A transonic turbine blade. Expansion waves are generated by a lifting surface on the blade. The expansion waves extend downstream, through a shock generated at the trailing edge of an adjacent blade. The invention increases the strength of the shock, thereby attenuating the expansion waves passing through the shock. One stratagem for increasing the shock is to reduce the aerodynamic load of the trailing edge generating the shock.

Patent
   RE42370
Priority
Oct 05 2001
Filed
Jan 27 2006
Issued
May 17 2011
Expiry
Oct 05 2021
Assg.orig
Entity
Large
1
45
all paid
1. A system, comprising:
a) a transonic turbine comprising one or more stages, each including
i) rotors a rotor carrying turbine blades, and
ii) stators and
having a normalized energy extraction per stage above 0.0725 BTU/(lbm*R); and
b) means on a rotor for unloading turbine blades at their trailing edges.
16. Apparatus comprising:
a) a turbine rotor; and
b) blades on the rotor having trailing edges no more than 0.029 inch thick, which
i) have a chord length defined therein, and
ii) are located in a transonic, or greater, flow, and
iii) generate a pressure field in which the ratio of (maximum static pressure/minimum static pressure)
in a 50 percent chord plane is less than 1.35.
13. A transonic turbine blade system, comprising:
a) a pair of neighboring blades, which cooperate to define an airfoil passage and an airfoil mouth; and
b) a suction side on one of the blades, having a blade metal angle defined therein, such that, downstream of the airfoil mouth, the metal angle
i) progressively increases in the downstream direction, and
ii) has a derivative which also progressively increases in the downstream direction.
14. Apparatus, comprising:
a) a row of transonic turbine blades having trailing edges which are no more than 0.029 inch thick, in which
i) airfoil passages are defined between adjacent blades, and
ii) expansion waves emanate from points on the suction surfaces of the blades, the points being located on the suction surfaces of the blades; and
b) means for creating a cross-passage shock through which the expansion waves pass, to thereby attain a ratio of
 (maximum static pressure/minimum static pressure) in a 50 percent chord plane of less than 1.35.
6. A system, comprising:
a) a transonic turbine comprising one or more stages, each including
i) rotors a rotor carrying turbine blades, and
ii) stators and
having an absolute pressure ratio per stage between 3.5 and 5.0; and
b) means on a the rotor for unloading the turbine blades at their trailing edges, said means comprising a region on a suction surface of a turbine blade that terminates with the trailing edge of the turbine blade and has no more than two degrees of bending, and wherein a metal angle of said region continually increases in the downstream direction, and wherein a first derivative of the metal angle continually increases in the downstream direction.
2. system according to claim 1, wherein said means comprises a region on a suction surface of a turbine blade, which
i) terminates with the trailing edge of the turbine blade, and
ii) has no more than six degrees of bending.
3. system according to claim 2, wherein said means has no more than two degrees of bending.
4. system according to claim 2, wherein metal angle of said region continually increases in the downstream direction.
5. system according to claim 4, wherein the first derivative of the metal angle continually increases in the downstream direction.
0. 7. system according to claim 6, wherein said means comprises a region on a suction surface of a turbine blade, which
i) terminates with the trailing edge of the turbine blade, and
ii) has no more than two degrees of bending.
0. 8. system according to claim 7, wherein metal angle of said region continually increases in the downstream direction.
0. 9. system according to claim 8, wherein the first derivative of metal angle continually increases in the downstream direction.
0. 10. A suction side for use in a turbine blade and having an airfoil mouth defined thereon, comprising:
a) a lift region; and
c) a trailing surface located downstream of the airfoil mouth and containing no more than two degrees of bending.
0. 11. Apparatus according to claim 10, wherein the trailing surface becomes progressively closer to the circumferential direction as the trailing surface progresses in the downstream direction.
0. 12. A system, comprising:
a) first and second turbine blades,
i) each having a suction side and a pressure side, and
ii) both cooperating to form an airfoil passage therebetween which terminates in an airfoil mouth; and
b) on the second blade, a suction surface on the suction side which is configured such that: i) all bending, except two degrees of bending, lies forward of the airfoil mouth.
15. Apparatus according to claim 14, wherein the means comprises an apparatus for reducing the aerodynamic loading of the trailing edges of the blades.
0. 17. A turbine blade, comprising:
a) a blade mouth defined on the suction side;
b) 94 degrees or more of curve of the suction side located upstream of the mouth; and
c) a trailing edge of thickness between 0.027 and 0.031 inch.

The invention concerns airfoils, such as those used in gas turbines, which operate in a transonic, or supersonic, flow regime, yet produce reduced shocks. One reason for reducing the shocks is that they produce undesirable mechanical stresses in parts of the turbine.

A simple analogy will first be given which explains how repeated pressure fluctuations can induce vibration. FIG. 1 shows an acoustic loudspeaker 3 which produces pressure waves 6. Each wave 6 contains a high-pressure, high-density region 9, and a low-pressure, low-density region 12. When the waves 6 strike an object 15, each high-pressure region 9 applies a small force to the object 15, and the succeeding low-pressure region 12 relaxes the force. The sequence of
. . . -force-relaxation-force-relaxation- . . .
causes the object 15 to vibrate.

