Metallurgical Considerations for Life Assessment and the Safe Refurbishment and Requalification of Gas Turbine Blades

Author:

Daleo J. A.1,Ellison K. A.1,Boone D. H.1

Affiliation:

1. BWD Turbines Ltd., 1-601 Tradewind Drive, Ancaster, Ontario L9G 4V5, Canada

Abstract

Metallurgical analysis of rotating blades operating in advanced gas turbine engines is important in establishing actual operating conditions, degradation modes, remaining life, and most importantly, the proper repair and rejuvenation techniques to be used in developing optimum component life strategies. The elevated firing temperatures used in the latest engine designs result not only in very high metal surface temperatures but also in very high temperature gradients and concommitant thermal strains induced in part by the complex and efficient cooling systems. This has changed the primary function of today’s superalloy-coating systems from one of hot corrosion protection to moderating high temperature oxidation reactions. Furthermore, as a result of the high thermal strains induced by the cooling systems, long-term metallurgical structural stability issues now revolve around optimizing both thermal mechanical fatigue (TMF) resistance and creep life. Thus the gradual change to directionally solidified (DS) and single crystal (SC) alloys throughout the industry. The use of DS and SC alloys coated with state of the art TBC, platinum modified aluminide and MCrAlY coatings with or without subsequent aluminizing applied by vacuum plasma spray (VPS), high velocity oxygen fuel (HVOF), physical vapor deposition (PVD), air plasma spray (APS), and by chemical vapor deposition (CVD) methods along with the widespread use of internal aluminide coatings have made today’s rotating components prohibitively expensive to replace after only one cycle of operation. It is therefore, or should now be a high priority for all cost conscious gas turbine users to help develop reliable repair and rejuvenation strategies and techniques to minimize their operating cost. Traditional metallurgical considerations required for life assessment and the reliable refurbishment and requalification of gas turbine blades are reviewed along with some new exciting techniques. Examples of component degradation modes are presented. Appropriate attention to metallurgical issues allows turbine users to more successfully and economically operate their turbines.

Publisher

ASME International

Subject

Mechanical Engineering,Energy Engineering and Power Technology,Aerospace Engineering,Fuel Technology,Nuclear Energy and Engineering

Reference24 articles.

1. Daleo, J. A., and Boone, D. H., 1997, “Failure Mechanisms of Coating Systems Applied to Advanced Turbine Components,”ASME Paper 97-GT-486.

2. Rairden, III, J. R., 1982, U.S. Patent, Re. 30,995, reissued July 13.

3. Ellison, K. A., Daleo, J. A., and Boone, D. H., 1998, “Metallurgical Temperature Estimates Based on Inter-diffusion Between CoCrAlY Overlay Coatings and a Directionally Solidified Nickel-Base Superalloy Substrate,” Proceedings of the 6th Liege Conference, Vol. 5, Part III, Forschungszentrum Julich GmbH, p. 1523.

4. Wells, C., 1996, “Eddy Current Measurements of the In-Service Degradation of the GT29PLUS Coating System On GTD111 Turbine Blades,” Final Report of Project GE96-20, Report number SIW-96-025, Structural Integrity Associates.

5. Daleo, J. A., and Boone, D. H., 1996, “Metallurgical Evaluation Techniques in Gas Turbine Failure Analysis and Life Assessment,” Failures 96, Risk, Economy and Safety, Failure Minimization and Analysis, R. K. Penny, ed., A. A. Balkema, Rotterdam, pp. 187–201.

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