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Saturday, January 7, 2012

Nozzle guide vanes | Turbine blades | BALANCING

Fig. 5-12 Section through a dual alloy disc.


Nozzle guide vanes
25. Due to their static condition. the nozzle guide vanes do not endure the same rotational stresses as the turbine blades. Therefore, heat resistance is the property most required. Nickel alloys are used, although cooling is required to prevent melting. Ceramic coatings can enhance the heat resisting properties and, for the same set of conditions, reduce the amount of cooling air required, thus improving engine efficiency.
Turbine discs

26. A turbine disc has to rotate at high speed in a relatively cool environment and is subjected to large rotational stresses. The limiting factor which affectsthe useful disc life is its resistance to fatigue cracking.
Fig. 5-13 Comparison of turbine blade life
properties.
Fig. 5-14 Ceramic turbine blades.
27. In the past, turbine discs have been made in ferritic and austenitic steels but nickel based alloys are currently used. Increasing the alloying elements in nickel extend the life limits of a disc by increasing fatigue resistance. Alternatively, expensive powder metallurgy discs, which offer an additional 10% in strength, allow faster rotational speeds to be achieved
Turbine blades
28. A brief mention of some of the points to be considered in connection with turbine blade design will give an idea of the importance of the correct choice of blade material. The blades, while glowing red-hot, must be strong enough to carry the centrifugal loads due to rotation at high speed. A small turbine blade weighing only two ounces may exert a load of over two tons at top speed and it must withstand the high bending loads applied by the gas to produce the many thousands of turbine horsepower necessary to drive the compressor. Turbin blades must also be resistant to fatigue and thermal shock, so that they will not fail under the influence of  high frequency fluctuations in the gas conditions, and they must also be resistant to corrosion and oxidization. In spite of all these demands, the blades must be made in a material that can be accurately formed and machined by current manufacturing methods.
29. From the foregoing, it follows that for a particular blade material and an acceptable safe life there is an associated maximum permissible turbine entry temperature and a corresponding maximum engine power. It is not surprising, therefore, that metallurgists and designers are constantly searching for better turbine blade materials and improved methods of blade cooling.
30. Over a period of operational time the turbine blades slowly grow in length. This phenomenon is known as ’creep’ and there is a finite useful life limit before failure occurs.
31. The early materials used were high temperature steel forgings, but these were rapidly replaced by cast nickel base alloys which give better creep and fatigue properties.
32. Close examination of a conventional turbine blade reveals a myriad of crystals that lie in all directions (equi-axed). Improved service life can be obtained by aligning the crystals to form columns along the blade length, produced by a method known as ’Directional Solidification’. A further advance of this technique is to make the blade out of a single  crystal, Examples of these structures are shown in fig. 5-12. Each method extends the useful creep life of the blade (fig. 5-13) and in the case of the single crystal blade, the operating temperature can be substantially increased.
33. A non-metal based turbine blade can be manufactured from reinforced ceramics. Their initial production application is likely to be for small high speed turbines which have very high turbine entry temperatures. An example of a ceramic blade is shown in fig. 5-14.
BALANCING
34. The balancing of a turbine is an extremely important operation in its assembly. In view of the high rotational speeds and the mass of materials, any unbalance could seriously affect the rotating assembly bearings and engine operation. Balancing is effected on a special balancing machine, the principles of which are briefly described in Part 25.

2 comments:

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