BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
1. Field of the Invention
[0001] The present invention relates to a blade-implanting structure for a compressor that
is a constituent element of a gas turbine.
2. Description of the Related Art
[0002] Gas turbines generally have a compressor to compress and deliver air to a combustor.
The compressor is internally provided with a compressor rotor rotating around a central
axis of a gas turbine. In the compressor, an implanting portion of a rotor blade is
fixedly fitted into a circumferential groove portion provided on a rotor wheel. Incidentally,
a conventional technique relating to the rotor blade securing structure is described
in e.g.
JP-63-273000-A.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
[0003] While the gas turbine operates, the rotor blade of the gas turbine compressor is
subjected to centrifugal force caused by its own weight and to a large pressure load
on its high-pressure side. In addition, vibration stress acts on the dovetail portion
of the blade due to the exciting force caused by irregular pressure variations that
occur during start-up. As a result, fatigue damage may result.
[0004] Conventionally, the surface on which the dovetail portion of the blade receives load
wholly bears such load. However, high stress occurs at a contact end portion between
the blade-load-receiving surface and the wheel-load-receiving surface of a wheel.
Since such a contact end portion suffers fretting damage resulting from abrasion in
addition to high stress, reliability in fatigue strength is likely to lower.
[0005] In view of the above, it is desirable to apply to an actual machine a blade-groove
structure capable of providing higher reliability.
[0006] It is an object of the present invention to provide a compressor that can reduce
stress occurring at a contact end portion between a blade and a wheel to suppress
lowering of fatigue strength reliability resulting from fretting.
[0007] To achieve the above object, the compressor according to the present invention is
characterized in that a portion on the circumferential outside and radial outside of a contact end portion
with a blade is removed from a wheel.
[0008] More specifically, the compressor includes a rotor blade secured to an outer circumferential
side of a wheel and a stator blade secured to an inner circumferential side of a casing
incorporating the wheel. The rotor blade includes a blade portion, a platform portion
joined to a root side of the blade portion and having planes parallel to a centrifugal-force
load direction of the blade portion, and a dovetail portion which merges with the
platform portion, is located radially inward of the platform portion and is increased
in width outwardly from the parallel planes of the platform portion. The dovetail
portion is fixedly inserted into a blade securing groove formed on the outer circumferential
side of the wheel. In addition, the wheel is formed with a groove portion or a hollow
portion in an area that is located on a circumferential outside of a radial outside
contact end portion of the blade securing groove with the dovetail portion and that
includes a radial outside of the radial outside contact end portion.
[0009] With the blade groove structure described above, rigidity of the wheel side at a
position close to the contact end portion between the wheel and the blade is reduced
to reduce the occurrence of stress. Thus, the lowering of fatigue life reliability
resulting from fretting can be avoided.
[0010] The present invention can provide the compressor that can reduce stress occurring
at the contact end portion between the wheel and the blade to suppress the lowering
of fatigue strength reliability resulting from fretting.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0011]
Fig. 1 is a cross-sectional diagram viewed from an axial direction that shows structural
details of an implanting portion of a rotor blade of a compressor according to a first
embodiment of the present invention.
Fig. 2 is a cross-sectional diagram that shows a configurational example of a typical
gas turbine.
Fig. 3 is a cross-sectional diagram viewed from an axial direction that shows a typical
fitting structure between a rotor blade and a wheel as a comparative example.
Fig. 4 illustrates a stress distribution occurring in a structure of the comparative
example.
Fig. 5A is a graph showing the results of mock-up fatigue tests of the first embodiment
and the comparative example by simulating the loads of an actual machine.
Fig. 5B illustrates the comparative example.
Fig. 5C illustrates the first embodiment of the present invention.
Fig. 6 illustrates a second embodiment of the present invention.
Fig. 7 illustrates a third embodiment of the present invention.
Fig. 8 illustrates a fourth embodiment of the present invention.
DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS
[0012] Preferred embodiments of the present invention will hereinafter be described with
reference to the drawings.
[0013] Fig. 2 is a configurational cross-sectional view of a gas turbine. A gas turbine
is mainly composed of a compressor 1, a combustor 2 and a turbine 3. The compressor
1 adiabatically compresses, as working fluid, air sucked from the atmosphere. The
combustor 2 mixes fuel with the compressed air delivered from the compressor 1 and
burns the mixture to produce high temperature and high pressure air.
