MANUFACTURING METHOD FOR STRUT SHIELD COLLAR OF GAS TURBINE EXHAUST DIFFUSER
A method for casting a collar (44, 46) for a heat shield (36) of a strut (32) in a gas turbine exhaust section (20). A casting geometry (60, 70) is defined with extra wall thickness (56, 68) in an area of wall curvature (53, 54), which provides a flow path beyond a final geometry of the collar to facilitate a flow of molten metal in the mold (63, 64). The extra thickness is removed after casting, leaving the collar in its final geometry, which may have uniform wall thickness (T, T2). The extra thickness in the casting geometry may be provided by increased radius (R3) in the wall curvature and/or by casting feed portals (66, 68) that span the wall curvature between a tubular portion (50) and a flange (52) of the collar.
The invention relates to manufacturing methods for support structures in a gas turbine exhaust section, and particularly to manufacturing of end collars for exhaust diffuser strut shields.
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTIONA gas turbine (GT) exhaust diffuser is a divergent annular duct formed between inner and outer annular shells through which the exhaust gas passes. The cross-sectional area of the duct progressively increases in the flow direction. This serves to reduce the speed of the exhaust flow and increase its pressure. The exhaust gas may have a temperature of 550-650° C. or more. This causes thermal stresses on components of the exhaust section due to operational thermal gradients and cyclic fatigue from GT starts and shutdowns. Such stresses are concentrated at interconnections between support structures due to differential thermal expansion.
A circular array of struts span between the aft hub of the turbine shaft and the surrounding cylindrical case of the exhaust section. Each strut is surrounded by a heat shield connected between the inner and outer diffuser shells. Each shield is a tube with a cross section that surrounds the strut and provides coolant space along the strut. Stress concentrations occur in a collar at each end of the heat shield. The collars attach the heat shield to the respective diffuser shell.
Components in the exhaust flow path are often made of superalloy materials. These are metal alloys that maintain strength and resist creep, corrosion, and oxidation at high temperatures. The base element is usually nickel, cobalt, or nickel-iron. An example is the Inconel® family of austenitic nickel-chromium based superalloys. Such materials are difficult to cast in complex thin-wall shapes because they solidify quickly around sharp corners of a mold, resulting in low yield and/or defects. Pressure and/or vacuum may be used to accelerate the casting flow, but this adds expense compared to a gravity feed casting process.
The invention is explained in the following description in view of the drawings that show:
Because the collars have complex geometries and relatively thin wall thicknesses, it has traditionally been necessary to design such collars to have varying wall thicknesses in different portions of the collar to facilitate the flow of molten metal during casting in order to achieve acceptable casting yield rates. The present inventors have realized that such prior art collars generate undesired levels of stress during thermal transients due to their varying wall thicknesses. In order to reduce such stress, the present inventors have developed collars 44 with more uniform wall thicknesses than in prior art designs, and have further developed manufacturing methods which allow such complex, thin-wall components to be cast successfully.
While various embodiments of the present invention have been shown and described herein, it will be obvious that such embodiments are provided by way of example only. Numerous variations, changes and substitutions may be made without departing from the invention herein. Accordingly, it is intended that the invention be limited only by the spirit and scope of the appended claims.
Claims
1. A method for manufacturing a collar for a gas turbine exhaust diffuser strut shield, the method comprising:
- casting the collar of metal in a mold that provides a flow path defining a casting geometry of the collar in excess of a final geometry of the collar, wherein the flow path facilitates a flow of the metal through a casting restriction region into the final geometry; and then
- removing excess metal beyond the final geometry to conform the collar to the final geometry.
2. The method of claim 1, wherein:
- the metal is a superalloy;
- the flow path in excess of the final geometry enables the flow of the superalloy into the mold without pressure or vacuum assistance; and
- the casting is performed by gravity feed without pressure or vacuum assistance.
