GB2059631A - Gas turbine engine fuel control system - Google Patents

Gas turbine engine fuel control system Download PDF

Info

Publication number
GB2059631A
GB2059631A GB8029730A GB8029730A GB2059631A GB 2059631 A GB2059631 A GB 2059631A GB 8029730 A GB8029730 A GB 8029730A GB 8029730 A GB8029730 A GB 8029730A GB 2059631 A GB2059631 A GB 2059631A
Authority
GB
United Kingdom
Prior art keywords
output
trim
integrator
circuit
proportional
Prior art date
Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)
Granted
Application number
GB8029730A
Other versions
GB2059631B (en
Current Assignee (The listed assignees may be inaccurate. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation or warranty as to the accuracy of the list.)
ZF International UK Ltd
Original Assignee
Lucas Industries Ltd
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Application filed by Lucas Industries Ltd filed Critical Lucas Industries Ltd
Priority to GB8029730A priority Critical patent/GB2059631B/en
Publication of GB2059631A publication Critical patent/GB2059631A/en
Application granted granted Critical
Publication of GB2059631B publication Critical patent/GB2059631B/en
Expired legal-status Critical Current

Links

Classifications

    • GPHYSICS
    • G05CONTROLLING; REGULATING
    • G05BCONTROL OR REGULATING SYSTEMS IN GENERAL; FUNCTIONAL ELEMENTS OF SUCH SYSTEMS; MONITORING OR TESTING ARRANGEMENTS FOR SUCH SYSTEMS OR ELEMENTS
    • G05B5/00Anti-hunting arrangements
    • G05B5/01Anti-hunting arrangements electric
    • FMECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
    • F02COMBUSTION ENGINES; HOT-GAS OR COMBUSTION-PRODUCT ENGINE PLANTS
    • F02CGAS-TURBINE PLANTS; AIR INTAKES FOR JET-PROPULSION PLANTS; CONTROLLING FUEL SUPPLY IN AIR-BREATHING JET-PROPULSION PLANTS
    • F02C9/00Controlling gas-turbine plants; Controlling fuel supply in air- breathing jet-propulsion plants
    • F02C9/26Control of fuel supply
    • F02C9/28Regulating systems responsive to plant or ambient parameters, e.g. temperature, pressure, rotor speed

Landscapes

  • Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Chemical & Material Sciences (AREA)
  • Combustion & Propulsion (AREA)
  • Physics & Mathematics (AREA)
  • General Physics & Mathematics (AREA)
  • Automation & Control Theory (AREA)
  • Mechanical Engineering (AREA)
  • General Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Electrical Control Of Air Or Fuel Supplied To Internal-Combustion Engine (AREA)

Abstract

A gas turbine engine fuel control system includes an hydromechanical speed governor fuel flow control (11) with an electromechanical trim (12). The trim (12) is controlled by a proportional-plus-integral controller (17, 18) in accordance with the error signal from an error amplifier (16) comparing an engine parameter with a desired value of that parameter. A trim datum signal is produced by a suitable generator circuit ( 8) and, if the error signal (or its rate of charge) exceeds a set maximum, the integrator (17) is set to a new value such that the input to the trim becomes equal to the trim datum. <IMAGE>