[0014] The turbine 3 generates rotational power when the combustion gas introduced from
the combustor 2 expands. The exhaust gas from the turbine 3 is discharged into the
atmosphere. The compressor 1 includes a rotor blade 1b secured to an outer circumferential
side of a wheel 7 (shown in fig. 3 described later), a casing 1a incorporating the
wheel 7, and a stator blade 1c secured to an inner circumferential side of the casing
1a.
[0015] Fig. 3 illustrates a blade-groove structure of a common compressor as a comparative
example. This fig. 3 is an enlarged diagram that shows an installation state of the
rotor blade 1b shown in fig. 2. The rotor blade 1b includes a blade portion 14, a
platform portion 4b joined to a root side (lower side in Fig. 3) of the blade portion
14, and a dovetail portion 4a fixedly inserted into a blade securing groove 15 formed
on the outer circumferential side (upper side in Fig. 3) of the wheel 7. In the structure
in Fig. 3, a groove portion or a hollow portion described later is not formed in the
wheel 7. Then, a blade-load-receiving surface 5 of the dovetail portion 4a wholly
bears centrifugal force caused by its own weight of the blade portion 14 and a load
relating to exciting force caused by irregular pressure variations that occur during
the start-up. However, as seen from a distribution 6 of the stress corresponding to
the blade-load-receiving surface shown in Fig. 4, high stress occurs at a radial outside
contact end portion 9a between the blade-load-receiving surface 5 and a wheel load
receiving surface 8 of the wheel 7. Since such a contact end portion 9a suffers fretting
damage resulting from abrasion in addition to high stress, reliability in fatigue
strength is likely to lower.
[0016] To eliminate such disadvantages, the present invention is devised such that a wheel
7 is formed with a groove portion or a hollow portion formed in an area that is located
on a circumferential outside (a widthwise outside of a platform portion 4b) of a radial
outside contact end portion 9a of a blade securing groove 15 with a dovetail portion
4a and that includes a radial outside of the contact end portion 9a. The specific
examples thereof are described below.
[Embodiment 1]
[0017] Fig. 1 illustrates a blade groove structure of a compressor that exhibits the most
characteristic feature of the present invention, as a first embodiment of the present
invention. As shown in the figure, a root portion of a rotor blade is formed to have
a platform portion 4b having planes 11 (circumferential end faces) parallel to a centrifugal-force
load direction of the blade (an upward direction in Fig.1) and a dovetail portion
4a flaring radially inward of the wheel (toward a lower side in Fig. 1) from the platform
portion 4b and outwardly from the parallel planes 11 (in a left-right direction in
Fig. 1). In a fitting portion between a wheel 7 and the dovetail portion 4a of the
blade, a groove portion 10 is provided in an area that is located on the circumferential
outside (the outside of left-right direction in Fig. 1) of a radial outside contact
end portion 9a of the wheel 7 with the dovetail portion 4a (the blade) and that includes
the radial outside (the upper side in Fig. 1) of the contact end portion 9a. The groove
portion 10 includes a first straight-line part 10a extending toward the circumferential
outside from the contact end portion 9a, a second straight-line part 10b extending
toward the radial outside from the straight-line part 10a, and a curve part 10c connecting
these straight-line parts together. Incidentally, it is desirable that the groove
portion 10 be formed in an area including the circumferential inside (the inside of
left-right direction in Fig. 1) of a radial inside contact end portion 9b with the
dovetail portion 4a. With this structure, since the rigidity of the contact end of
the wheel is lowered, the stress at the contact end portion 9a can be reduced.
[0018] Fig. 5A is a graph showing the results of mock-up fatigue tests simulating centrifugal
force occurring at the blade groove portion of each of the structures of the present
embodiment (Fig. 5C) and a comparative example (Fig. 5B). Test results are made dimensionless
using the results of the structure of the comparative example. The present results
show that the use of the structure of the present embodiment improves a fatigue life
about six times that of the shape of the comparative example.