3. The method of claim 1, wherein:
- the final geometry of the collar comprises a tubular portion with a flared flange on one end thereof and a smoothly curved transition there between;
- the flange is disposed at an oblique angle relative to the tubular portion, and the transition varies from an area of lesser curvature angle on a first side of the tubular portion to an area of greater curvature angle on a second side thereof; and
- the flow path in excess of the final geometry comprises space in the mold for an extra wall thickness in the collar along the area of greater curvature angle, and the removing step removes the extra wall thickness.
4. The method of claim 3, wherein the extra wall thickness is provided by increasing a radius of curvature of an exterior surface of the curved transition in the casting geometry over the final geometry.
5. The method of claim 3, further comprising providing the tubular portion and the welding flange with a uniform wall thickness in the final geometry.
6. The method of claim 3, wherein the curvature angle is less than 85 degrees on the first side of the tubular portion and greater than 100 degrees on the second side thereof.
7. The method of claim 3, further comprising casting the collar in a superalloy material that cannot flow around the area of greater curvature angle in the final geometry by gravity, but can flow around the area of greater curvature angle in the casting geometry via the flow path in excess of the final geometry by gravity.
8. The method of claim 1, wherein:
- the final geometry of the collar comprises a tubular portion with a flared flange on one end thereof and a smoothly curved transition there between;
- the flange is disposed at an oblique angle relative to the tubular portion, and the transition varies from an area of lesser curvature angle on a first side of the tubular portion to an area of greater curvature angle on a second side thereof; and
- further comprising providing the flow path in excess of the final geometry by providing a plurality of mold feed portals, at least some of which span between the tubular portion and the flange across the transition area of greater curvature angle.
9. The method of claim 8, further comprising providing the tubular portion and the welding flange with a uniform wall thickness in the final geometry.
10. The method of claim 1, further comprising providing the final geometry with a uniform maximum thickness dimension around a curved transition area between a tubular portion and an oblique flared flange on an end of the tubular portion.
11. A product formed by the method of claim 1.
12. A product formed by the method of claim 3.
13. A product formed by the method of claim 8.
14. A method for manufacturing a collar for a gas turbine exhaust diffuser strut shield, the method comprising:
- casting the collar in a casting geometry with extra wall thickness beyond that of a final geometry of the collar in a curved transition area between a tubular portion and an oblique flared flange on an end of the tubular portion, wherein the extra wall thickness facilitates a flow of a molten metal into the final geometry; and
- removing the extra wall thickness beyond the final geometry, leaving the final geometry with a uniform maximum thickness dimension around the curved transition area.
15. The method of claim 14, further comprising:
- providing the final geometry with the transition area varying from a curvature angle of less than 85 degrees on a first side of the collar to a curvature angle of greater than 100 degrees on a second side of the collar;
- the extra wall thickness is provided in the transition area on at least the second side of the collar;
- and the removing step leaves the final geometry with the uniform maximum thickness dimension in the transition area around both the first and second sides of the collar.
16. A product formed by the process of claim 15.
17. The method of claim 15, further comprising providing the extra wall thickness in the casting geometry by a plurality of casting feed portals that span across the transition area between the tubular portion and the flange on an inner surface of the casting geometry.
18. A product formed by the process of claim 17.
19. The method of claim 14, further comprising providing the transition area in the final geometry with a curvature of compound radius having a relatively shorter radius adjacent the tubular portion and a relatively longer radius adjacent the flange.
20. The method of claim 14, further comprising checking for the final geometry during the removing step with a manual template comprising an edge with a curvature of the transition area of the final geometry.
Type: Application
Filed: Aug 7, 2013
Publication Date: Feb 12, 2015
Inventors: Yevgeniy Shteyman (West Palm Beach, FL), Matthew R. Porter (West Palm Beach, FL), Mrinal Munshi (Orlando, FL), Douglas R. Roth (Oviedo, FL), Timothy J. Stewart, JR. (Charlotte, NC)
Application Number: 13/961,029
International Classification: F01D 25/08 (20060101); B22D 31/00 (20060101); B22D 25/02 (20060101);