Shocks produced by rotating airfoils can produce similar vibrations, as will now be explained.

FIG. 2 illustrates a generalized shock 23 produced by a generalized airfoil 26. The shocks as drawn in FIG. 2, as well as in FIGS. 3 and 4, are not intended to be precise depictions, but are simplifications, to illustrate the principles under discussion.

One feature of the shock 23 is that the static pressure on side 29 is higher than that on side 32. Another feature is that the gas density on side 29 is higher than on side 32. These differentials in pressure and density can have deleterious effects, as will be explained with reference to FIGS. 3 and 4.

FIG. 3 illustrates a generalized gas turbine 35, which extracts energy from an incoming gas stream 38. Each blade 41 produces a shock 23A in FIG. 4 analogous to shock 23 in FIG. 2. The blades 41 in FIG. 4 collectively produce the shock system, or shock structure, 47.

Similar to the shock 23 in FIG. 2, each individual shock 23A in FIG. 4 is flanked by a differential in pressure and gas density: one side of the shock 23A is characterized by high pressure and high density; the other side is characterized by low pressure and low density.

When the shock structure 47 rotates, as it does in normal operation, it causes a sequence of pressure pulses to be applied to any stationary structure in the vicinity. This sequence of pulses is roughly analogous to the sequence of acoustic pressure waves 6 in FIG. 1.

For example, stationary guide vanes (not shown) are sometimes used to re-direct the gas streams exiting the blades 41 in FIGS. 3 and 4, in order to produce a more favorable angle-of-attack for blades on a downstream turbine (also not shown). The pulsating pressure and density pulses can generate vibration in the stationary guide vanes.

As a general principle, vibration in rotating machinery is to be avoided.

The preceding discussion is a simplification. In general, shocks 23A in FIG. 4 will be accompanied by expansion fans, and the overall aerodynamic structure will be quite complex. Nevertheless, the general principles explained above are still applicable.

In one form of the invention, substantially all curve on the suction surface of a transonic turbine blade is located upstream of a throat defined by the blade and an adjacent blade. Downstream of the throat, the remaining curve on the suction surface is no more than 6 degrees, and preferably no more than 2 degrees.

FIG. 1 illustrates acoustic waves 6 impinging on an object 15.

FIG. 2 illustrates a generalized shock 23.

FIG. 3 illustrates a generic turbine.

FIG. 4 illustrates shocks 23A produced by the turbine of FIG. 3.

FIG. 5 illustrates one form of the invention.

FIG. 6 illustrates formation of a shock.

FIG. 7 illustrates formation of an expansion fan.

FIGS. 8 and 9 illustrate operation of one form of the invention.

FIGS. 10 and 11 illustrate actual geometry of region 110 in FIG. 5, based on the data contained in Table 1 herein.

FIGS. 12 and 13 illustrate operation of one form of the invention.

FIG. 14 illustrates a definition of a fifty-percent-chord-plane, and points at which pressure is measured in that plane.

FIG. 15 is a cross section of one form of the invention.

FIG. 16 illustrates how amount of bending of a surface can be numerically defined.

FIG. 17 is a schematic cross-sectional view of blades and Inlet Guide Vanes, IGVs, in a gas turbine engine.

FIG. 18 illustrates how a maximum allowable deviation DEV from flatness can be computed.

FIG. 19 illustrates a trailing edge of a turbine blade found in the prior art.

FIG. 20 illustrates how the invention attains a thickness of 0.029 inches at a trailing edge of a turbine blade, yet still provides a passage for cooling air for the trailing edge.

This discussion will first set forth standard nomenclature, in the context of one form of the invention. It is emphasized that a transonic, or supersonic, structure is under consideration. The term transonic means that the Mach number at some points on a structure is 1.0 or above and, at other points, is below 1.0. The term supersonic means that the Mach number is above 1.0 everywhere, with respect to the structure in question.

FIG. 5 is an end-on view of two turbine blades 60 used by the invention. That is, if FIG. 3 showed the invention, then the cross-sections of the blades labeled 41 in FIG. 3 correspond to the cross sections shown in FIG. 5.

In FIG. 5, an airfoil passage 52 is shown, together with an airfoil mouth 55, which is sometimes called a throat. The term airfoil passage is a term of art. That is, even though the region downstream of the airfoil mouth 55 may, from one perspective, also be viewed as a passage, it is not the airfoil passage 52 as herein defined. The airfoil passage 52 herein is bounded by the two blades along its entire length.

Each blade 60 contains a pressure surface, or side, 63 and a suction surface, or side, 66. Arrow 70 represents incoming gas streams while arrow 73 represents exiting gas streams.

Arrow 73 points in the downstream direction. The upstream direction is opposite.

Leading edge 75 is shown, as is trailing edge 78.

Dashed line 81 represents a line parallel to the axis of rotation of the turbine. The axis is labeled 83 in FIG. 3. Line 81 in FIG. 5, and other lines 81 parallel to it, represent reference lines which will be used in defining various angles. In FIG. 5, angle B1 represents the angle between the incoming gas streams 70 and the reference line 81. Angle B1 is called the airfoil inlet gas angle.

