Title of Invention

A HOT GAS DUCTING ARRANGEMENT FOR A GAS TURBINE SYSTEM

Abstract Disclosed is a hot gas-conducting housing element (6) for a hot gas-conducting housing (9) of a gas turbine system (1) encompassing a compressor (7), a turbine (5), and a turbine rotor (11, 12). The hot gas-conducting housing element (6) is embodied so as to surround a protective shaft jacket (15, 15a) placed around the turbine rotor (11, 12) and conduct a hot gas to the turbine (5). The hot gas-conducting housing element (6) comprises: -at least one hot gas inlet (18); -an opening (19) facing the turbine; - a section for conducting the hot from the at least one hot gas inlet (18) to the opening (19) facing the turbine, said conducting section being provided with an inner housing hub (17a, 17b, 17c) which is configured so as to surround the protective shaft jacket (15, 15a), extends to the opening (19) facing the turbine, and is equipped with a rib (22a, 22b, 22c) on a circumferential surface (14a, 14b, 14c) facing the protective shaft jacket (15,15a). Said rib (22a, 22b, 22c) extends in the circumferential direction, protrudes from the circumferential surface, and is disposed in the zone of the circumferential surface (14a, 14b, 14c) bordering the opening (19) that faces the turbine. The rib (22a) and/or the inner housing hub (17b, 17c) is/are fitted with cooling fluid ducts (25a, 28b, 28c).
Full Text PCT/EP2006/063825 / 2004P18721WOUS
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Description
Hot-gas-ducting housing element, protective shaft jacket and
gas turbi nc system
The present invention relates to a hot-gas-ducting housing
element for a hot-gas-ducting housing, which element can be
arranged particularly in a gas turbine system around a turbine
rotor of the gas turbine system and serves to conduct a hot
gas to a turbine part of the gas turbine system. The present
invention relates further to a protective shaft jacket of the
hot -gas- ducting housing, which jacket is embodied for
surrounding the turbine rotor of the gas turbine system. The
present invention relates finally to the hot-gas-ducting
housing itself and to a gas turbine system having a hot-gas-
ducting housing.
A qas turbine system 1 essentially comprises one or more
combustion chambers 3 (see Fig. 1) in which a fuel is burned,
a turbine b to which the combustion exhaust gases that are hot
and under pressure are ducted from the combustion chambers 3
and in which the exhaust gases perform work, while cooling and
expanding and thereby cause the turbine 5 to rotate, and a
compressor 7 that is coupled to the turbine 5 via a shaft 15
and via which the air necessary for combustion is taken in and
compressed to a higher pressure.
Hot-gas-conducting housings are employed in gas turbine
systems for ducting the hot combustion exhaust gases. That
applies particularly to gas turbine systems of the kind in
which what are termed silo combustion chambers arc used that
are as a rule arranged on both sides of the turbine. Fig. .1
shows a schematic view of a gas turbine system of said type,
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with Fig. 1a showing a horizontal and Fig. 1b a vertical
section through the system. The combustion exhaust gases 2
flow out of said silo combustion chambers 3 in a direction
substantially perpendicular to the rotational, axis A of the
turbine b. Arranged between the outlet 18 of the silo
combustion chambers and the turbine 5 is a mixer housing 8 to
which on the turbine side is joined an inner housing 9 located
inside the gas turbine housing 2. The function of the inner
housing 9 is to protect the surrounding components from heat
and redirect the hot gases exiting the mixer housing 8 toward
the turbine. On exiting the inner housing 9, which means on
entering the turbine 5 of the gas turbine system 1, the
combustion exhaust gases then flow substantially parallel to
the rotational axis A of the turbine shaft 12.
Hot-gas-conducting housings, and in particular the described
inner housings in gas turbine systems having silo combustion
chambers, are thermally highly stressed components. For that
reason measures are taken to cool the hot-gas-ducting surfaces
of the housing. Said measures include cooling the regions
particularly under stress by means of a cooling fluid that
flows along the outer side of the walls of said regions in
order to absorb and remove the heat transferred to the hot-
gas-ducting surfaces.
An Inner housing 9, as previously described, has as a rule a
hot-gas-ducting housing element 100 having an inner housing
hub 101. The inner housing hub 101 surrounds a protective
shaft jacket 115 (Fig. 7a) which in turn surrounds the shaft
12. The surface 109 of the inner housing hub 101 facing the
housing interior therein forms the guiding and conducting
surface for the combustion exhaust gases 2, while the surface
104 of the inner housing hub 101 facing away from the housing
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interior surrounds the protective shaft jacket 115. The inner
housing hub 101 is fixed in position on the protective shaft
