Verification and Design of High Precision Eddy Current Sensor for Tip Clearance Measurement

Author(s):  
Ziyu Zhao ◽  
Zhenxia Liu ◽  
Yaguo Lyu ◽  
Xinxin Xu

A high precision eddy current sensor for tip clearance measurement was proposed to assess the dynamic tip clearance measurement for aero-engine rotator. Based on the Lenz’s law, the eddy current sensor has high sensitivity, quick response speed and strong anti-interference capability, in addition, the simple geometry and easy installation are its main merits. The aim is to study the influence of planar coil structure parameters and excitation signal parameters on the sensor coil measurement, provide the basis for design of practical sensor in turbine tip clearance measurement. The dynamic calibration experiment verified the designed planar sensor coil, the results indicated the sensor resolution was 10μm and the measurement range was not less than 3mm. The dynamic experiment proved the measuring range, resolution, response speed of designed sensor can meet the requirement of turbine blade tip clearance measurement. The work provides experience in eddy current sensor design in different application, not only in turbine. And the future work will focus on the high temperature issues.

Author(s):  
Xiao-Hu Zheng

An analytical model of an eddy current sensor designed for noncontact distance measurement was presented. The device consists of two planar coil (driver coil and pickup coil) stacked on the magnetic core. The planar coil fabricated by UV-LIGA technology with SU8 photoresist was illustrated, and the permalloy magnetic core electroforming process was presented also. Tested with 10–50KHz sine signal, the output voltage on the sensing coil rearched 30mv with an stainless target placed at a distance of 10μm, and the experimental showed a linear relation between the distance and output voltage within 50μm distance. The whole size of the device was: Φ5mm × 1.5 mm. The results demonstrated that the device could nondestructive evaluate the distance and be easily integrated on chip.


Author(s):  
K. S. Chana ◽  
M. T. Cardwell ◽  
J. S. Sullivan

Gas turbine efficiency can be improved with tighter turbine tip clearances. An approach being developed by engine manufacturers deploys active tip clearance monitoring where the turbine casing diameter is actively controlled in-service either mechanically or thermally. Typically current engines operate at about 1% clearance of blade span. With active control this could potentially be reduced significantly. Ideally active tip clearance control requires closed loop feedback measurements to maintain very small clearances without the risk of blade tip contact with the casing liner. Therefore reliable and robust sensors systems are required that can operate at the elevated temperatures found in modern gas turbines. Currently there are limited sensor systems available that can operate at these temperatures and survive typical sensor life requirements of many thousands of hours. This study details development of a high temperature eddy current sensor system for hot section applications. The investigation encompasses development and validation of an integrated sensor design to provide tip clearance measurements. The sensor is designed to withstand temperatures of order 1500 to 1600K. Test facilities used to validate the system include a RB168 Mk 101 Spey engine and a Rolls-Royce VIPER engine. The turbine casings of both engines were modified to fit sensors directly above the rotor. The accuracy of the system was validated in a high speed rotor test facility with engine representative blading. Accuracy of the eddy current sensor was compared and validated against a dynamic laser micrometer system.


Author(s):  
V. Sridhar ◽  
K. S. Chana

Gas turbine health monitoring is an important area of research. As the performance of aircraft and power plants increase, they will require better sensors for health monitoring systems to prevent failures. Health monitoring systems help in preventive maintenance reducing unnecessary downtime and maintenance costs. Gas turbine blades are subjected to dynamic loads caused by rotor imbalances, distortions in the intake flows etc. These loads cause low or high cycle fatigues and the blades can fail over time. Tip-timing and tip-clearance systems makes it possible to assess turbomachinery blade vibration by using non-contact measurement systems such as optical, eddy current, hall effect, capacitve etc. The most widely used systems in industry are optical, however, these systems are still largely prone to contamination problems from dust, dirt, oil, water etc. Further development of these systems for in-service use is problematic because of the difficulty in eliminating contamination of the optics. Other systems, although immune to contamination, may not be able to measure both tip-clearance and tip-timing at the same time due to their operating principle. Another limitation is that they cannot be used in high temperature applications such as in a high pressure turbine where the temperatures can reach 1400°C. Eddy current sensors are found to be quite robust and can measure both tip-timing and tip-clearance. They are currently being used for gas turbine health monitoring applications at low temperatures such as in the compressor stage and last stage of a steam turbine. A new high temperature eddy current sensor has been developed in-house at the University of Oxford for application in gas turbine tip-timing and tip clearance measurements to assess blade vibrations. The current sensor is a modified version of the existing eddy current sensor that is able to operate at high temperatures of about 1400°C. The paper presents the development of the sensor and experimental results of tip clearance measurements in the high pressure turbine stage of a jet engine. In the engine tests, two blades were reduced in height to increase the tip-clearance and the measurements were taken at both idle and max operating speeds. The sensor was found to work in these harsh environments and was sufficiently sensitive to accurately determine the tip clearance at these elevated temperatures. Tests were carried out mainly to demonstrate the technique of obtaining good tip clearance measurements and the survivability of the sensors in the high temperature and pressure environment.


