The turbine is at the heart of any jet engine with its primary task
being to drive the compressor. As described previously without
the compressor no mechanical work would be done on the fluid prior combustion
and the thrust produced would only be a function of the chemical energy stored
within the fuel. The hot combustion gases that enter the turbine directly after
the combustion chamber are expanded across a series of vanes and stators, known
as a stage, similar to the compressor. In the case of a turbine the fluid is
expanded to extract useful work and therefore the pressure of the fluid falls
across each turbine stage. Since the fluid is not working against an adverse
(rising) pressure gradient boundary layer separation over the aerofoils of the
turbine blades is not as critical such that turbine blades
can have much moreagressive angles of attack
with respect to the flow. Consequently, the pressure ratio across a turbine
stage can be much higher than across a compressor stage and it quite common for
a single turbine stage to drive six or seven compressor stages. The amount of
power that can be extracted from a turbine stage is tremendous and a single
turbine blade (not the full rotor of blades) may contribute up
to 250 bhp [1]. The biggest driver behind
the progress in turbine technology since Whittle’s first engine in the 1930’s
has been the development of advanced cooling methods and the use of
high-temperature alloys.
Similar to compressors axial turbines seen on most modern jet airliners
are more efficient than their radial counterparts at higher flow rates.
However, radial turbines are still being used on modern aircraft for auxiliary
power units. Figure 1 below shows a single-shaft three-stage axial turbine i.e.
the three turbine stages drive all of the compressor stages through a single
shaft.
Fig. 1. Triple Stage Turbine [2]
The hot gases that exist the combustion chamber and impinge on the first
row of nozzle guide vanes that turn the flow into the rotating turbine blades
at the optimal angle to extract the most amount of work. Each stage of vanes
and blades expands the flow thereby resulting in a drop in enthalpy (total
amount of energy in the combustion gases) and a transfer of work from the fluid
to the turbine. For simple jet engines the overall performance of the engine is
more effectively enhanced by developing the compressor stages. However for
large by-pass turbofan engines turbine aerodynamic design is crucial. Figure 2
shows the velocity triangles for the flow passing through a single turbine
stage. Separate turbine rows are typically placed very close together, around
20% of a blade chord [1], and the tangential velocity of the rotor blades w*r (w is
the rotational speed and r the radius of the blades) is close
to the local speed of sound.
Fig. 2. Velocity triangles for turbine stage [2]
The main function of the stator is not to do work but to add swirl to
the flow into order to convert some of its internal heat into kinetic energy.
The turbine rotor then extracts work from the flow by removing the kinetic
energy associated with the swirl velocity. In the global reference frame of the
engine the flow into the stator and rotor is highly unsteady and of great
complexity. However, in a frame of reference fixed to a rotating blade it can
be assumed to be fairly steady with sufficient accuracy. For the first row of
stators (or nozzle guide vanes) the flow impinges parallel to the axial flow
direction and is consequently turned through angle βb with
respect to the axial direction by the stator. Thus the flow leaves the stator
at with a velocity Vb with
respect to the stator which is equivalent to a velocity V’b at
an angle β’b with respect to the rotating blade. At optimum design
condition β’b is equal to the angle of rotor blade. V’c and
β’c are the relative exit speed and blade angle
respectively, such that the turning angle is equal to β’b –
β’c. An important design parameter for turbine performance is
the blade coefficient φ, which is the ratio of the total temperature drop (which is proportional to the work done)
across a stage divided by the kinetic energy of the rotor.
High efficiency are achieved with lower temperature drops per stage and
therefore smaller values of φ and lower turning angles β’b –
β’c. However large values of φ are required to reduce the
number of stages and keep the weight of the engine down. Consequently a
compromise has to be struck between optimising thermodynamic efficiency and
weight.
If the high pressure of the fluid exiting the combustion chamber were
expanded in a single stage a very high velocity close to 1500 m/s [1] would be
produced, which due to losses associated with supersonic shock waves, would be
impossible to use efficiently. Therefore the turbine stages make a series of
incremental expansions resulting in flows just over the local speed of sound,
which, as shown by the velocity triangles, is apparently reduced on entry to
the next stage as a result of the change in reference frame. Thus the velocity
triangles show that the velocity leaving the stator Vb is high
in the frame of reference appropriate to the stator but much lower when seen at
the rotor entry V’b .
Similarly the velocity leaving the rotor is high in its relative frame of
reference V’c. but lower in the absolute frame appropriate to the
stator Vc. Thus
each of the turbine rows takes in a flow which is almost axial down the engine
and turns it towards the tangential thereby reducing the effective
cross-sectional flow area, which, by conservation of momentum, must result in
an increase in fluid velocity.
Turbine Stresses
The turbine inlet blades of the first stage are the most likely to
determine the life of the engine since they are exerted to the highest fluid
temperatures, highest rotational speeds and highest aerodynamic loads. Stresses
in the rotor blades also place restrictions on the allowable blade heights and
annulus flow area. The gross of the mechanical stresses arise from the
centrifugal stresses of the rotating turbine and bending moments exerted by the
flowing gases, which unfortunately are both maximum at the blade root. The
problem of centrifugal root stress was previously discussed for compressor
blades. The turbine blades are of course tuned such that none of its natural
frequencies coincide with any rotational or fluid excitation frequencies
so as to prevent resonant behaviour. The gas turbine produces higher specific
power and thus efficiency as the turbine entry temperature (TET) of the gas
exiting the combustion chamber is increased. Of course the TET is bounded by
the metallurgy of the turbine blade materials. The TET has increased from
around 800°C in 1940 to 1500°C in the 1994 Rolls-Royce Trent engine. This
development has in part been due to better materials but more importantly
through channelling of cold
compressor air to cool the turbine blades.
In this high temperature environment the life of the turbine blades is
limited by creep, which is the continual and gradual extension of a material
under constant load over time. Apart from distorting the physical dimensions
and thereby reducing performance of the engine, the induced creep stresses
exacerbate the centrifugal operating stresses and will therefore lead to
premature failure of the material. Under ambient temperature creep is often
only a factor for elastomers and other plastics, but at higher temperatures the
effects become increasingly more pronounced for metals as well. A rule of thumb
is that the blade life is halved (for a specific blade material and cooling
technology) for each 10°C rise in temperature of the metal [1]. In the early
days of turbine technology blades were forged but later cast for better high
temperature performance. It was then found that by elongating the metal
crystals along the direction of the span, creating so called directionally
solidified blades, resulted in further improvements in creep performance. The
standard technique for high-performance blades is to cast the blade out of a
single crystal as shown in Figure 3 below. Metals may deform by separate
crystals slipping along grain boundaries, such that removing the grain
boundaries all together results in great improvements in resisting creep
deformation.
Fig. 3. The microstructure of the three different turbine
blades [4].
A typical alloy used for turbine blades today is Inconel, a
nickel-based alloying containing 13% chromium, 6% iron, with small amounts of
manganese, silicon and copper. These metallurgical advances account for some of
the improvements in driving up TET and turbine efficiency. The other very
interesting and complicated technology are blade-cooling techniques. But that
is a topic for another article all together.