jacket. 11b by means of an annular rib 103 arranged centrally
in the axial direction and projecting toward the protective
shaft jacket 115. The protective shaft jacket 115 itself is
secured to the gas turbine housing 2 and has a stud 105 in
which is located an annular groove 106 into which the annular
rib 103 engages. The inner housing hub 101 and protective
shaft jacket 115 are mounted in the gas turbine system jointly
as a unit.
To enable a cooling fluid F to flow from one side of the rib
103 or, as the case may be, of the stud 105 to the other, the
stud 105 has passage openings 107 through which the cooling
fluid can flow (see figures 7a and 7b).
When the hot-gas-ducting housing is operating, the rib 103 is,
however, heated less than the material regions closer to the
hol-gas-ducting surface 109 of the cylindrical inner housing
hub 101. This results in what is termed a ferrule effect that
gives rise to tensions in the material regions of the inner
housing hub 101 that border the rib 103. Cracks can therefore
occur in the material particularly at the locations indicated
by the reference numerals 111.
To reduce the risk of a defect due to cracking, the maximum
number of starts, meaning the number of starts of the gas
turbine system after which an inspection for cracking or a
repair is to be performed, is generally limited, furthermore
the rib was relocated to the region of the inner housing's
opening on the turbine side so as to be located in a thermally
loss stressed region of the inner housing.
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Compared with said prior art an object of the present
invention is to provide an improved hot-gas-ducting housing
element for a hot-gas-ducting housing of a gas turbine system,
in which element the risk of cracking is reduced and the
number of starts before an inspection or repair can be
increased.
A further object of the present invention is to provide a
protective shaft jacket for a hot-gas-ducting housing of a
gas turbine system, which jacket will enable a hot-gas-ducting
housing element to be better fixed in position.
Yet. a further object of the present invention is to provide an
improved housing unit for a gas turbine system.
It is finally an object of the present invention to provide an
improved gas turbine system.
The first object is achieved by means of a hot-gas-ducting
housing element as claimed in claim 1, the second object is
achieved by means of protective shaft jacket as claimed in
claim 8, the third object is achieved by means of a housing
unit as claimed in claim 9, and the fourth object is achieved
by means of a gas turbine system as claimed in claim 11. The
dependent, claims contain advantageous embodiments of the
invention.
An Inventive hot-gas-ducting housing element for a hot-gas-
ducting housing of a gas turbine system having a compressor, a
turbine and a turbine rotor is embodied for surrounding a
protective shaft jacket requiring to be arranged around the
turbine rotor and for ducting a hot gas to the turbine. Said
element includes at least one hot gas inlet orifice, an
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opening on the turbine side, and a ducting section for ducting-
the hot gas from the at least one hot gas inlet orifice to the
opening on the turbine side. The ducting section has an inner
housing hub that is embodied for surrounding the protective
shaft jacket of the gas turbine system and which extends up to
the opening on the turbine side and has on a circumferential
surface requiring to be arranged facing the protective shaft
jacket a rib that extends entirely or partially in the
circumferential direction along the circumferential surface
and projects beyond it. The inner housing hub can be at least
approximately cylindrical in form and have the shape in
particular of a hollow cylinder, with the circumferential
surface requiring to be arranged facing the protective shaft
jacket then constituting the inner surface of the hollow
cylindor. A rib is arranged in the region of the
circumforcntial surface bordering the opening on the turbine
side. In the inventive hot-gas-ducting housing element, the
rib is provided with cooling fluid channels. The inner housing
hub is additionally or alternatively provided with cooling
fluid channels at least in the region of the rib.
Arranging the rib in the region of the inner housing hub's
ci rcumferontial surface bordering the opening on the turbine
side will enable a cooling fluid to flow largely unimpeded
along the inner housing hub up to the opening on the turbine
side, which alone will improve the possibilities for cooling
the inner housing hub. As a result of the inventive
arrangement of the cooling fluid channels it is now also
possible to improve the cooling possibility in the rib region
by reducing the barrier effect of the rib or improving the
ducting of the cooling fluid in the region of the rib.
The barrier effect on the flow of the cooling fluid can be
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reduced i f the rib is provided with cooling fluid channels
enabling the cooling fluid to pass through the rib. The flow