Angle B2 represents the angle between the exiting gas streams 73 and the reference line 81. Angle B2 is called the airfoil exit gas angle.

Angle A1 represents the angle between part of the suction surface 66 and the reference line 81. Angle A1 is called the airfoil suction surface metal angle at the airfoil mouth.

Angle A2 represents the angle between part of the suction surface 66 at the trailing edge and the reference line 81. Angle A2 is called the airfoil suction surface metal angle at the airfoil trailing edge.

Against the background of these definitions, four significant characteristics of the system of FIG. 5 can be explained. One characteristic is that no more than two degrees of bending, or curve, occurs in the suction side 66 downstream of the airfoil mouth 55. Data tables and Figures explaining this bending are given below.

The terms bending and curve are considered synonymous, and refer to visible spatial shape. However, they are different from the term curvature, as will be explained later.

This restriction on location of the curve causes substantially all expansion of the transonic airflow to occur upstream of the airfoil mouth 55. Thus, few, if any, expansion waves are generated downstream of the airfoil mouth 55, at least because of the lift-generating process occurring in the airfoil passage. However, as explained below, expansion downstream of the mouth 55 is deliberately generated at a specific point for another purpose.

A second characteristic is a type of corollary to the first, namely, the suction side 66 is substantially flat in region 110, subject to the two-degree bending just described, which is downstream of the airfoil mouth 55. This flatness reduces expansion and shocks, as explained with reference to FIGS. 6 and 7.

FIG. 6 illustrates a gas stream 90 encountering a concave corner 93. The compression process induced creates a shock 96. FIG. 7 shows a gas stream 100 encountering a convex corner 103. The expansion process induced creates an expansion fan 106. A characteristic pressure differential and density differential exists across the shock 96 in FIG. 6. The expansion fan 106 is also accompanied by its own type of pressure and density differentials.

In contrast, the flatness, or very shallow bending, of region 110 in FIG. 5 does not create such shocks and expansion fans, or creates them in reduced strengths.

Therefore, considering the first and second characteristics together: the vast majority of shocks and expansions occur in the airfoil passage 52 in FIG. 5, with little or no shocks and expansion generated downstream of the airfoil mouth 55, on surface 110. An exception will be a shock which is deliberately created, and described below.

In explaining the third characteristic, the reader is reminded that all, or nearly all, expansion is restricted to the airfoil passage 52. However, the resulting expansion waves, or fan, 125 in FIG. 8 do escape through the airfoil mouth 55, and are not confined to the passage 52.

The third characteristic of the invention is that the expansion fan 125 is mitigated by passing it through a shock 115, as indicated in FIG. 9. This particular shock 115 is deliberately increased in strength by the invention, through the particular blade geometries used, which are shown in FIGS. 10-12.

FIG. 10, top, is a plot of the actual profile of region 110 of FIG. 5. The x-axis runs parallel to reference line 81 in FIG. 5. Arrows 153 indicate a very small gap between the actual profile 110 and a straight line 154 running from beginning to end of region 110.

The maximum size of this gap is less than 0.005 inches, as the scale of the Figure indicates. For example, the distance between adjacent grid lines of the x-axis is about 0.020 inch. Clearly, the distance 153 is less than one-fourth of 0.020, which is 0.005.

FIG. 11 is a plot of the angle of each point on the surface of region 110, at the corresponding x-positions. Each angle is measured with respect to reference line 81. For example, angle B1 in FIG. 5 would be one of the angles plotted in FIG. 10.

FIG. 10, bottom, is a plot of the curvature of each of the angles, again at the corresponding x-positions of FIG. 10. The term curvature is used in the mathematical sense. It is the first derivative of the change in angle of FIG. 10, with respect to x.

Table 1, below, sets forth data from which region 110 can be constructed. The parameter X in Table 1 is shown in FIGS. 10 and 11. The zero value of X corresponds to the airfoil mouth 55 in FIG. 5. The parameter Y in Table 1 is the y-position shown in FIG. 10. The parameter ANGLE in Table 1 is the angle of FIG. 11. The parameter CURVATURE in Table 1 is the curvature of FIG. 10.

It is emphasized that, depending on the particular orientation selected for the blade, some coordinates can be considered negative. For example, by one convention, the parameter Y in FIG. 10 can be considered negative. Selection of a coordinate system, and specification of the negative axes, are both considered the designer's choice. For simplicity, algebraic sign of the axes are ignored here.

