2015 Advance Materials For GT
2015 Advance Materials For GT
2015 Advance Materials For GT
4 (December 2015)
5
The market for gas turbine combined cycle (GTCC) power generation is expected to grow on
a long-term basis as the cleanest and most economic thermal power generating system that can
coexist with renewable energy. To further achieve further efficiency, it is essential to improve the
properties of turbine component materials and develop manufacturing technologies for building
the complicated structures required by advanced blade design. This report presents the
development of technologies including alloy design and casting, coating, welding repair, and
cooling-hole drilling processes, as material and manufacturing technologies for the
higher-temperature application of gas turbines.
|1. Introduction
In recent years global energy demand is increasing markedly, especially in Asian countries
such as China and India. It is predicted that global energy consumption in 2035 will reach a level
approximately 1.5 times higher than that of 2010. In Japan, the energy self-sufficiency rate is less
than 10% and it is an issue of urgency to improve energy use efficiency and reduce environmental
load. In particular, thermal power generation, which is currently responsible for nearly 90% of the
electricity production in Japan, should be made more efficient. Power generation efficiency is
significantly affected by the firing temperature of gas turbine (the main component of the system).
Because the thermal cycle efficiency can be improved as the temperature rises, Mitsubishi Hitachi
Power Systems, Ltd. (MHPS) has developed advanced systems with higher temperatures/ better
efficiency and larger capacities since the early 1980s.
As shown in Figure 11, the turbine inlet temperatures started with a 1,100°C-class in 1984
(Type D), followed by a 1,350°C-class in 1989 (Type F) and a 1,500°C-class in 1997 (Type G).
Further in 2011, 1,600°C-class gas turbines (Type J) were launched.2 The national project
“Elemental Technology Development for 1,700°C-class Gas Turbine” started in fiscal 2004. In
developing the Type J gas turbines, the project results such as advanced thermal barrier coating
(TBC) and cooling/aerodynamic technologies were also utilized (Figure 2).
To further elevate the gas turbine temperature, it is critical to design a new material that can
withstand such high temperatures, improve the properties of turbine components and invent
manufacturing technologies for building complicated structures required by advanced blade design.
This report introduces these technologies that MHPS is developing with Mitsubishi Heavy
Industries, Ltd. (MHI) Research & Innovation Center.
*1 Chief Staff Manager, Manufacturing Technology Research Depart, Research & Innovation Center, Technology & Innovation
Headquarters
*2 Manufacturing Technology Research Depart, Research & Innovation Center, Technology & Innovation Headquarters
*3 Materials Research Department, Research & Innovation Center, Technology & Innovation Headquarters
*4 Chief Staff Manager, Research & Innovation Center, Technology & Innovation Headquarters
*5 Director, Fluid Dynamics Research Department, Research & Innovation Center, Technology & Innovation Headquarters
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Figure 3 Micro structure and high-temperature strength property of the designed alloy
TBC is applied by thermal spraying. The introduction of micro scale pores in the coatings
enables the formation of coatings with a lower thermal conductivity than sintered bodies. However,
the presence of too many pores can induce abrasion due to erosion or cause early coating spallation
under the actual operating conditions of high temperature and high flow rate, which in itself may
lead to the loss of thermal barrier effectiveness. The next issue is therefore the development of a
coating technology including the optimization of thermal spraying conditions. As shown in
Figure 8 (a), the thermal cycle resistance of coatings is examined by the laser thermal cycle test
and with the simultaneous measurement of temperature, thermal conductivity is also evaluated.
MHI developed high-temperature erosion test rig by which erodent particles can impinge on the
coating under simulated operating conditions of high temperature and high flow rate (Figure 8 (b)).
The coating erosion property is thus evaluated. With the use of such equipment, the material design
for TBC was conducted while optimizing the thermal spraying conditions (which is described in
the next section). The obtained coatings satisfy the required criteria of reliability and thermal
barrier effectiveness.
The coatings formed in accordance with the determined thermal-spraying conditions exhibit
excellent properties. However, this is the case only with objects with a simple shape such as test
pieces. Turbine blades have end walls and the contour is three-dimensional. It is not easy to
produce an ideal uniform coating all over the surface, as with the test pieces. To make it possible, it
is necessary to execute the application technique under the same condition as the test pieces, while
synchronizing the robot arm with a thermal spray gun and the turn table with a turbine blade fixed
on it to stop them from interfering with each other. CAD-based robot simulation technology is used
to program such complicated robotic operations (Figure 10).
