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| Content Provider | The American Society of Mechanical Engineers (ASME) Digital Collection |
|---|---|
| Author | Flouros, Michael Hendrick, Patrick Outirba, Bilal Cottier, Francois Proestler, Stephan |
| Copyright Year | 2014 |
| Abstract | Due to the increasing fuel cost and environmental targets, the demand for more efficient gas turbines has risen considerably in the last decade. One of the most important systems in a gas turbine is the secondary air system which provides cooling air to the disks and to the blades. It also provides air for sealing of the bearing chambers. The amount of secondary air that is extracted from the compressor is a performance penalty for the engine. In aero engines, bearing chambers are in most cases sealed by the most traditional type of seal, the labyrinth seal. Bearing chambers contain the oil lubricated components like bearings and gears. In order to avoid oil migration from the bearing chamber into the turbo machinery the seals are pressurized by air thus a pressure difference is set up across the seal which retains the lubricant into the bearing chamber. Oil loss can lead to a number of problems like oil fire or coking with the probability of an uncontained destruction of the aero engine. Oil fumes can also cause contamination of the air conditioning system of the aircraft thus cause discomfort to the passengers. Beside labyrinth seals other types of seals such as brush seals and carbon seals are used. Both the latter are contact type seals, that is, they may be installed with zero gap and lift during operation when they get pressurized. Brush seals particularly may even have an overlap with the rotating part. An original aero engine bearing chamber was modified by MTU Aero Engines to run with brush seals in a simulating rig in Munich. Two types of brush seals were used for testing: a) brush seal with bristles made of Kevlar fibers and b) with bristles made of steel. Both types were installed having an overlap to the rotor. The targets set were twofold: a) to measure the transient temperatures in the rotor and particularly in the contact zone between the bristles and the rotor and b) to calculate the heat generation by the seals which could enable predictions of the heat generation in future applications (i.e. scaling to bigger rotor diameters). To that effect numerical models using ANSYS CFX were created. Additionally, a coupled CFD and Finite Element Analysis (FEA) approach was applied to simulate flow and bristle’s behavior. In order to obtain the transient temperature measurements with high fidelity, a new pyrometric technique was developed and was applied for the first time in brush seals as reported in [5]. This technique has enabled positioning of the pyrometer [15] into the bristles pack of the seal adjacent to the rotating surface. The pyrometer can record the frictional temperature evolution in the bristles/rotor contact zone during accelerations or decelerations of the rotor. The sealing air demand can be reduced up to 97% with brush seals compared to traditional three fin labyrinth. It has been estimated that this can result in a reduction in fuel burned by up to 1%. Further, the reduction in air flow has additional potential benefits such as a possible simplification of the bearing chamber architecture (vent less chamber). Even though the rotor was accelerated up to 19500rpm, the temperature induced overshoots in the seal/rotor contact zone have caused no deterioration in either the materials or the oil. This work is part of the European Union funded research programme ELUBSYS (Engine LUBrication System TechnologieS) within the 7th EU Frame Programme for Aeronautics and Transport (AAT.2008.4.2.3). |
| Sponsorship | International Gas Turbine Institute |
| File Format | |
| ISBN | 9780791845738 |
| DOI | 10.1115/GT2014-25538 |
| Volume Number | Volume 5C: Heat Transfer |
| Conference Proceedings | ASME Turbo Expo 2014: Turbine Technical Conference and Exposition |
| Language | English |
| Publisher Date | 2014-06-16 |
| Publisher Place | Düsseldorf, Germany |
| Access Restriction | Subscribed |
| Subject Keyword | Temperature Blades Bearings Industrial lubrication systems Aircraft engines Fuels Machinery Engines Fibers Gas turbines Vents Turbochargers Pyrometers Testing Air conditioning Cooling Computational fluid dynamics Computer simulation Lubricants Rotors Sealing (process) Aeronautics Probability Compressors Steel Flow (dynamics) Carbon Pressure Contamination Transients (dynamics) Temperature measurement Heat Air flow Gears Fire Disks Finite element analysis Aircraft |
| Content Type | Text |
| Resource Type | Article |
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