TABLE 1
X Y ANGLE CURVATURE
−.200386E−07 .173349E−08 68.1985 .778938E−02
.366203E−02 .922460E−01 68.2030 .824942E−02
.732402E−02 .184488E−01 68.2077 .869913E−02
.109870E−01 .276729E−01 68.2127 .913866E−02
.146500E−01 .368968E−01 68.2178 .956786E−02
.183130E−01 .461206E−01 68.2231 .998673E−02
.219770E−01 .553441E−01 68.2285 .103954E−01
.256410E−01 .645675E−01 68.2342 .107937E−01
.293060E−01 .737909E−01 68.2400 .111819E−01
.329700R−01 .830142E−01 68.2461 .115595E−01
.366350E−01 .922374E−01 68.2523 .119270E−01
.403000E−01 .101461 68.2587 .122608E−01
.439640E−01 .110684 68.2654 .125827E−01
.476290E−01 .119907 68.2722 .129006E−01
.512930E−01 .129130 68.2792 .132143E−01
.549590E−01 .138354 68.2863 .135239E−01
.586230E−01 .147577 68.2937 .138829E−01
.622870E−01 .156801 68.3012 .141305E−01
.659500E−01 .166025 68.3089 .144274E−01
.696130e_01 .175249 68.3167 .147202E−01
.732760E−01 .184473 68.3248 .150089E−01
.769380E−01 .193697 68.3330 .152955E−01
.805990E−01 .202922 68.3412 .155901E−01
.842590E−01 .212146 68.3497 .158887E−01
.879190E−01 .221371 68.3583 .161914E−01
.915790E−01 .230598 68.3671 .164981E−01
.952380E−01 .239823 68.3761 .168088E−01
.988950E−01 .249049 68.3852 .171234E−01
.102551 .258276 68.3945 .174420E−01
.106208 .267502 68.4041 .177647E−01
.109862 .276729 68.4137 .180913E−01
.113516 .285957 68.4236 .184219E−01
.117168 .295186 68.4336 .187553E−01
.120820 .304414 68.4437 .190925E−01
.124469 .313643 68.4541 .194397E−01
.123118 .322873 68.4647 .197970E−01
.131766 .332103 68.4754 .201641E−01
.136412 .341333 68.4864 .205413E−01
.139056 .350565 68.4977 .209283E−01
.142699 .359796 68.5091 .213253E−01
.146339 .369030 68.5208 .217322E−01
.149979 .378262 68.5326 .221490E−01
.153617 .387497 68.5447 .225756E−01
.157252 .396731 68.5570 .230120E−01
.160887 .405966 68.5694 .234455E−01
.164519 .415202 68.5821 .238942E−01
.168150 .424439 68.5950 .243619E−01
.171778 .433677 68.6083 .248486E−01
.175404 .442916 68.6219 .253544E−01
.179028 .452154 68.6358 .258791E−01
.182650 .461395 68.6500 .264228E−01
.186268 .470636 68.6645 .269853E−01
.189886 .479878 68.6793 .275668E−01
.193500 .489121 68.6944 .2S1669E−01
.197112 .498365 68.7098 .287857E−01
.200722 .507610 68.7254 .294135E−01
.204328 .516857 68.7410 .300184E−01
.207932 .526104 68.7571 .306628E−01
.211534 .535352 68.7738 .313468E−01
.215131 .544602 68.7908 .320698E−01
.218727 .553852 68.8084 .328322E−01
.222319 .563103 68.8265 .336337E−01
.225908 .572356 68.8451 .344740E−01
.229494 .581611 68.8642 .353532E−01
.233076 .590866 68.8838 .362709E−01
.236655 .600123 68.9038 .372274E−01
.240231 .609381 68.9244 .382222E−01
.243802 .618641 68.9454 .392550E−01
.247370 .627902 68.9657 .401391E−01
.250935 .637165 68.9867 .410925E−01
.254494 .646429 69.0087 .421442E−01
.258050 .655694 69.0316 .432935E−01
.261603 .664961 69.0554 .445401E−01
.265151 .674231 69.0802 .458863E−01
.268693 .638501 69.1058 .473232E−01
.272233 .692771 69.1324 .488594E−01
.275767 .702047 69.1599 .504911E−01
.279296 .711323 69.1883 .522176E−01
.282821 .720601 69.2176 .540392E−01
.286340 .729881 69.2478 .559548E−01
.289853 .739162 69.2789 .579636E−01
.293362 .748466 69.3121 .602168E−01
.296866 .757731 693467 .626344E−01
.300363 .767020 693825 .652012E−01
.303858 .776310 69.4196 .679173E−01
.307338 .785603 69.4580 .707810E−01
.310818 .794898 69.4975 .737916E−01
.314288 .804195 69.5383 .769482E−01
.317758 .813495 69.5803 .802490E−01
.321218 .822797 69.6235 .836951E−01
.324668 .832101 69.6679 .872825E−01
.328118 .841408 69.7135 .910113E−01
.331558 .850719 69.7602 .948816E−01
.334988 .860033 69.8081 .988903E−01
.338408 .869349 69.8614 .103796
.341818 .878668 69.9208 .109721
.345218 .887990 69.9824 .115984
.348618 .897316 70.0462 .122585
.352008 .906645 70.1123 .129518
.355378 .915978 70.1806 .136781

FIGS. 10 and 11 are simplified plots of the data of Table 1: every tenth data point in the Table is plotted in those Figures.

Some significant features of FIGS. 10 and 11 are the following. As FIG. 10 indicates, region 110 is substantially flat. Distance 153 is less than 0.005 inch.

As FIG. 11 indicates, the angle of the surface of region 110 continually increases as one progresses downstream. The tables of FIG. 14 11 indicate that the angle changes from an absolute value of 68.1985, at the airfoil mouth 55 of FIG. 5, to an absolute value of 70.1806 at the trailing edge 78. The difference between these two angles is 1.9821, or less than to the two degrees stated above.