After advanced TBC was applied to a real blade using the robot programming, a test piece
from the blade was used to verify the soundness of the coating on the blade through a thermal cycle
test and blade cutting inspection. The advanced TBC technology was thus completed and was
applied to Type J gas turbines, which have been in operation for approximately 130000 hours (at
the end of October, 2015) with excellent operational results.
To produce a weld metal structure with the same single-crystal orientation as the base
material, it is necessary to appropriately control the temperature gradient (G) and the rate of
solidification (R) in the fused boundary and result in a large G/R value during solidification. The
analysis was conducted to estimate G and R values in the designated areas under various LMD
conditions. Specifically, based on G/R values, the areas in which monocrystalline crystals (formed
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on the fused boundary with the base material) can grow normally are predicted. Figure 14 shows
the results of the predicted height of normal growth under various welding conditions. The bottom
right of the figure represents the application condition in which welding heat input is too small,
while the upper left is the application condition in which heat input is too large, and are areas where
welding could not be performed. The results indicate that, to expand the formation range of the
weld metal with the same crystal orientation as the base material (i.e., monocrystalline), the laser
power should be increased and the welding speed should be decreased.
LMD was applied under the appropriate conditions determined by the analysis. Figure 15 is
a cross-sectional image of the weld bead structure. It shows the normal monocrystalline structure of
the weld metal, confirming that the desirable results have been obtained.
Figure 14 Relationship between LMD condition and Figure 15 Cross section of the
range of monocrystalline growth weld bead microstructure
In developing this method, a processing test was conducted to drill simple round holes as the
verification of two-stage processing effectiveness. Figure 17 illustrates the mechanism of
two-stage processing for the TBC-sprayed Ni-base superalloy. In Step 1, a short-pulse laser beam is
radiated to the coating while rotating the beam in a circle, thereby creating a hole outlined by the
red ring hatch and allowing the Ni-base superalloy underneath (which is the substrate) to be
exposed. In Step 2, the Ni-base superalloy is irradiated by rotating a fiber laser beam in a circle,
creating a hole outlined by the yellow hatch. The drilling process for the TBC-sprayed Ni-base
superalloy is thus completed.
|6. Conclusion
To deal with the increase in temperature applied to gas turbines, it is crucial to develop new
materials durable enough to resist high-temperature environments, improve turbine component
properties and invent manufacturing technologies to build complicated structures required by
advanced blade design. This report introduced our progress in such technological development.
MHPS and MHI verified the usability and effectiveness of the developed material and
manufacturing technologies. Some of the latest technologies have already been used in our gas
turbines. MHPS and MHI will continue to develop technologies that can improve the performance
and reliability of our gas turbines and satisfy the needs of our clients, while enabling the further
effective use of energy and a reduction in environmental load.
References
1. Komori, T. et al., the 41th GTSJ Seminar material (2013) pp. 57-64
2. Yuri, M. et al., Development of 1600°C-Class High-efficiency Gas Turbine for Power Generation
Applying J-Type Technology, Mitsubishi Heavy Industries Technical Review Vol. 50 No. 3 (2013) pp.
1-10.
3. Okada, I. et al., Development of Ni base Superalloy for Industrial Gas Turbine, Superalloy2004,
(2004),p707-712.
4. Kishi, K. et al., Welding Repair Technology for Single Crystal Blade and Vane,Proceedings of the
International Gas Turbine Congress, (2014), IGTC07-116S.
5. KREUTZ, E.W. et al., Process Development and Control of Laser Drilled and Shaped Holes in Turbine
Components, JLMN-Journal of Laser Micro/Nanoengineering, Vol.2 No.2 (2007), p123.
6. Sezer, H.K. et al., Mechanisms of Acute Angle Laser Drilling induced Thermal Barrier Coating
Delamination,Journal of Manufacturing Science and Engineering, vol.131 (2009), p.051014-1
7. Goya, S. et al., High-Speed & High-Quality Laser Drilling Technology Using a Prism Rotator, Mitsubishi
Heavy Industries Technical Review Vol. 52 No. 1 (2015) pp. 106-109