Sensors ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 19 (4) ◽  
pp. 761 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jiang Wu ◽  
Bin Wen ◽  
Yu Zhou ◽  
Qi Zhang ◽  
Shuiting Ding ◽  
...  

Blade tip clearance (BTC) measurement and active clearance control (ACC) are becoming crucial technologies in aero-engine health monitoring so as to improve the efficiency and reliability as well as to ensure timely maintenance. Eddy current sensor (ECS) offers an attractive option for BTC measurement due to its robustness, whereas current approaches have not considered two issues sufficiently. One is that BTC affects the response time of a measurement loop, the other is that ECS signal decays with increasing speed. This paper proposes a speed adjustment model (SAM) to deal with these issues in detail. SAM is trained using a nonlinear regression method from a dynamic training data set obtained by an experiment. The Levenberg–Marquardt (LM) algorithm is used to estimate SAM characteristic parameters. The quantitative relationship between the response time of ECS measurement loop and BTC, as well as the output signal and speed are obtained. A BTC measurement method (BTCMM) based on the SAM is proposed and a geometric constraint equation is constructed to assess the accuracy of BTC measurement. Experiment on a real-time BTC measurement during the running process for a micro turbojet engine is conducted to validate the BTCMM. It is desirable and significative to effectively improve BTC measurement accuracy and expand the range of applicable engine speed.


2010 ◽  
Vol 139-141 ◽  
pp. 2283-2286
Author(s):  
Xiao Hu Zheng ◽  
Feng Gu

An analytical model of an eddy current sensor designed for noncontact distance measurement is presented. The device consists of two planar coil (driver coil and pickup coil) stacked on the magnetic core. The planar coil fabricated by UV-LIGA technology with SU-8 photoresist is illustrated, and the permalloy magnetic core electroforming process is presented also. Tested with 10-50 KHz sine signal, the output voltage of the sensing coil reached 30mv with a Ni target placed at a distance of 20μm. And the experimental showed a linear relation between the distance and output voltage within 60μm distance. The amplitude trend increases with the increasing of the frequency and amplitude of excited signal, which is according with the theory analytics. The whole size of the device is: Φ5mm×1.5mm. The results demonstrated that the device could nondestructive evaluate the distance and be easily integrated on chip, and the UV-LIGA Process could be used as a new method to fabricate the micro eddy current sensor massly.


2018 ◽  
Vol 10 (1) ◽  
pp. 168781401774802 ◽  
Author(s):  
Nidhal Jamia ◽  
Michael I Friswell ◽  
Sami El-Borgi ◽  
Ralston Fernandes

Blade tip timing is a contactless method used to monitor the vibration of blades in rotating machinery. Blade vibration and clearance are important diagnostic features for condition monitoring, including the detection of blade cracks. Eddy current sensors are a practical choice for blade tip timing and have been used extensively. As the data requirements from the timing measurement become more stringent and the systems become more complicated, including the use of multiple sensors, the ability to fully understand and optimize the measurement system becomes more important. This requires detailed modeling of eddy current sensors in the blade tip timing application; the current approaches often rely on experimental trials. Existing simulations for eddy current sensors have not considered the particular case of a blade rotating past the sensor. Hence, the novel aspect of this article is the development of a detailed quasi-static finite element model of the electro-magnetic field to simulate the integrated measured output of the sensor. This model is demonstrated by simulating the effect of tip clearance, blade geometry, and blade velocity on the output of the eddy current sensor. This allows an understanding of the sources of error in the blade time of arrival estimate and hence insight into the accuracy of the blade vibration measurement.


2014 ◽  
Vol 635-637 ◽  
pp. 942-947
Author(s):  
Wen Bo Na ◽  
Qing Feng Jiang ◽  
Long Xie ◽  
Wen Bo Zhou

Eddy current sensor with online non-contact measurement, no coupling medium and high sensitivity etc, is widely used in engineering. In this paper, based on the eddy current testing principle, the eddy current sensor is modeled in ANSYS software to complete the optimization design. The article research on the method of flaw recognition after extracting the detection signal features and analysis the impact of the flaw size on the detection signal, so as to provide a theoretical method of qualitative detection in the practical application.


2013 ◽  
Vol 133 (5) ◽  
pp. 300-306
Author(s):  
Tsutomu Mizuno ◽  
Yuichi Asato ◽  
Sho Goto ◽  
Takashi Watanabe ◽  
Teruie Takemasu ◽  
...  

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