As FIG. 10 indicates, the curvature progressively, monotonically, increases from the mouth 55 to the trailing edge 78. Restated, the rate of change of the angle increases from the mouth 55 to the trailing edge 78.

The effects of this geometry on the strength of the cross passage shock 115 in FIG. 9 will now be explained. FIG. 12 illustrates a generalized trailing edge 78, and the cross-passage shock 115 generated, which is also shown in FIG. 9. Expansion fans 160 are shown in FIG. 12, as is the downstream shock 165.

FIG. 13 also illustrates the trailing edge, but rotated clockwise. The rotated condition tends to unload the aerodynamic loading at the trailing edge 78. That is, the static pressure on the pressure side is reduced, and that on the suction side increases. The unloading can be sufficiently great that negative lift is attained at the trailing edge.

The reduction in loading causes the wake 170 to rotate toward the pressure side 63, as indicated by a comparison of FIGS. 12 and 13. This situation causes the cross-passage shock 115 in FIG. 13 to increase in intensity. One way to understand this is to view the wake 170 as a physical barrier. The pressure side 63 in FIG. 13, together with the wake 170, act as the convex corner 93 in FIG. 6, forcing flow moving in the downstream direction on the pressure side 63 in FIG. 13 to bend. This action increases the cross-passage shock 115.

When the expansion waves, or fan, 125 in FIG. 9 now cross the strengthened cross-passage shock 115, their strength is thereby reduced.

The invention produces a specific favorable pressure ratio. Two pressures are measured in a specific plane 190, shown in FIG. 14. Points P8 and P9 represent two points at which the pressures are measured. The Figure does not indicate the precise locations of points P8 and P9, but merely indicates that two separate locations are involved.

Points P8 and P9 lie in plane 190, which is parallel with plane 195, which contains the tips of the trailing edges of the blades 60. Plane 190 is located downstream from the trailing edge at a distance of 50 percent of the chord of the blade. A chord is indicated, as is the 50 percent distance. This plane will be defined as a 50 percent chord plane.

One pressure measured at point P8 or P9 is the cross-passage maximum static pressure, PSMAX. It will be the maximum pressure in plane 190. The other pressure is the minimum static pressure, PSMIN, in plane 190. Of course, the flow field in crossing plane 190 will be axi-symmetric, so that numerous comparable pairs of points P8 and P9 will exist.

The ratio of PSMAX/PSMIN is preferably in the range of 1.35 or less.

The two points P8 and P9 should be located at comparable aerodynamic stations. For example, if P8 were located at the radial tip of a blade, and P9 located at a blade root, the stations would probably not be comparable. In contrast, if both points were located at the same radius from the axis of rotation 83 in FIG. 3, then the stations would be comparable.

FIG. 15 is a scale representation of the airfoil used in one form of the invention, drawn in arbitrary units. The curve shown in FIG. 15 is a Nonuniform Rational B-Spline, NURB, based on the data points given in Table 2, below.

TABLE 2
7.7163, 1.8954
7.6828, 1.9543
7.6180, 2.0734
7.5245, 2.2489
7.4214, 2.4134
7.3254, 2.5752
7.2253, 2.7329
7.1254, 2.8979
7.0121, 3.0626
6.9058, 3.2339
6.7832, 3.3863
6.6802, 3.5329
7.7163, 1.8954
7.6828, 1.9543
7.6180, 2.0734
7.5245, 2.2489
7.4214, 2.4134
7.3254, 2.5752
7.2253, 2.7329
7.1254, 2.8979
7.0121, 3.0626
6.9058, 3.2339
6.7832, 3.3863
6.6802, 3.5329
6.5663, 3.6569
6.4684, 3.7721
6.3710, 3.8791
6.2364, 4.0066
6.1067, 4.1308
5.9745, 4.2366
5.8403, 4.3156
5.7064, 4.4096
5.5550, 4.4789
5.4433, 4.5390
5.3206, 4.5694
5.2113, 4.6119
5.0677, 4.6314
4.9297, 4.6425
4.7838, 4.6445
4.6681, 4.6305
4.5483, 4.6213
4.4289, 4.6078
4.2891, 4.5737
4.1707, 4.5483
4.0181, 4.5363
3.8978, 4.5203
3.7512, 4.4946
3.6176, 4.4838
3.4829, 4.4488
3.3792, 4.4507
3.2830, 4.4537
3.1952, 4.5154
3.1517, 4.6155
3.1511, 4.7069
3.1376, 4.8406
3.1744, 4.9832
3.2312, 5.1436
3.2768, 5.2709
3.3182, 5.4008
3.4245, 5.6331
3.5836, 5.8789
3.7415, 6.1244
3.8531, 6.2258
3.9583, 6.3401
4.1046, 6.4671
4.2760, 6.5598
4.3914, 6.6317
4.4867, 6.7002
4.6281, 6.7481
4.7655, 6.7887
4.9090, 6.8189
5.0335, 6.8182
5.1667, 6.8215
5.3104, 6.8064
5.4688, 6.7648
5.6281, 6.6695
5.7941, 6.5483
5.9350, 6.4081
6.0845, 6.2080
6.2110, 5.9138
6.3761, 5.4967
6.6476, 4.8322
7.1107, 3.6282
7.6142, 2.6276
7.8135, 1.9386

The following discussion will consider (1) various characterizations of the invention, and (2) definitional matters.

