• Title/Summary/Keyword: turbine blade failure

Search Result 79, Processing Time 0.025 seconds

Design Technique for Improving the Durability of Top Coating for Thermal Barrier of Gas Turbine (가스터빈의 열차폐용 탑코팅의 내구성 향상 설계기술)

  • Koo, Jae-Mean;Seok, Chang-Sung
    • Journal of the Korean Society for Precision Engineering
    • /
    • v.31 no.1
    • /
    • pp.15-20
    • /
    • 2014
  • Thermal barrier coating (TBC) is used to protect the substrate and extend the operating life of the gas turbine for a power plant and an aircraft. The major cause of failure of such a coating is the spallation of coating, and it results from the thermal stress between top coating and bond coating. To improve the durability of TBC system, the dense vertical cracked (DVC) coating method to insert vertical cracks is applied to a gas turbine blade. In this study, a criterion for the design of vertical crack in the DVC coating was presented using the finite element analysis.

Evaluation of high temperature tensile behavior and LCF properties of stainless steel for turbine disks (터빈 디스크용 스테인리스강의 고온 인장 및 저주기 피로 물성 측정)

  • Im, H.D.;Park, C.K.;Lee, K.;Rhim, S.H.;Kim, C.T.
    • Proceedings of the Korean Society for Technology of Plasticity Conference
    • /
    • 2007.10a
    • /
    • pp.334-337
    • /
    • 2007
  • Austenitic stainless steel is used as high temperature components such as gas turbine blade and disk because of its good thermal resistance. In the present investigation, tensile and low cycle fatigue(LCF) behavior of stainless steel for turbine disks was studied at wide temperature range $20^{\circ}C\;{\sim}\;750^{\circ}C$. In the tensile tests, it was shown that elastic modulus, yield strength, ultimate tensile strength decreased when temperature increased. The effect on fatigue failure of the parameters such as plastic strain amplitude, stress amplitude and plastic strain energy density was also investigated. Coffin-Manson and Morrow models were used to adjust experimental data and predict the fatigue life behavior at different mean strain values during cyclic loading of high temperature components.

  • PDF

Fracture Mechanism of Gas Turbine Compressor Blades in a Combined Cycle Power Plant (복합화력발전소 가스터빈 압축기 블레이드에 대한 손상원인 고찰)

  • Yang, Kyeong-Hyeon;Song, Oh-Seop;Cho, Cheul-Whan;Yun, Wan-No;Jung, Nam-Geun
    • Transactions of the Korean Society for Noise and Vibration Engineering
    • /
    • v.20 no.11
    • /
    • pp.1025-1032
    • /
    • 2010
  • Gas turbine compressor blades used in a combined cycle power plant are possibly damaged and fractured during their operation. There are two possible causes of the failure of compressor blades; one is a defect of material quality which can be detected through some microscopic inspections for the fracture section, the other is high cycle fatigue problem caused by vibration and can be diagnosed by carrying out dynamic characteristics analysis for the blades. In this paper, in order to determine the cause of the failure of compressor blades in a combined cycle power plant, examination of the fracture section and the propagation mechanism of the crack via stress analysis are performed. Dynamic characteristics analysis via FRF estimation is also performed to identify the cause of failure.

A Study on the Accelerated Life Test of Yaw Gearbox for Wind Turbine (풍력발전기용 Yaw gearbox의 가속 수명시험에 관한 연구)

  • Yong-Bum Lee;G. C. Lee;J. J. Lee;S. Y. Lim
    • Journal of Drive and Control
    • /
    • v.21 no.1
    • /
    • pp.16-21
    • /
    • 2024
  • The yaw gearbox is a key device in a wind power generator that improves power generation efficiency by rotating hundreds of tons (400 to 600 tons) of nacelle so that the blade reaches 90 degrees in the wind direction. Recently, installation sites have been advancing from land to sea as they have become super-large at (8-12) MW to increase the economic feasibility of wind power generators and utilize excellent wind resources, and the target life of large wind power generators is 25 to 30 years. The yaw gearbox of 6 to 12 sets is installed in a very complex place inside the nacelle on the tower with parallels, and it is important to secure the reliability of the yaw gearbox because if a failure occurs after installation, it costs tens to hundreds of times the price of a new product to restore. In this study, equivalent loads were calculated by analyzing failure mode and field data, accelerated life test conditions were established, and a test device was constructed to perform the accelerated life tests and performance tests to ensure the reliability of the gearbox.

