IMPROVED PERFORMANCE
RHENIUM CONTAINING SINGLE CRYSTAL ALLOY TURBINE BLADES UTILIZING PPM
LEVELS OF THE HIGHLY REACTIVE ELEMENTS LANTHANUM AND YTTRIUM
David A. Ford, Keith P. L. Fullagar,
Harry K. Bhangu
Rolls-Royce plc
Derby and Bristol, UK
Malcolm C. Thomas, Phil S.
Burkholder, Paul S. Korinko
Allison Engine Company Rolls-Royce plc
Indianapolis, Indiana, USA
Ken Harris, Jacqueline B. Wahl
Cannon-Muskegon Corporation
[SPS Technologies, Inc.]
Muskegon, Michigan USA
ABSTRACT
Turbine inlet temperatures have now
approached 1650°C (3000°F) at maximum power for the latest large
commercial turbofan engines, resulting in high fuel efficiency and
thrust levels approaching or exceeding 445 kN (100,000 lbs.). High
reliability and durability must be intrinsically designed into these
turbine engines to meet operating economic targets and ETOPS
certification requirements.
This level of performance has been
brought about by a combination of advances in air cooling for turbine
blades and vanes, computerized design technology for stresses and
airflow and the development and application of rhenium (Re) containing,
high g¢ volume fraction nickel-base single crystal superalloys, with
advanced coatings, including prime-reliant ceramic thermal barrier
coatings (TBCs). Re additions to cast airfoil superalloys not only
improve creep and thermo-mechanical fatigue strength but also
environmental properties, including coating performance. Re slows down
diffusion in these alloys at high operating temperatures.(1)
At high gas temperatures, several
issues are critical to turbine engine performance retention, blade life
and integrity. These are tip oxidation in particular for shroudless
blades, internal oxidation for lightly cooled turbine blades and TBC
adherence to both the airfoil and tip seal liner. It is now known that
sulfur (S) at levels < 10 ppm but > 0.2 ppm in these alloys reduces the
adherence of a alumina protective scales on these materials or their
coatings by weakening the Van der Waal’s bond between the scale and the
alloy substrate. A team approach has been used to develop an improvement
to CMSX-4® alloy which contains 3% Re, by reducing S and
phosphorus (P) levels in the alloy to < 2 ppm, combined with residual
additions of lanthanum (La) + yttrium (Y) in the range 10-30 ppm.
Results from cyclic, burner rig dynamic oxidation testing at 1093°C
(2000°F) show thirteen times the number of cycles to initial alumina
scale spallation for CMSX-4 [La + Y] compared to standard CMSX-4.
A key factor for application
acceptance is of course manufacturing cost. The development of improved
low reactivity prime coats for the blade shell molds along with a
viable, tight dimensional control yttrium oxide core body are discussed.
The target is to attain grain yields of single crystal CMSX-4 (ULS) [La
+ Y] turbine blades and casting cleanliness approaching standard CMSX-4.
The low residual levels of La + Y along with a sophisticated
homogenisation/solutioning heat treatment procedure result in full
solutioning with essentially no residual g/g¢ eutectic phase, Ni (La, Y)
low melting point eutectics and associated incipient melting pores.
Thus, full CMSX-4 mechanical properties are attained. The La assists
with ppm chemistry control of the Y throughout the single crystal
turbine blade castings through the formation of a continuous lanthanum
oxide film between the molten and solidifying alloy and the ceramic core
and prime coat of the shell mold. Y and La tie up the < 2 ppm but > 0.2
ppm residual S in the alloy as very stable Y and La sulfides and
oxysulfides, thus preventing diffusion of the S atoms to the alumina
scale layer under high temperature, cyclic oxidising conditions. La also
forms a stable phosphide.
CMSX-4 (ULS) [La + Y] HP shroudless
turbine blades will commence engine testing in May 1998.
Copyright© Cannon Muskegon
Corporation