A Microwave Blade Tip Clearance Sensor for Active Clearance Control Applications

Author(s):  
Jonathan Geisheimer ◽  
Scott Billington ◽  
David Burgess
Author(s):  
Richard Grzybowski ◽  
George Foyt ◽  
Hartwig Knoell ◽  
William Atkinson ◽  
Josef Wenger

This paper describes the development of a Microwave Tip Clearance Measurement System for use in the gas turbine environment Applications for this sensor include basic tip clearance measurements, seal wear measurement and active blade tip clearance control in gas turbine engines. The system being developed was designed for useful operation to temperatures exceeding 1093°F, since only ceramic materials are directly exposed in the gas path. Other advantages of this microwave approach to blade tip clearance sensing include the existence of an inherent self-calibration in the sensor that permits accurate operation despite temperature variations and possible abrasion by the rotating blades. Earlier experiments designed to simulate this abrasion of the sensor head indicated that rubs as deep as 1 mm (40 mils) were easily tolerated. In addition, unlike methods based upon phase measurements, this method is very insensitive to cable vibration and length variations. Finally, this microwave technique is expected to be insensitive to fuel and other engine contamination, since it is based on the measurement of resonant frequencies, which are only slightly affected by moderate values of loss due to contamination.


Author(s):  
Weimin Wang ◽  
Huajin Shao ◽  
Xing Shao ◽  
Kailiang Song

Blade tip clearance (BTC) measurement and active clearance control (ACC) have been and continue to be a fundamental concern in turbomachinery, which are closely bound up with the efficiency and reliability. This paper addresses the BTC measurement and ACC experimental study based on eddy current pulse-trigger method (ECPTM). And the implementation of ACC by axial displacement of the blisk is novel and this paper is the first to present the technique. The purpose of this paper is three fold. The first portion of this paper addresses the BTC measurement in different rotating speeds based on the larger scale rig, where a high-bandwidth (100 kHz) eddy current sensor (HECS) is employed. The results show that the relative errors of BTC values are not much bigger than 20%. The result indicates that ECPTM is more generally applicable in the condition where the eddy current sensor (ECS) is insufficient sampling caused by the limit of narrow bandwidth, especially under the high linear velocity condition. The second portion of this paper describes the ACC system where an electro-hydraulic proportional position control system (EHPPCS) is employed as the actuator. EHPPCS has the advantages of small size, fast response, resistance to load stiffness, large output and simple operation, which is widely applicable to the automatic control system of industrial power. This system optimizes the geometry shapes of casing and the blade tips to create a linear relationship of BTC values related to the axial displacement of the rotor. The BTC values can be transferred into axial displacement of the rotor, and then a voltage/current-BTC values characteristic can be obtained by employing EHPPCS in different rotating speeds. Unfortunately, one of the core components of EHPPCS is an overflow valve with a non-linear and time-variable voltage/current-pressure characteristic. Besides, the pressure-axial displacement characteristic of tilting pad thrust bearing is also non-linear. All those non-linear characteristics make it unsatisfactory to use the conventional PID control algorithm to achieve effective control of the system, which cause many difficulties in controlling of axial displacement of the rotor. So the last portion of this paper is the experimental study on ACC based on the above system by adopting sliding mode adaptive control of nonlinear system (SMACNS). The BTC values have been obtained under different outlet pressures by changing the current in different rotating speeds. The results indicate that this approach has nice robustness and smooth controlled quantity, and can overcome the difficulty caused by nonlinearity, parameter uncertainty and load disturbance. And then, the precision verification and error analysis are made. However, this work is a proof-of-concept demonstration using a laboratory setup providing the basis for BTC active control and blade health monitoring (BHM) based on ECS.


Author(s):  
Wei Zhao ◽  
Xiuming Sui ◽  
Kai Zhang ◽  
Zeming Wei ◽  
Qingjun Zhao

In order to develop a tip clearance control system for an uncooled vaneless counter-rotating turbine, tip clearance variation of its high pressure rotor blade at off-design conditions is analyzed. Aero-thermal interaction simulation is performed to predict the temperature and deformation of the solid blade. At operating conditions with rotating speeds greater than 60% design value and expansion ratios greater than 85% design value, the blade tip clearance height at leading edge remains unchanged when the expansion ratio decreases, meanwhile that at trailing edge decreased obviously. However, the tip clearance height variations at the leading edge and trailing edge are almost the same in a conventional subsonic turbine at such conditions. The cause is that the flow in the high-pressure rotor is choked at these conditions. The choked flow results in that the fluid and solid blade temperatures upstream of the throat are not affected by the back pressure and only those downstream of the throat increases with the back pressure. Consequently, the blade height at leading edge keeps constant, and that at trailing edge varies because of thermal expansion. To avoid the rubbing of the blade and case, the blade height at trailing edge is diminished by 30%. As a result, the blade tip clearance height at low speed operating conditions increases in axial direction. Such a design leads to a stronger tip leakage flow. More flow losses might be generated. Therefore, a casing cooling method is proposed to control the blade tip clearance height at leading edge and trailing edge respectively. The deformations of the casing with different mass flow rate of cooling air at design and off-design conditions are calculated. It shows that the blade tip clearance heights at leading edge and at trailing edge of the rotor can be well controlled with appropriate amount of cooling air.