Vibration Analysis of wind turbine gearbox with frequency response analysis (주파수 응답해석을 통한 풍력발전기용 기어박스의 동특성해석)

  • Park, Hyunyong;Park, Junghun
    • 한국신재생에너지학회:학술대회논문집
    • /
    • 2010.11a
    • /
    • pp.178.2-178.2
    • /
    • 2010
  • The wind turbine gearbox is important rotating part to transmit torque from turbine blade to generator. Generally, gear shaft which rotates causes vibration by influence of stiffness and mass with gear shaft. Root cause of this vibration source is well known to gear transmission error that is decided from gear tooth property. Transmission error excites a gear, and makes excitation force that is vibrated shaft. This vibration of shaft is transmitted to gearbox housing through gearbox bearing. If the resonance about which the natural frequency of the gearbox accords with shaft exciting frequency occurs, a wind turbine can lead to failure. The gearbox for wind turbine should be considered influence of vibration as well as the fatigue life and its performance by such reason. The cause to vibration should be closely examined to reduce influence of such vibration. In this paper, the cause of the vibration which occurs by a gearbox is closely examined and the method which can reduce the vibration which occurred is shown. It is compared with vibration test outcome of a 3MW gearbox for verification of the method shown by this paper.

  • PDF

Study on Damage Mechanism Analysis and Recovery Characteristic of the Large Scale Steam Turbine Cased by Water Induction (대형 증기터빈 물유입에 의한 손상메커니즘 분석과 원상복구특성 연구)

  • Kim, D.Y.;Park, G.H.;Lee, B.H.
    • Journal of Power System Engineering
    • /
    • v.15 no.5
    • /
    • pp.22-29
    • /
    • 2011
  • In this study, the damage mechanism of large scale steam turbine due to water induction was analyzed and recovery characteristics were reviewed. A turbine consists of the rotating rotor and the stationary casing, and the clearance between them is very small for the efficiency enhancement. If water induction, while relatively cold steam or water is introduced into turbine, occurs, the considerable humping is caused at the casing near the initial water induction point and that induces the rubbing between rotor and casing. Finally, it leads to the catastrophic failure. Bowed rotor has the different characteristics in the recovery depending on damage degree. The elastic deformation due to light rubbing is recovered by turning the rotor with 3 rpm under normal operation condition, but most plastic deformation due to rubbing deforms the local microstructure and that results in permanent deformation which could not be recovered under normal operation condition. Bowed rotor has diverse characteristics depending on the recovery method, and the method is empirical and needs the cutting edge technology. Careful recovery treatment of the rotor will eliminate the risks and secure the high quality rotor similar to new rotor. If any critical error is made during the recovery, the rotor would not be recovered permanently and it should be scrapped.

Success Run Test for Reliability Demonstration of 1100℃ Gas Turbine Blades (1100℃급 가스터빈 동익의 무고장시험을 통한 HCF 신뢰성 평가)

  • Lee, Dooyoung;Goo, Jaeryang;Kim, Doosoo;Kim, Donghwan
    • KEPCO Journal on Electric Power and Energy
    • /
    • v.3 no.2
    • /
    • pp.107-111
    • /
    • 2017
  • The reliability on high cycle fatigue damage mechanism for new blades manufactured by reverse-engineering is demonstrated by success-run test. Turbine blades always experience various dynamic loads in turbine operation, as well as being in resonance condition and forced by fluid-induced vibrations mostly during run-up/down, which may accumulate high cycle damage to the blades. The accidents caused by blade failure especially incur not only a lot of troubles to the machinery but also huge financial losses. Therefore it is necessary to verify the reliability of blades in advance for the safe use. The success run test for the reliability demonstration is designed and performed for the new blades using the technique known as resonant high cycle fatigue testing.

