a second disc appendage protruding radially from the second body, the second disc appendage having the female spline.
3. The rotor assembly of claim 2, wherein the spigot engagement is a first spigot engagement between the first disc appendage and the second disc appendage, the rotor assembly further comprising a second spigot engagement between the first disc appendage and the second disc appendage, the spline engagement being between the first spigot engagement and the second spigot engagement relative to the axis.
4. The rotor assembly of claim 1, wherein the spigot engagement is axially adjacent to the spline engagement.
5. The rotor assembly of claim 1 wherein the first set of blades and the second set of blades extend across a main gas path, further comprising a disc cavity extending axially between the first disc body and the second disc body, radially internally from the main gas path, the disc cavity having less than 3 inches of radial depth.
6. The rotor assembly of claim 1 further comprising at least one cooling air passage extending radially across the spline engagement.
7. The rotor assembly of claim 1 wherein the keys and grooves have a corresponding circumferential width, and an axially oriented length, the length at least twice the width.
8. The rotor assembly of claim 1 further comprising inversed keys between adjacent ones of the grooves, and inversed grooves between adjacent ones of the keys the inversed keys engaged with the inversed grooves wherein the inversed keys have the same dimensions as the keys, and the inversed grooves have the same dimensions as the grooves.
9. The rotor assembly of claim 1 wherein the keys and grooves have pressure faces which slope relative to radial-axial planes in a manner for the keys and grooves to have narrower radially outer ends and broader radially inner ends.
10. The rotor assembly of claim 1 wherein the spline engagement include at least 30 of said keys.
11. The rotor assembly of claim 1 wherein the spline engagement include at least 50 of said keys.
12. The rotor assembly of claim 1 wherein the first disc and the second disc are turbine discs.
13. A gas turbine engine having in serial flow communication along a main gas path a compressor section, a combustor and a turbine section, at least one of said compressor section and said turbine section having a rotor assembly configured for rotation around an axis relative a stator, the rotor assembly comprising: a first disc having a first body extending circumferentially and radially around the axis, a first set of circumferentially distributed blades protruding radially from the first disc across the main gas path, and a male spline protruding axially from the disc, the male spline extending around and along the axis, a second disc having a second body extending circumferentially and radially around the axis, a second set of circumferentially distributed blades protruding radially from the second disc across the main gas path, and a female spline extending around and along the axis, the female spline receiving the male spline in a spline engagement, and the stator having a set of circumferentially distributed vanes extending radially across the main gas path, axially between the first and second sets of blades; wherein a disc cavity extends axially between the first disc body and the second disc body, radially internally from the main gas path to the spline engagement, further comprising a first annular gap and a second annular gap both fluidly connecting the disc cavity to the main gas path, the first annular gap between the first disc and the stator, the second annular gap between the stator and the second disc.
14. The gas turbine engine of claim 13 further comprising an air passage extending radially across the spline engagement.
15. The gas turbine engine of claim 14 wherein the stator further comprises a sealing assembly extending radially inwardly from the set of circumferentially distributed vanes into the disc cavity, the sealing assembly partitioning the disc cavity into an air passage portion fluidly connecting the air passage to the first annular gap, and a sub cavity fluidly connected to the second annular gap.
16. The gas turbine engine of claim 15 wherein the sealing assembly includes at least one baffle retained axially by an axial retention feature and centered by a centralizing feature associated to the axial retention feature.
Description
DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
(1) Reference is now made to the accompanying figures in which:
(2)
(3)
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION
(5)
(6) Gas turbine engines can have a plurality of rotors. In the illustrated embodiment, for instance, the gas turbine engine 10 has a high pressure rotor assembly 20 and a low pressure rotor assembly 22. The high pressure rotor assembly 20 can include a high pressure turbine disc assembly 24, and/or a compressor disc assembly 26, interconnected to one another by a high pressure shaft 28. The low pressure rotor assembly 22 can include a low pressure turbine disc assembly 30 and the fan 12, interconnected to one another by a power shaft 32. Different builds of gas turbine engines can have significantly different configurations. For example, in turboprop and turboshaft applications, the power shaft can connect to a propeller or to helicopter blades, respectively, and the fan and bypass path can be absent. In some gas turbine engines, more than two rotors may be used.