of the cooling fluid will therein be especially little impeded
if said cooling fluid channels are arranged in the rib such
that they run close to the circumferential surface of the
inner housing hub virtually parallel to its axial direction.
The cool ing effect can also be improved if the inner housing
hub is provided with cooling fluid channels. They can each
have, for example, an opening on the protective shaft jacket
side, meaning an opening in the circumferential surface
requiring to be arranged facing the protective shaft jacket,
and an opening on the hot gas side, meaning an opening in the
surface ducting the hot gas. In particular a cooling fluid
film can form on the surface, on the hot gas side, of the
inner housing hub if, over their course through the inner
housing hub as viewed from the opening on the protective shaft
jacket side constituting an inlet orifice for the cooling
fluid, the cooling fluid channels have an inclination in the
flow direction of the hot gas requiring to be ducted.
Additionally or alternatively to the cooling fluid channels
provided with openings on the protective shaft jacket side and
hot. gas side there can also be cooling fluid channels running
parallel to the hot-gas-ducting surface of the inner housing
hub between an inlet orifice for the cooling fluid to enter
and an outlet orifice for the cooling fluid to exit. Cooling
f1uid channels of said type will enable particularly effective
cooling of the inner housing hub.
A hot-gas-ducting surface and in particular the inner housing
hub can bo provided with a thermally insulating and/or
corrosion-inhibiting and/or oxidation-inhibiting coating in
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order to minimize wear and tear in the hot-gas-duct.ing
housing.
An inventive protective shaft jacket for a gas turbine system
having a compressor, a turbine and a turbine rotor is embodied
for surrounding the turbine rotor in the region between the
compressor and the turbine of the gas turbine system and has a
depression extending in the circumferential direction entirely
or partially over its circumference for accommodating a rib of
a hot-gas-ducting housing element, of the hot-gas-ducting
housing, requiring to be arranged around the protective shaft
jacket. In the inventive protective shaft jacket the
depression is located in a stud that projects radially beyond
the circumferential surface and is completely closed, which is
to say has no cooling fluid channels.
A hot-gas-ducting housing element can be fixed in position by
inserting the rib into the depression of the protective shaft
jacket. The stud can therein function as, for example, a
spacer between the protective shaft jacket and inner housing
hub of a hot-gas-ducting housing element so that a space
through which a cooling fluid can flow will remain between the
inner housing hub and protective shaft jacket.
An inventive housing unit includes a hot-gas-ducting housing
having an inventive hot-gas-ducting housing element as well as
an inventive protective shaft jacket. The hot-gas-ducting
housing can therein be embodied particularly as an inner
housing for a gas turbine system having at least one silo
combust i on chamber.
An Inventive gas turbine system includes at least one
combustion chamber, a turbine part and an inventive hot-gas-
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ducting housing arranged between the at least one combustion
chamber and the turbine part for ducting the hot gas
originating from the at least one combustion chamber to the
turbine part. The inventive gas turbine system can in
particular include at least one silo combustion chamber and a
mixer housing arranged between the silo combustion chamber and
hot.-gas-ducting housing. The hot-gas-ducting housing will then
be embodied as an inner housing of the gas turbine system.
Further features, characteristics and advantages of the
present invention will emerge from the following description
of exemplary embodiments with reference to the attached
figures .
Fig. la shows in a highly schematic form a horizontal section
through a gas turbine system having two silo
combustion chambers.
Fig. 1b shows in a highly schematic form a vertical section
through the gas turbine system shown in Fig. la.
Fig. 2 shows a section of an inventive gas turbine system in
which can be seen parts of an inner housing.
Fig. 3 shows in detail a section of an inner housing
according to the prior art.
Fig. 4 shows in detail a first embodiment of the invention.
Fig. b shows in detail a second embodiment of the invention.
Fig. 6 shows in detail a third embodiment of the invention.
o
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Fiq. 7a shows a section of a gas turbine system according t
the prior art in which can be seen parts of: the
inner housing.
Fig. 7b shows in enlarged form a detail from Fig. 7a.
An example of a gas turbine system 1 is shown in Figures la
and 1b in a highly schematic form. The gas turbine system 1
includes two silo combustion chambers 3, a turbine 5, a
compressor 7, two mixer housings 8, and an inner housing 9.