As shown in FIG. 5, the suction side 66 can be divided into (1) a lift region within the airfoil passage 52 containing substantially all bending of the suction side, (2) a trailing region 110 which contains no more than two degrees of bending, and which is entirely located downstream of the airfoil mouth 55 in FIG. 5.

The trailing edge 78 of the suction side 66 has greater camber than does the suction side at the airfoil mouth. Camber angle is a term of art, and is defined, for example, in chapter 5 of the text GAS TURBINE THEORY by Cohen, Rogers, and Saravanamuttoo (Longman Scientific & Technical Publishing, 1972, ISBN 0-470-20705-1).

In FIG. 5, as one progresses in the downstream direction, that is, in the direction of arrow 60, the bending of the surface 110 causes the surface 110 to move away from the axial direction, represented by line 81. That is, the angle of surface 110 progressively increases, as indicated by FIG. 11. Further, the mathematical curvature, or first derivative, of the angle, also progressively increases in the downstream direction.

The increase just described causes the surface of the suction side 66 to move away from the axial direction and toward the transverse direction.

The meaning of the term angle should be explained. FIG. 11 gives the angle in terms of the slope of the region 110 at each x-position. The slope is a ratio, which is non-dimensional for the top of FIG. 10: inches/inches. If the actual angle in degrees or radians is desired, the arctangent of the given angle/slope should be taken.

As stated, the angle/slope of FIG. 11 is the first derivative of Y in FIG. 10, top, with respect to X. The curvature of FIG. 10, bottom, is the second derivative of Y with respect to X, which is equivalent to the first derivative of the angle/slope.

One form of the invention comprises a row of turbine blades, which may be supported by a rotor. FIG. 3 illustrates a row of turbine blades on a rotor. In the turbine art, even though the array of turbine blades is a circumferential array in FIG. 3, supported by a turbine disc, the array is traditionally called a row. Also, in cascade testing, a literal row of turbine blades is used.

Each pair of blades, as in FIG. 5, defines an airfoil passage 52, and an airfoil mouth 55, through which gases travelling through the passage 52 pass, when exiting the passage 52. Expansion waves 125 in FIG. 9 emanate from the suction surface 66, and pass through a cross-passage shock 115. The invention provides a means, or method, for increasing the strength of that cross-passage shock 115.

It is recognized in the art how to derive a mean, or representative, gas stream 73 in FIG. 5. One approach is to simply draw a line perpendicular to the airfoil mouth 55. Another is to take a mean vector representing all flow vectors exiting the mouth 55.

Another form of the invention can be viewed as a transonic turbine blade equipped with means for aerodynamically unloading its trailing edge. The curvature of FIG. 10 provides an example of such a means.

Angle A2 in FIG. 5 is greater than angle B2, but no more than five degrees greater.

Angle A1 in FIG. 5 is either (1) less than angle B2, but no more than five degrees less, or (2) more than B2, but no more than five degrees more.

As to the term bending, the amount of bending between two points on a curved surface can be defined as the angle made by two tangents at the two respective points. For example, FIG. 16 shows a curve 300, and two tangents 305 and 310. The amount of bending between the two tangent points 330 and 340 equals angle 315. As another example, the amount of bending of a cylinder between the 12 o'clock position and the 3 o'clock position would be 90 degrees. This definition may not apply if an inflection point occurs between the points.

The invention has particular application in a transonic turbine. A transonic turbine is characterized by its design to extract as much energy as possible from a moving gas stream, yet use the smallest number possible of turbine stages and airfoils.

A turbine stage is defined as a pair of elements, namely, a (1) set of stationary inlet guide vanes, IGVs, and (2) a row of rotating turbine blades. FIG. 17 represents two stages.

For a single turbine stage 204, the level of energy extraction can be defined as a normalized amount of energy, which equals the amount of energy extracted by the stage, in BTU's, British Thermal Units, per pound of gas flow divided by the absolute total temperature at the vane exit, such as at point 205 in FIG. 17. That is, the quantity computed is BTU/(lbm*R), wherein BTU represents energy extracted per stage, lbm is mass flow of gas in pounds per second, and R is temperature on the Rankine scale.

In one form of the invention, this quantity lies in the range of 0.0725 to 0.0800 for a single stage. The principles of the invention apply to turbines operating in this range, and above.

Another measure of the type of environment in which the invention operates is indicated by the ratio of two absolute pressures. The ratio is that between (1) the absolute pressure at the inlet to a stage, at point 210 in FIG. 17, to (2) the absolute pressure at the outlet of a stage, at point 215. In one form of the invention, this ratio lies in the range of 3.5 to 5.0.

A third measure of the type of environment in which the invention operates is indicated by the pressure ratio across a blade, as opposed to that across a stage. Under one form of the invention, the ratio of (1) the total pressure at a blade inlet, at point 230 in FIG. 17, to (2) the static pressure at the airfoil (or blade) exit, at point 215, lies in the range of 2.3 to 3.0.