(7) An example rotor assembly 20, and more specifically a portion thereof having a turbine disc assembly 24, is presented in
(8) Returning to
(9) Various other requirements can exist. For instance, it is relatively common in the case of a turbine section 18 to bleed air from the compressor section 14 and to inject it into one or more annular gaps 50, 51 which can exist between the blade root zone (radially inner end) of a set of blades 36, 40 and the vane root zone of a set of vanes 44. The gaps 50, 51 can fluidly connect the disc cavity 54 to the main gas path 56. This can be used to control temperature of turbine section components during operation. This can require designing the gas turbine engine 10 with corresponding compressed air paths, and can require the use of a sealing assembly 52 in a disc cavity 54 inter-disc cavity which extend axially between adjacent disc bodies 46, 48 and radially inwardly from the main gas path 56. A sealing assembly 52 can include a seal runner 58, one or more baffles 60, 62, and can require to be axially retained to the set of vanes 44 in a centering manner. To this end, the stator 42 can further include an axial retention feature 64 and a centralizing feature 66. The seal assembly 52 can partition an air passage portion 78 of the disc cavity 54 which is in fluid communication with a first gap 50, from a sub cavity 82 which is in fluid communication with a second gap 51, for instance, from the point of view of fluid flow communication and/or fluid pressure environment.
(10) Especially in smaller engines the zones of the disc cavities 54 can be challenging to design, particularly from the point of view of fitting, within a fairly limited amount of radial space 68 and axial space 69, components such as baffles 60, 62, centralizing features 66, axial retention features 64, and seal runners 58. The radial space 68 can be considered limited and impose design constraints when it is below 3 inches in some embodiments, below 2 inches in some embodiments, and can be considered particularly limited when below 1.5 inches for instance. The design of the engagement features structurally connecting axially adjacent discs 34, 38 which were initially separately manufactured can also be challenging, especially when taking into consideration load bearing considerations (which can warrant using one or more spigot engagements 70, 72), air system passages 74, 75, 76, 78, and torque transmission. Torque transmission requirement themselves typically involve criteria such structural resistance in different operating conditions and durability. It was found that former assembly techniques could leave a want for more available space between discs in some embodiments.
(11) It was found that using a spline engagement 80 to provide torque transmission between discs 34, 38 during operation of the engine could be advantageous and provide more available radial space 68 and/or axial spacing 69 in the disc cavity 54, facilitating the accommodation of components such as air passages 78, sealing assemblies 52 in one embodiment, the use of a spline engagement 80 can leave more available radial and axial space 68, 69 between the discs 34, 38 to accommodate one or more of a baffle 60, 62, a centralizing feature 66, an axial retention feature 64, and a sealing assembly 52, in addition to facilitating the integration of one or two spigots 70, 72 and/or cooling air passages 74, 75, 76, 78. In one embodiment, the use of a spline engagement 80 to transmit torque between two axially adjacent discs 34, 38 can facilitate a double spigot fit design (i.e. use of two spigot engagements 70, 72) between the discs 34, 38, such as allowing to integrate the spline engagement 80 axially between the two spigot engagements 70, 72 for example. Each spigot engagement 70, 72 can involve an interference or tight fit between a male perimeter formed in a first one of the discs 34, 38 and a female perimeter formed in the other one of the discs 34, 38. In the illustrated example, for instance, both spigot engagements 70, 72 involve the use of a male cylindrical surface formed in the first disc 34 interference fitted into a corresponding female cylindrical surface formed in the second disc 38. In one embodiment, the use of a spline engagement 80 can facilitate manufacturing. The use of a spline engagement 80 can meet life requirements in addition to providing one or more additional advantages over other assembly techniques.
(12) In the embodiment presented in
(13) As known in the art, and as depicted more explicitly in
(14) Returning to
(15) In the illustrated embodiment, an air passage is defined for supplying cooling air to the gap 50. The air passage includes a hub cavity 74 formed radially internally in the first disc appendage 102, and an air passage portion 78 of the disc cavity 54. Moreover, the air passage includes a plurality of circumferentially interspaced first air passage segments 75 defined radially across the first disc appendage 102 and male spline 82, and a plurality of circumferentially interspaced second air passage segments 76 defined radially across the second disc appendage 104 and female spline 84. The first air passage segments 75 are clocked to fluidly communicate with the second air passage segments 76 as best seen in
(16) The embodiments described in this document provide non-limiting examples of possible implementations of the present technology. Upon review of the present disclosure, a person of ordinary skill in the art will recognize that changes may be made to the embodiments described herein without departing from the scope of the present technology. Yet further modifications than the one presented above could be implemented by a person of ordinary skill in the art in view of the present disclosure, which modifications would be within the scope of the present technology.