The silo combustion chambers 3 serve to burn a fuel, with the
hot,, pressurized exhaust gases 2 being ducted via the mixer
housings 8 and inner housing 9 to the turbine 7 in order to
drive it.
The turbine 5 includes stationary guide vanes 10 as well as
rotor blades 11 permanently connected to a shaft 12 mounted
rotatably around an axis A. The hot exhaust gas 2 expanding in
the turbine 5 causes an impulse to be conveyed via the rotor
blades 11 to the shaft 12, which is thereby made to rotate.
The shaft 12 can be roughly divided into three sections,
namely a section bearing the rotor blades 11 of the turbine 5,
a section bearing rotor blades of the compressor 7 (not
shown), and a shaft section 13 that is arranged between said
two sections and in which no rotor blades are disposed. The
shaft 12 and the rotor blades 11 attached thereto form what is
termed the turbine rotor.
The shaft. 12 extends through the entire gas turbine system
(not shown in full) and drives the compressor 7 as well as a
generator (not shown). The compressor 7 therein serves to
compress air that is then ducted to the silo combustion
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chambers 3 for the combustion.
The shaft, section 13 is surrounded by a protective shaft
jacket 1b (see Fig. 2) which is itself surrounded by an inner
housing hub 17 of a hot-gas-ducting housing element 6 of the
inner housing 9. The inner housing 9 and protective shaft
jacket 1b are Installed in the gas turbine system together as
a housi nq unit.
The inner housing hub 17 and protective shaft jacket 15 are
shaped substantially like a hollow cylinder, with the
circumferential, surface 14, facing the protective shaft: jacket
1b, of the inner housing hub 17 or, as the case may be, the
surface, facing the turbine rotor, of the protective shaft
jacket 1b forming the inner surfaces of the hollow cylinder.
The inner housing 9 therein serves on the one hand to divert
the hot exhaust gas flowing from the mixer housings 8 into the
inner housing 9 and, on the other, to distribute it as evenly
as possible around the entire circumference of the turbine
rotor. The surface 20, facing the hot gas, of the inner
housing 9 therein serves as a guiding and conducting surface
for the hot gas. Said surface can in particular also be
provided with a thermally insulating coating or a corrosion-
and/or oxidation-inhibiting coating. Potential candidates for
a thermally insulating coating are, for example, what are
termed thermal barrier coatings, TBC for short, which can be
produced from, say, yttrium-stabilized zirconium oxide.
Potential candidates for corrosion- and/or oxidation-
inhibiting coatings are, for example, what are termed MCrAlY
coatings, where M stands for iron (Fe), cobalt (Co), or nickel
(Ni), and Y stands for yttrium (Y) and/or silicon and/or a
rare-earth element, for example hafnium (Hf). Alloys of said
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typo are known from, inter alia, the following documents, to
which reference is made with respect to suitable MCrAIY
coalings: EP 0 486 489 B1, EP 0 786 017 B1, EP 0 412 397 B1,
and EP 1 306 454 Al. The thermal barrier coating TBC can
therein have been applied in particular to the MCrAlY coating.
Fig. 2 shows a section that has been taken from Fig. 1b and in
which can be seen the inner housing hub 17 of the inner
housing 9 and a part of the protective shaft jacket 15. Also
to be seen is a section of a guide vane 10 of the turbine 5
located opposite the opening 19, on the turbine side, of the
i nncr housing 9.
The inner housing hub 17 of the inner housing 9 has in the
region of the opening 19 on the turbine side an annular rib 22
that projects radially toward the protective shaft jacket 15
and extends along its entire circumference.
The protective shaft jacket 15 includes an annular stud 23
that extends in the region of the outlet orifice 19 of the
inner housing 9 along the entire circumference of the
protective shaft jacket 15. The stud 23 has a groove 26
serving to accommodate the rib 22 of the inner housing hub 17.
The inner housing hub 17 of the hot-gas-ducting housing
element 6 can be fixed in position on the protective shaft
jacket 15 by means of the rib 22 and the groove 26 in the stud
23.
The protective shaft jacket 15 further has a radiation guard
16 that surrounds it spaced therefrom. A flow channel is in
that way formed between the radiation guard 16 and protective
shaft jacket 15. A further flow channel is formed between the
radiation guard 16 and the inner housing hub 17 of the hot-
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gas-ducting housing element 6. The radiation guard 16 has
passage openings 21 for the passage of cooling fluid toward
the inner housing hub 17 which serve to duct a cooling fluid
F, for example ambient air, into the flow channel between the
radiation guard 16 and inner housing hub 17 (see Fig. 3). The
cooling fluid passing through the openings 21 is used for
impingement cooling of the inner housing hub 17 and is
forwarded to the turbine 5 via the flow channel 24 formed
between the radiation guard 16 and inner housing hub 17, with
