Application of Blade-Tip Sensors to Blade-Vibration Monitoring in Gas Turbines

Non-contact blade vibration measurement in turbomachinery is performed during development phase to verify design quality of bladed disk and its structural integrity (Zielinski & Ziller, 2005). The method, referred as blade tip-timing (BTT) or Non-contact Stress Measurement System (NSMS) is applied by mostly all manufacturers as a complement of strain gauges, traditionally used to measure stress levels and blade vibration parameters (Roberts, 2007). Measurement results are usually presented in the function of rotational speed in Campbell diagram, showing vibration modes excited by particular engine orders. Operational stress levels and accumulated fatigue cycles should not exceed material endurance limits. High Cycle Fatigue, occurring at low stress and high vibration frequency is a common reason for blade damage in turbomachinery. HCF has been identified as factor limiting development of more efficient blade designs, affecting safe operation of turbomachinery and causing considerable losses (Nicholas, 2006). US Air Forces initiated HCF Science and technology program in late 1990’s, which launched and supported multidisciplinary efforts for HCF mitigation, continued recently as Engine Prognosis Program. Development of tiptiming instrumentation both for supporting design of fatigue-resistant components and also for online blade crack detection has been one of research priorities and provided new sensors and advanced data analysis methods. NSMS technologies are also developed and successfully applied in power industry (Ross, 2007). Nowadays Blade Tip-Timing using optical sensors is considered as mature technology able to replace strain gauges in development process of fans or compressors (Rushard, 2010; Courtney, 2011). Current research activities concentrate on turbines, which are more demanding environment for tip-timing instrumentation due to high temperature, contamination and lower amplitude of vibration. Development of alternative tip sensors is considered as another priority. Optical sensors despite providing the highest available resolution, require cleaning and ensure quite limited life, which makes them unusable in embedded systems for blade health monitoring. This chapter describes development and application of inductive, eddy-current and microwave tip-timing sensors for gas-turbine blades, carried out in ITWL in last five years. Other sensors’ applications, like measurement of tip-clearance, blade twist and disk

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