2005 ◽  
Vol 21 (3) ◽  
pp. 552-563 ◽  
Author(s):  
Scott B. Lattime ◽  
Bruce M. Steinetz ◽  
Malcolm G. Robbie

2010 ◽  
Vol 139-141 ◽  
pp. 2469-2472 ◽  
Author(s):  
Bing Hui Jia ◽  
Xiao Dong Zhang

The tip clearance flow of axial turbomachines is important for their aerodynamic and maneuver performance. And the tip clearance gap leakage flow is of continuing concern in reducing efficiency losses that occur within turbines. In order to gain significant reductions in emissions and specific fuel consumption as well as dramatic improvements in operating efficiency and increased service life of aero-engine, variation mechanism of blade tip clearance was analyzed and the equation of dynamic clearance was shown firstly, then the effect of rotor vibration in clearance variation which include flight loads and engine loads was studied in this paper; based on the dynamic measurements of blade tip clearance, a method that ensure tip clearance at optimal state in given mission profile through active rotor vibration control and active tip clearance control was presented. Besides, fuzzy control theory was used to solve the high nonlinear variation of tip clearance. The analysis result shows that this technique is useful.


Materials ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 12 (21) ◽  
pp. 3552 ◽  
Author(s):  
Chun-Yi Zhang ◽  
Jing-Shan Wei ◽  
Ze Wang ◽  
Zhe-Shan Yuan ◽  
Cheng-Wei Fei ◽  
...  

To reveal the effect of high-temperature creep on the blade-tip radial running clearance of aeroengine high-pressure turbines, a distributed collaborative generalized regression extremum neural network is proposed by absorbing the heuristic thoughts of distributed collaborative response surface method and the generalized extremum neural network, in order to improve the reliability analysis of blade-tip clearance with creep behavior in terms of modeling precision and simulation efficiency. In this method, the generalized extremum neural network was used to handle the transients by simplifying the response process as one extremum and to address the strong nonlinearity by means of its nonlinear mapping ability. The distributed collaborative response surface method was applied to handle multi-object multi-discipline analysis, by decomposing one “big” model with hyperparameters and high nonlinearity into a series of “small” sub-models with few parameters and low nonlinearity. Based on the developed method, the blade-tip clearance reliability analysis of an aeroengine high-pressure turbine was performed subject to the creep behaviors of structural materials, by considering the randomness of influencing parameters such as gas temperature, rotational speed, material parameters, convective heat transfer coefficient, and so forth. It was found that the reliability degree of the clearance is 0.9909 when the allowable value is 2.2 mm, and the creep deformation of the clearance presents a normal distribution with a mean of 1.9829 mm and a standard deviation of 0.07539 mm. Based on a comparison of the methods, it is demonstrated that the proposed method requires a computing time of 1.201 s and has a computational accuracy of 99.929% over 104 simulations, which are improvements of 70.5% and 1.23%, respectively, relative to the distributed collaborative response surface method. Meanwhile, the high efficiency and high precision of the presented approach become more obvious with the increasing simulations. The efforts of this study provide a promising approach to improve the dynamic reliability analysis of complex structures.


Author(s):  
Eric B. Holmquist ◽  
Peter L. Jalbert

New and future gas turbine engines are being required to provide greater thrust with improved efficiency, while simultaneously reducing life cycle operating costs. Improved component capabilities enable active control methods to provide better control of engine operation with reduced margin. One area of interest is a means to assess the relative position of rotating machinery in real-time, in particular hot section turbo machinery. To this end, Hamilton Sundstrand is working to develop a real-time means to monitor blade position relative to the engine static structure. This approach may yield other engine operating characteristics useful in assessing component health, specifically measuring blade tip clearance, time-of-arrival, and other parameters. UTC is leveraging its many years of experience with engine control systems to develop a microwave-based sensing device, applicable to both military and commercial engines. The presentation will discuss a hot section engine demonstration of a blade position monitoring system and the control system implications posed by a microwave-based solution. Considerations necessary to implement such a system and the challenges associated with integrating a microwave-based sensor system into an engine control system are discussed.


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