the inner housing hub 17 being additionally convectively
cooled. What is therein to be understood by the term
"impingement cooling" is the ducting of cooling fluid flowing
in a direction of said type such that it will impact against
the surface 14, on the hub side, of the inner housing hub 17
and be diverted by it.
To make the invention easier to understand, an inner housing 9
according to the prior art in which the rib of the hot-gas-
ducfing housing element 6 is located in the region of the
opening, on the turbine side, of the inner housing 9 will
first be described with reference to Figure 3. Inner housings
9 exhibiting three different embodiment variants of the
inventive hot-gas-ducting housing element 6 will then be
described with reference to Figures 4 to 6. The prior art and
all embodiment variants have an inner housing hub 17, 17a,
17b, 17c in each case provided in the region of the opening on
the turbine side with a rib 22, 22a, 22b, 22c projecting
beyond the circumferential surface 14, 14a, 14b, 14c on the
protective shaft jacket side.
One embodiment of the inner housing hub 17, radiation guard 16
and protective shaft jacket 15 in the region of the rib 22 and
of the stud 23 according to the prior art is shown in Fig. 3.
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in the prior art there are passage openings 25 shaped like
drilled holes in the stud 23 below the groove 2 6 that enable
the cooling fluid (indicated by arrows) to pass through the
stud 23. Arranged on the protective shaft jacket 15 opposite
the outlet, end of the passage hole 25 in the flow direction is
a guide rib 38 that causes the flow of cooling fluid to be
redirected toward the hot exhaust gas flowing through the gas
turbine system.
A first embodiment variant of the hot-gas-ducting housing
oIement 6 is shown in Figure 4. The figure shows the inner
housing hub 17a of the radiation guard 16a as well as the
protective shaft jacket 15a in the region of the stud 23a. The
stud 23a of the protective shaft jacket 15a shown in Fig. 4
differs from the stud 23 of the protective shaft jacket 15
shown in Fig. 3 in being embodied wider and not projecting so
far beyond the surface 20a of the protective shaft jacket 15a.
Nor does it have a passage hole for the passage of a cooling
fluid. A passage opening in the form of a drilled hole 25a
enabling the cooling fluid to pass through the rib 22a is
instead arranged in the rib 22a of the inner housing hub 17a.
The passage hole is arranged in the immediate vicinity of the
ci rcumferential surface 14a, of the inner housing hub 17a,
facing the protective shaft jacket 15a. Corresponding passage
holes are distributed spaced apart in the circumferential
direction over the entire annular rib 22a.
A second embodiment variant for embodying the hot-gas-ducting
housing element 6 is shown in Fig. 5. The figure shows the
inner housing hub 17b, the radiation guard 16 and the
protective shaft jacket 15 in the region of the stud 23. The
embodiment of the protective shaft jacket 15 and radiation
guard 16 is the same as that of the corresponding parts in the
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embodiment; described with reference to Fig. 3. However, in
contrast, to the inner housing hub 17 shown in Fig. 3 the inner
housing hub 17b in the second embodiment variant has passage
openings in the form of passage holes 28 having openings 2 9 on
the protective shaft jacket side and openings 30 on the hot
gas side. Compared to the openings 29 on the protective shaft
jacket side the openings 30 on the hot gas side are therein
displaced in the flow direction of the hot gas. in other
words, as viewed from the circumferential surface 14b on the
protective shaft jacket side the openings 29 have an
inclination in the flow direction of the hot exhaust gases.
Through the passage holes 28, cooling fluid proceeding from
the flow channel 24 enters the region of the inner housing 9
ducting the hot exhaust gas and owing to the flow conditions
there prevailing forms a cooling fluid film across the surface
20b, of the inner housing hub 17b, on the hot gas side, in
particular in the region of the rib 22b. That embodiment of
the inner housing hub 17b will enable the surface 20b to be
cooled very effectively.
A third embodiment of the hot-gas-ducting housing element 6 is
shown in Fig. 6. The figure shows the inner housing hub 17c,
the radiation guard 16 and the protective shaft jacket 15 in
the region of the stud 23. As in Fig. 5, the inner housing hub
17c has passage openings in the form of drilled holes 28c.
Said drilled holes 28c each have an opening 29c on the
protective shaft jacket side and an opening 30c located in the
front side of the inner housing hub 17c. Between the opening
2 9c on the protective shaft jacket side and the opening 30c on
the front side, each passage hole 28c runs mostly parallel to
the hot-gas-ducting surface 20c of the inner housing hub 17c.
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Cooling fluid F entering through the opening 29c on the
protective shaft jacket side is guided in the region of the