It was stated above that the amount of bending between the mouth and trailing edge should be limited to two degrees. However, in other embodiments, bending as great as six degrees is possible.

The discussion above placed a limit of 0.005 inch on dimension 153 in FIG. 10. In another form of the invention, the limit can be computed in a different manner. FIG. 18 illustrates region 110, which can correspond to region 110 in FIG. 5, or can represent a comparable surface, running from blade mouth to trailing edge, on a larger blade, such as one used in a steam turbine.

In one form of the invention, a limit of six degrees is placed on both angles AX and AZ in FIG. 18. Surface 111 is flat. Region 110 of FIG. 5 must occupy the envelope between dashed surface 110 A and surface 111.

Given these limits of six degrees, the maximum value of the deviation DEV from surface 111 is (LENGTH11½) TAN 6, wherein LENGTH110 is the length of surface 110. If, as in Table 1, LENGTH110 is about ⅓ inch, then the maximum value of DEV is 0.0175. If, in a longer blade, LENGTH111 is 1.5 inches, then the maximum value of DEV is 0.079 inch.

The surface 110 within envelope 110A may be rippled, or wavy, but must still lie within the envelope determined by parameter DEV.

The limits just stated were for angles of six degrees. Other forms of the invention implement the same type of limit, but for different angles. Angles AX and AZ of 0.5, 1.0, 1.5, 2.0, 2.5, 3.0, 3.5, 4.0, 4.5, 5.0, 5.5, and 6.0 degrees are included. For example, a particular blade may impose a limit on DEV based on a three degree limit. The limit on DEV accordingly is (LENGTH11½) TAN 3. If LENGTH111 is ⅓ inch, then the limit on DEV is 0.0087 inch.

The general form of the limit is (LENGTH11½)TANx, wherein x is one of the angles in the series specified in the previous paragraph, running from 0.5 to 6.0.

FIG. 19 illustrates the trailing edge of a turbine blade found in the prior art, having a thickness of 0.050 inch, as indicated. The blade in question provided the desirable pressure ratio PSMAX/PSMIN of 1.35 in the 50 percent chord plane of FIG. 14. This ratio was discussed above. However, that blade is believed to provide an unfavorable efficiency, as indicated by total pressure loss. Under the invention, cascade testing indicates that total pressure loss at the 50 percent chord plane of FIG. 14 is 3.75 percent. This testing was done on a 1.5 scale airfoil of the type shown in FIG. 20, using trailing edge cooling, at a total static pressure ratio of 2.8.

The invention provides a trailing edge thickness of 0.029 inch, plus-or-minus 0.002 inches, as indicated in FIG. 20. That is, under the invention, the thickness ranges between 0.027 and 0.031 inch. In addition, in order to cool the trailing edge, a cooling passage 300 is provided, which connects to an internal cooling cavity 305. Pressurized air is forced through the passage 300 from the cavity 305.

A significant feature is that, under today's technology, providing a central cooling passage in the apparatus of FIG. 20, which is analogous to passage 315 in FIG. 19, is not considered feasible. A primary reason is that the indicated thickness of 0.029 inch in FIG. 20 is considered a minimal limit on material thickness, for reasons of strength.

Restated, if the thickness in FIG. 19 were 0.029 inch instead of 0.050 inch, then, if a passage analogous to passage 315 is provided, the absolute maximum available wall thickness in walls 320 and 325 would be [(0.029/2)-radius of passage 315]. Clearly, even with a radius of 0.001 inch in passage 315, the wall thickness would be less than 0.015 inch, which is below the limit.

The invention of FIG. 20 circumvents this problem by placing the exit to cooling passage 300 entirely on the pressure surface 63.

Thickness of the trailing edge is defined as the diameter of the fillet, or curve, in which the trailing edge terminates. That is, in FIG. 20, one could move downstream of the point at which 0.029 is indicated, and take a measurement at that downstream location. The measurement would be less than 0.029. However, one would be measuring a chord at that point, and not a diameter as required.

Numerous substitutions and modifications can be undertaken without departing from the true spirit and scope of the invention. What is desired to be secured by Letters Patent is the invention as defined in the following claims.