Development of Unmanned Remote Monitoring System for MW Class Wind Turbines (대형 풍력터빈을 위한 무인 원격감시시스템 개발)

  • Park, Joon-Young;Kim, Beom-Joo;Lee, Jae-Kyung
    • Journal of Institute of Control, Robotics and Systems
    • /
    • v.17 no.5
    • /
    • pp.412-418
    • /
    • 2011
  • The scale of wind turbines has continuously increased over the last decade. Especially, the rapid growth of the rotor diameter has brought about the increase of the tower height and the load on the rotor blade, as can be seen in the case of a 5MW class wind turbine with 126m rotor diameter. This trend means the increasing possibility of system failure. In addition to that, it is impossible for human operators to stay and manage all the turbines in the case of a large-scale wind farm. For these reasons, the operation and maintenance technology is getting more importance. In this paper, we present an unmanned remote monitoring system for MW class wind turbines and its application to YeungHeung wind test bed.

Rotordynamic Analysis of a Dual-Spool Turbofan Engine with Focus on Blade Defect Events (블레이드 손상에 따른 이축식 터보팬 엔진의 동적 안정성 해석)

  • Kim, Sitae;Jung, Kihyun;Lee, Junho;Park, Kihyun;Yang, Kwangjin
    • Tribology and Lubricants
    • /
    • v.36 no.2
    • /
    • pp.105-115
    • /
    • 2020
  • This paper presents a numerical study on the rotordynamic analysis of a dual-spool turbofan engine in the context of blade defect events. The blades of an axial-type aeroengine are typically well aligned during the compressor and turbine stages. However, they are sometimes exposed to damage, partially or entirely, for several operational reasons, such as cracks due to foreign objects, burns from the combustion gas, and corrosion due to oxygen in the air. Herein, we designed a dual-spool rotor using the commercial 3D modeling software CATIA to simulate blade defects in the turbofan engine. We utilized the rotordynamic parameters to create two finite element Euler-Bernoulli beam models connected by means of an inter-rotor bearing. We then applied the unbalanced forces induced by the mass eccentricities of the blades to the following selected scenarios: 1) fully balanced, 2) crack in the low-pressure compressor (LPC) and high pressure compressor (HPC), 3) burn on the high-pressure turbine (HPT) and low pressure compressor, 4) corrosion of the LPC, and 5) corrosion of the HPC. Additionally, we obtained the transient and steady-state responses of the overall rotor nodes using the Runge-Kutta numerical integration method, and employed model reduction techniques such as component mode synthesis to enhance the computational efficiency of the process. The simulation results indicate that the high-vibration status of the rotor commences beyond 10,000 rpm, which is identified as the first critical speed of the lower speed rotor. Moreover, we monitored the unbalanced stages near the inter-rotor bearing, which prominently influences the overall rotordynamic status, and the corrosion of the HPC to prevent further instability. The high-speed range operation (>13,000 rpm) coupled with HPC/HPT blade defects possibly presents a rotor-case contact problem that can lead to catastrophic failure.

Stochastic modelling fatigue crack evolution and optimum maintenance strategy for composite blades of wind turbines

  • Chen, Hua-Peng;Zhang, Chi;Huang, Tian-Li
    • Structural Engineering and Mechanics
    • /
    • v.63 no.6
    • /
    • pp.703-712
    • /
    • 2017
  • The composite blades of offshore wind turbines accumulate structural damage such as fatigue cracking due to harsh operation environments during their service time, leading to premature structural failures. This paper investigates various fatigue crack models for reproducing crack development in composite blades and proposes a stochastic approach to predict fatigue crack evolution and to analyse failure probability for the composite blades. Three typical fatigue models for the propagation of fatigue cracks, i.e., Miner model, Paris model and Reifsnider model, are discussed to reproduce the fatigue crack evolution in composite blades subjected to cyclical loadings. The lifetime probability of fatigue failure of the composite blades is estimated by stochastic deterioration modelling such as gamma process. Based on time-dependent reliability analysis and lifecycle cost analysis, an optimised maintenance policy is determined to make the optimal decision for the composite blades during the service time. A numerical example is employed to investigate the effectiveness of predicting fatigue crack growth, estimating the probability of fatigue failure and evaluating an optimal maintenance policy. The results from the numerical study show that the stochastic gamma process together with the proper fatigue models can provide a useful tool for remaining useful life predictions and optimum maintenance strategies of the composite blades of offshore wind turbines.