rib 22c by means of the drilled holes 28c through the interior
of the inner housing hub 17c and thereby causes cooling of the
inner housing hub 17c before exiting from the opening.30c on
the front side.
In the embodiment variants described with reference to Figures
5 and 6, the stud of the protective shaft jacket is in each
case provided with passage openings for the passage of cooling
fluid. Openings can alternatively also be provided in the rib,
as has boon described with reference to Fig. 4.
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New claims
1. An inner housing (9) for a gas turbine system (1) having a
compressor (7), two silo combustion chambers (3), a turbine
(b) and a turbine rotor (11, 12), wherein the inner housing
(9) is embodied for arranging between the silo combustion
chambers (3) and the turbine (5), and comprises two hot gas
inlet or ifices (18) for receiving the hot combustion exhaust
gases of the silo combustion chambers, an opening (19) on the
turbine side, and a hot-gas-ducting housing element (6) which
is embodied for surrounding a protective shaft jacket (1b,
15a) that is to be arranged around the turbine rotor (11, 12)
in the region between the compressor (7) and the turbines (b)
and includes a ducting section for ducting the hot gas from
the hot gas inlet orifices (18) to the opening (19) on the
turbine side, with the ducting section including an inner
housing hub (17a, 17b, 17c) that is embodied for surrounding
the protective shaft jacket (15, 15a) and which extends up to
the opening (19) on the turbine side and has on a
circumferential surface (14a, 14b, 14c) requiring to be
arranged facing the protective shaft jacket (15, 15a) a rib
(22a, 22b, 22c) that extends in the circumferential direction,
projects beyond the circumferential surface, and is arranged
in the region of the circumferential surface (14a, 14b, 14c)
bordering the opening (19) on the turbine side, wherein the
rib (22a) and/or the inner housing hub (17b, 17c) are/is
provided with cooling fluid channels (25a, 28b, 28c) .
2. The inner housing (9) as claimed in claim 1, characterized
in that the cooling fluid channels (25a) extend through the
rib (22a) and are arranged in the rib (22a) such that they run
close to the circumferential surface (14a) of the inner
housing hub (17a) parallel to the axial direction of the inner
PCT/EP2006/06382b / 2004P18721WO
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housing hub (17a) .
3. The inner housing (9) as claimed in claim 1 or 2,
characterized in that the cooling fluid channels (28b) extend
through the inner housing hub (1.7b) and are each provided with
an opening (29b) on the protective shaft jacket side and an
opening (30b) on the hot gas side.
4. The inner housing (9) as claimed in claim 3, characterized
in that the cooling fluid channels (28b) have, over their
course through the inner housing hub (17b) as viewed from the
opening (29b) on the protective shaft jacket side, an
inclination in the flow direction of the hot gas requiring to
be ducted.
b. The inner housing (9) as claimed in one of claims 1 to 4,
characterized in that provided in the inner housing hub (17c)
arc cooling fluid channels (28c) running parallel to a hot-
gasducting surface (20c) of the inner housing hub (17c)
between an inlet orifice (29c) for a cooling fluid (F) to
enter and an outlet orifice (30c) for a cooling fluid (F) to
exit.
6. The inner housing (9) as claimed in one of claims 1 to b,
characterized in that the inner housing hub (17a, 17b, 17c) is
embodied at least approximately cylindrically.
7. The inner housing (9) as claimed in one of claims 1 to 6,
characterized in that the inner housing hub (17a, 17b, 17c)
includes a hot-gas-ducting surface (20a, 20b, 20c) provided
w.i th a thermally insulating and/or corrosion-inhibiting and/or
oxidation-inhibiting coating.
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8. A protective shaft jacket (15a) for a gas turbine system
(1) having a compressor (7), a turbine (5) and a turbine rotor
(11, 12), which protective shaft jacket (15a) is embodied for
surround.i ng the turbine rotor (11, 12) in the region between
the compressor (7) and the turbine (5) and has a depression
(26a), extending in the circumferential direction, which is
embodied for accommodating a rib (22a) of a hot-gas-ducting
housing element (6), requiring to be arranged around the
protective shaft jacket (15a), of an inner housing (9),
characterized in that the depression (26a)
is located in a stud (23a) that projects radially beyond the
circumferential surface and is completely closed and the stud
(23) is located in a section of the protective shaft jacket
(15a) that is to be disposed adjacent to the turbine (5).
9. A housing unit for a gas turbine system (1),
characterized by an inner housing (9) as
claimed in one of claims 1 to 7 and/or by a protective shaft
jacket (15a) as claimed in claim 8.
10. A gas turbine system (1) characterized b y
two silo combustion chambers (3), a turbine part (5), and a
housing unit as claimed in claim 9 that is arranged between
the silo combustion chambers (3) and the turbine part (5).