Kuhne, Craig Miller

Patent Priority Assignee Title
9957801, Aug 03 2012 RTX CORPORATION Airfoil design having localized suction side curvatures
Patent Priority Assignee Title
3953148, Apr 30 1973 BBC Brown Boveri & Company Limited Configuration of the last moving blade row of a multi-stage turbine
3989406, Nov 26 1974 Bolt Beranek and Newman, Inc. Method of and apparatus for preventing leading edge shocks and shock-related noise in transonic and supersonic rotor blades and the like
4080102, May 31 1975 Maschinenfabrik Augsburg-Nurnberg Aktiengesellschaft Moving blade row of high peripheral speed for thermal axial-flow turbo machines
4131387, Feb 27 1976 General Electric Company Curved blade turbomachinery noise reduction
4408957, Feb 22 1972 Allison Engine Company, Inc Supersonic blading
4470755, May 05 1981 Alsthom-Atlantique Guide blade set for diverging jet streams in a steam turbine
4483659, Sep 29 1983 CONSUMERS GAS COMPANY LTD , THE Axial flow impeller
4545726, Jun 05 1981 Sulzer-Escher Wyss Ltd. Turbine
4626174, Mar 16 1979 Hitachi, Ltd. Turbine blade
4720239, Oct 22 1982 OWCZAREK, JERZY, A Stator blades of turbomachines
4919593, Aug 30 1988 Siemens Westinghouse Power Corporation Retrofitted rotor blades for steam turbines and method of making the same
4968216, Oct 12 1984 The Boeing Company Two-stage fluid driven turbine
5035578, Oct 16 1989 SIEMENS POWER GENERATION, INC Blading for reaction turbine blade row
5077968, Apr 06 1990 United Technologies Corporation Vaneless contrarotating turbine
5211703, Oct 24 1990 Westinghouse Electric Corp. Stationary blade design for L-OC row
5221181, Oct 24 1990 Westinghouse Electric Corp. Stationary turbine blade having diaphragm construction
5228833, Jun 28 1991 Asea Brown Boveri Ltd. Turbomachine blade/vane for subsonic conditions
5232338, Sep 13 1990 GEC Alsthom SA Blade array for turbomachines comprising suction ports in the inner and/or outer wall and turbomachines comprising same
5249922, Sep 17 1990 Hitachi, Ltd. Apparatus of stationary blade for axial flow turbine, and axial flow turbine
5277549, Mar 16 1992 Siemens Westinghouse Power Corporation Controlled reaction L-2R steam turbine blade
5292230, Dec 16 1992 Siemens Westinghouse Power Corporation Curvature steam turbine vane airfoil
5326221, Aug 27 1993 General Electric Company Over-cambered stage design for steam turbines
5342170, Aug 29 1992 Asea Brown Boveri Ltd. Axial-flow turbine
5354178, Nov 24 1993 Siemens Westinghouse Power Corporation Light weight steam turbine blade
5393200, Apr 04 1994 General Electric Co. Bucket for the last stage of turbine
5524341, Sep 26 1994 SIEMENS ENERGY, INC Method of making a row of mix-tuned turbomachine blades
5553995, Oct 11 1991 Method of driving a turbine in rotation by means of a jet device
5554000, Sep 20 1993 MITSUBISHI HITACHI POWER SYSTEMS, LTD Blade profile for axial flow compressor
5616000, Feb 21 1995 Kabushiki Kaisha Toyota Chuo Kenkyusho; Toyota Jidosha Kabushiki Kaisha Stator of torque converter for vehicles improved to suppress separation of working fluid
5692709, Nov 01 1994 ITT Manufacturing Enterprises, Inc Shock wave stabilization apparatus and method
6036438, Dec 05 1996 Kabushiki Kaisha Toshiba Turbine nozzle
6059532, Oct 24 1997 AlliedSignal Inc.; AlliedSignal Inc Axial flow turbo-machine fan blade having shifted tip center of gravity axis
6062819, Dec 07 1995 Ebara Corporation; Ebara Research Co., Ltd.; University College London Turbomachinery and method of manufacturing the same
6079948, Sep 30 1996 Kabushiki Kaisha Toshiba Blade for axial fluid machine having projecting portion at the tip and root of the blade
6203274, Apr 24 1998 Kabushiki Kaisha Toshiba Steam turbine
6206637, Jul 07 1998 Mitsubishi Heavy Industries, Ltd. Gas turbine blade
6354798, Sep 08 1997 Siemens Aktiengesellschaft Blade for a fluid-flow machine, and steam turbine
6358012, May 01 2000 RAYTHEON TECHNOLOGIES CORPORATION High efficiency turbomachinery blade
6375419, Jun 02 1995 United Technologies Corporation Flow directing element for a turbine engine
6375420, Jul 31 1998 Kabushiki Kaisha Toshiba High efficiency blade configuration for steam turbine
6431829, Jun 03 1999 Ebara Corporation Turbine device
6527510, May 31 2000 Honda Giken Kogyo Kabushiki Kaisha Stator blade and stator blade cascade for axial-flow compressor
20010016163,
EP219140,
EP1152122,
/
Executed onAssignorAssigneeConveyanceFrameReelDoc
Jan 27 2006General Electric Company(assignment on the face of the patent)
Date Maintenance Fee Events
Jul 27 2011M1552: Payment of Maintenance Fee, 8th Year, Large Entity.
Jan 04 2012ASPN: Payor Number Assigned.
Jul 27 2015M1553: Payment of Maintenance Fee, 12th Year, Large Entity.


Date Maintenance Schedule
May 17 20144 years fee payment window open
Nov 17 20146 months grace period start (w surcharge)
May 17 2015patent expiry (for year 4)
May 17 20172 years to revive unintentionally abandoned end. (for year 4)
May 17 20188 years fee payment window open
Nov 17 20186 months grace period start (w surcharge)
May 17 2019patent expiry (for year 8)
May 17 20212 years to revive unintentionally abandoned end. (for year 8)
May 17 202212 years fee payment window open
Nov 17 20226 months grace period start (w surcharge)
May 17 2023patent expiry (for year 12)
May 17 20252 years to revive unintentionally abandoned end. (for year 12)