[Embodiment 2]
[0019] A second embodiment of the present invention is shown in Fig. 6. The second embodiment
is
characterized in that a portion extending from a radial outside contact end portion 9a to the outer circumference
of a wheel 7 is removed from the wheel 7 so as to gradually increase a circumferential
distance from a circumferential end face 11 of a platform portion 4b of a rotor blade
as it goes toward the radial outside of the wheel (upward in Fig. 6) from the contact
end portion 9a with a dovetail portion 4a of a rotor blade, thereby providing a groove
portion 10 in the wheel 7. This can suppress the lowering of strength at a position
close to the contact surface of the wheel with the blade compared with that of the
first embodiment.
[Embodiment 3]
[0020] A third embodiment of the present invention is shown in Fig. 7. A groove portion
12 of a wheel 7 is provided that is formed by a straight line parallel to a blade
load-receiving surface 5 and straight lines extending from both respective ends thereof
toward the radial outside of the wheel. This can make a wheel-side opening portion
small or eliminate it, thereby making it possible to reduce an influence on the flow
of turbine working fluid.
[Embodiment 4]
[0021] A fourth embodiment of the present invention is described in Fig. 8. A hollow portion
13 of a wheel 7 is formed in an area that is located on a radial outside of a contact
surface between the wheel and a dovetail portion 4a of a rotor blade. For example,
a circular or elliptical hole as shown in Fig. 8 is provided as the hollow portion
13. Thus, similarly to the third embodiment, stress at a contact end portion 9a can
be reduced and an influence on a turbine working fluid can be suppressed.
[0022] In the embodiments described above, it is believed that the deformation of the contact
end portion 9a of the wheel can achieve a reduction in stress. It is desirable, therefore,
that the groove and the hollow portion (the hole) be located radially above the contact
surface. However, it is necessary to appropriately set the size and position of the
groove portion or the hollow portion taking into consideration the load conditions
of an actual machine, the strength of material to be applied and the like.
[0023] Methods of increasing the fatigue strength of the area having reduced rigidity include
application of compressive residual stress by shot peening or water jet peening and
surface modification by friction stir.
[0024] Features, components and specific details of the structures of the above-described
embodiments may be exchanged or combined to form further embodiments optimized for
the respective application. As far as those modifications are apparent for an expert
skilled in the art they shall be disclosed implicitly by the above description without
specifying explicitly every possible combination.
1. A compressor comprising:
a rotor blade (1b) secured to an outer circumferential side of a wheel (7); and
a stator blade (1c) secured to an inner circumferential side of a casing incorporating
the wheel (7);
wherein the rotor blade (1b) includes:
a blade portion (14);
a platform portion (4b) joined to a root side of the blade portion (14) and having
planes (11) parallel to a centrifugal-force load direction of the blade portion (14);
and
a dovetail portion (4a) which merges with the platform portion (4b), is located radially
inward of the platform portion (4b) and is increased in width outwardly from the parallel
planes of the platform portion (4b), the dovetail portion (4a) being fixedly inserted
into a blade securing groove (15) formed on the outer circumferential side of the
wheel (7), and
wherein the wheel (7) is formed with a groove portion (10) or a hollow portion (13)
in an area that is located on a circumferential outside of a radial outside contact
end portion of the blade securing groove (15) with the dovetail portion (4a) and that
includes a radial outside of the radial outside contact end portion (9a).
2. The compressor according to claim 1,
wherein the wheel (7) is formed with the groove portion (10) or the hollow portion
(13) in an area including a circumferential inside of a radial inside contact end
portion of the blade securing groove (15) with the dovetail portion (4a).
3. The compressor according to claim 1 or 2,
wherein the groove portion (10) is formed by a first straight-line part extending
circumferentially outward from the radial outside contact end portion (9a), a second
straight-line part extending radially outward, and a curved part connecting the first
and second straight-line parts together.
4. The compressor according to claim 1 or 2,
wherein the groove portion (10) is formed such that a distance from the parallel plane
of the platform portion (4b) is gradually increased as the groove portion (10) goes
toward the radial outside from the radial outside contact end portion (9a).
5. The compressor according to at least one of claims 1 to 4,
wherein the groove portion (10) or the hollow portion (13) is subjected to compressive
residual stress by shot peening.
6. The compressor according to at least one of claims 1 to 4,
wherein the groove portion (10) or the hollow portion (13) has a surface subjected
to surface modification by friction stir.