Disclosed is a hot gas-conducting housing element (6) for a hot gas-conducting
housing (9) of a gas turbine system (1) encompassing a compressor (7), a turbine (5),
and a turbine rotor (11, 12). The hot gas-conducting housing element (6) is
embodied so as to surround a protective shaft jacket (15, 15a) placed around the
turbine rotor (11, 12) and conduct a hot gas to the turbine (5). The hot gas-conducting
housing element (6) comprises: -at least one hot gas inlet (18); -an
opening (19) facing the turbine; - a section for conducting the hot from the at least
one hot gas inlet (18) to the opening (19) facing the turbine, said conducting section
being provided with an inner housing hub (17a, 17b, 17c) which is configured so as
to surround the protective shaft jacket (15, 15a), extends to the opening (19) facing
the turbine, and is equipped with a rib (22a, 22b, 22c) on a circumferential surface
(14a, 14b, 14c) facing the protective shaft jacket (15,15a). Said rib (22a, 22b, 22c)
extends in the circumferential direction, protrudes from the circumferential surface,
and is disposed in the zone of the circumferential surface (14a, 14b, 14c) bordering
the opening (19) that faces the turbine. The rib (22a) and/or the inner housing hub
(17b, 17c) is/are fitted with cooling fluid ducts (25a, 28b, 28c).

Documents:

00152-kolnp-2008-abstract.pdf

00152-kolnp-2008-claims.pdf

00152-kolnp-2008-correspondence others.pdf

00152-kolnp-2008-description complete.pdf

00152-kolnp-2008-drawings.pdf

00152-kolnp-2008-form 1.pdf

00152-kolnp-2008-form 2.pdf

00152-kolnp-2008-form 3.pdf

00152-kolnp-2008-form 5.pdf

00152-kolnp-2008-gpa.pdf

00152-kolnp-2008-international exm report.pdf

00152-kolnp-2008-international publication.pdf

00152-kolnp-2008-international search report.pdf

00152-kolnp-2008-pct request form.pdf

00152-kolnp-2008-translated copy of priority document.pdf

152-KOLNP-2008-(19-12-2012)-ABSTRACT.pdf

152-KOLNP-2008-(19-12-2012)-AMANDED PAGES OF SPECIFICATION.pdf

152-KOLNP-2008-(19-12-2012)-ANNEXURE TO FORM 3.pdf

152-KOLNP-2008-(19-12-2012)-CLAIMS.pdf

152-KOLNP-2008-(19-12-2012)-CORRESPONDENCE.pdf

152-KOLNP-2008-(19-12-2012)-DESCRIPTION (COMPLETE).pdf

152-KOLNP-2008-(19-12-2012)-DRAWINGS.pdf

152-KOLNP-2008-(19-12-2012)-FORM-1.pdf

152-KOLNP-2008-(19-12-2012)-FORM-2.pdf

152-KOLNP-2008-(19-12-2012)-OTHERS.pdf

152-KOLNP-2008-(19-12-2012)-PETITION UNDER RULE 137.pdf

152-KOLNP-2008-(31-10-2012-RI)-CORRESPONDENCE-1.1.pdf

152-KOLNP-2008-(31-10-2012-RI)-CORRESPONDENCE.pdf

152-KOLNP-2008-(31-10-2012-RI)-OTHERS-1.1.pdf

152-KOLNP-2008-(31-10-2012-RI)-OTHERS.pdf

152-KOLNP-2008-CORRESPONDENCE OTHERS 1.1.pdf

152-KOLNP-2008-CORRESPONDENCE.pdf

152-kolnp-2008-form 18.pdf

152-KOLNP-2008-OTHERS.pdf


Patent Number 257307
Indian Patent Application Number 152/KOLNP/2008
PG Journal Number 39/2013
Publication Date 27-Sep-2013
Grant Date 23-Sep-2013
Date of Filing 10-Jan-2008
Name of Patentee SIEMENS AKTIENGESELLSCHAFT
Applicant Address WITTELSBACHERPLATZ 2, 80333 MUNCHEN
Inventors:
# Inventor's Name Inventor's Address
1 GERHARD BOHRENKAMPER KALDEMORGENWEG 27, 45276 ESSEN
2 MILAN SCHMAHL ULMENALLEE 103 45479 MULHEIM AN DER RUHR
PCT International Classification Number F01D 25/12
PCT International Application Number PCT/EP2006/063825
PCT International Filing date 2006-07-04
PCT Conventions:
# PCT Application Number Date of Convention Priority Country
1 05015001.0 2005-07-11 Germany