Description

SPECIFICATION Gas turbine engine fuel control system This invention relates to a gas turbine engine fuel control system of the kind including a hydromechanical speed governor fuel control in which a fuel valve is movable (to vary fuel flow to the engine) under the influence of a control input element, operable for example by the pilot of an aircraft in which the engine is installed, and speed sensing means, the effect of said control input element on said fuel valve being variable through the intermediary of an electromechanical trim device controlled by an electronic control circuit sensitive to at least one engine parameter.
With a control system of this kind problems arise with overshoot which occurs following a step change in the control input. It is an object of the present invention to provide a fuel control system of the kind specified in which such overshoot is avoided.
In accordance with the invention there is provided a fuel control system of the kind specified in which the electronic control circuit controlling the electromechanical trim device includes error signal generating means for producing an error signal representing the difference between the desired and actual values of said engine parameter, a proportional-plus-integral controller circuit for producing the output signal which is applied to said electromechanical trim device, means for generating a trim datum signal dependent on the control input and means for setting the integrator included in the proportional-plusintegral control circuit to a value corresponding to the difference between the trim datum signal and the output of the proportional part of the proportional-plus-integral control circuit when the magnitude of the output of the error signal generating circuit or the rate of change of such output exceeds a predetermined value.
In the accompanying drawings, Figure 1, is a diagram of one example of the invention, Figure 2 is a series of graphs illustrating the performance of the control shown in Fig. 1 and Figure 3 is a diagram of a modified form of the invention.
The system described is intended to control the fuel flow to a ducted fan type gas turbine engine 10. The fuel control itself is a hydromechanical system 11 as described in detail in U.K. Patent Specification No. 1465477 and will not be described in detail herein, the present invention being concerned with the generation of an electrical signal to control an electromechanical trim element 1 2 in the form of a torque motor providing a mechanical trim input to the system 11.
The trim signal generating circuit utilizes an input signal dependent on the engine parameter known as the integrated exhaust pressure ratio (IEPR), which is derived by dividing an electrical signal representing the integrated exhaust pressure (IEP), being a pressure at the tapping of an air potentiometer connected between one pressure tapping downstream of the fan 1 3 of the engine and another pressure tapping at the outlet 14 of the core engine, by an electrical signal representing the pressure in the engine air intake upstream of the fan 13.
An IEPR demand signal generator 1 5 is provided to calculate the desired value of the IEPR signal for any given position of the pilots lever PLA (with other engine variables as additional inputs to this generator.
The actual IEPR signal and the IEPR demand signal are applied to an error signal generator 16, the error signal output of which is applied to the inputs of an integrator 1 7 and a linear amplifier 18, the outputs of which are added together to generate the trim signal which is applied to the trim element 12.
The PLA signal is also supplied along with signals from the IEPR demand signal generator 1 5 and from a temperature transducer 7 sensitive to the air intake temperature, to a trim datum signal generator 8. This generator 8 calculates a trim datum signal by dividing a signal representing the difference between a permitted maximum high pressure spool speed at the existing PLA setting and a permitted minimum speed at that setting by a calculated desired speed signal derived by multiplying a function of IEPR demand by a function of the temperature signal.
The trim datum signal is not used during normal steady state running of the engine, since the closed loop, incorporating the error generator 16, the integrator 1 7 and the proportional amplifier 1 8 normally maintains the error signal at zero. Following a rapid change in PLA, however, there will be a step change in the IEPR demand signal and the effect of integrator 1 7 will be to cause the trim element 1 2 to be driven to one or other of its extremes whilst engine acceleration (or deceleration) is being controlled by other means (not shown in the drawing). This will result in a large overshoot at the end of acceleration or deceleration.
To prevent this overshoot, the error signal is connected via an absolute value circuit 1 9 to a reference comparator 20 connected to operate an integrator setting circuit 21 which causes the integrator output to take up a level such that the sum of its output and that of the amplifier 1 8 is equal to the trim datum signal whenever the magnitude of error signal exceeds the reference level. Thus, in acceleration or deceleration, when the output of error signal generator 1 6 is large, the integrator 1 7 will be prevented from integrating the error signal and the trim element will be set in the position it will be expected to take up after acceleration or deceleration is completed.
When the error signal falls below the reference level integrator 1 7 will start integrating again and whilst a small overshoot will occur this will be trivial compared with the overshoot which would occur in the absence of the integrator setting circuit.
In Fig. 2, the upper graph shows a step change in the IEPR demand and the solid lines in the middle and lower graphs show how the actual IEPR and the current supplied to the trim element 1 2 vary with time following the step change. The dotted lines show the performance without the reset circuit 21 operating.
It will be appreciated that, although the invention has been illustrated in terms of analog controls, a digital control involving a suitably programmed computer or a microprocessor could also be employed.
Turning now to Fig. 3, there are two main areas of difference. Firstly, a differentiator 30 is interposed between the error signal generator 16 and the absolute value circuit 19. The effect of this modification is to cause the integrator 1 7 output to be set as previously described when the absolute value of the rate of change of the error signal exceeds a set threshold, rather than when the absolute value of the error signal exceeds that threshold.
The result of this is that there is no danger of a steady state latch-up condition occurring. In the original circuit latch-up could occur if the effect of imposing the trim was to cause the error to remain above the threshold. With the differentiator 30 inserted the integrator 1 7 is externally set only during transient conditions and once the error has stabilised the normal integral and proportional trim loop is re-established.
The other change as compared with the original circuit is provision of a closed loop determining the value of the constant K. This loop includes an integrator 31 connected to integrate the difference between the output of the summing junction between the integrator 1 7 and amplifier 18 and the output of a multiplier 32. The output of integrator 31 is supplied to a function generator 33 the characteristic of which is as shown in the dia gram-i.e. its output is constant and positive when the integrator output is low, constant and larger when the integrator output is high, and linearly varying between these two constant values for intermediate values of the integrator output.The multiplier 32 has one input from the trim datum generator 8 and another from the function generator 33 and its output is applied to the integrator setting circuit 21.
This closed loop operates so that in steady conditions the output of multiplier 32 is equal to the output of the integrator 1 7 (the output of amplifier 1 6 being zero in these conditions). Whenever a change occurs which necessitates setting integrator 17, changes in the output of the trim datum generator occur more quickly than changes in the output of integrator 31, so that the multiplier K value set during the previous steady state condition is used to multiply the new trim datum signal.
The two constant levels of the output of the function generator 33 determine limits to the value of K which are respectively lower and higher than the normal range of values which K will adopt during steady state conditions, but the value of the output of the integrator 31 during large change transient conditions will cause these limits to be reached. In these conditions there is no point in attempting to maintain the value of K "correct" because until steady state is again reached the necessary value of K cannot be accurately predicted.

Claims (4)

1. A fuel control system for a gas turbine engine of the kind specified, wherein said electronic control circuit controlling the electromechanical trim device includes error signal generating means for producing an error signal representing the difference between the desired and actual values of said engine parameter, a proportional-plus-integral controller circuit for producing the output signal which is applied to said electromechanical trim device, means for generating a trim datum signal dependent on the control input and means for setting the integrator included in the proportional-plus-integral control circuit to a value corresponding to the difference between the trim datum signal and the output of the proportional part of the proportional-plus-integral control circuit when the magnitude of the output of the error signal generating circuit or the rate of change of such output exceeds a predetermined value.
2. A fuel control system as claimed in claim 1 including a closed loop circuit including a multiplier, a further integrator connected to integrate the difference between the output of the proportional-plus-integral circuit and the output of said multiplier, one input of the multiplier being connected to the output of said trim datum signal generating means and a function generator having an input connected to the output of said further integrator and its output connected to the other input of the multiplier, said function generator producing a relatively low level constant signal at low values of the output of the further integrator and a relatively high level constant signal at high values of the output of the further integrator, and the output of the multiplier being connected to an integrator setting circuit controlled by a comparator sensitive to the rate of change of the output of the error signal generating circuit.
3. A fuel control system for a gas turbine engine substantially as hereinbefore described with reference to Fig. 1 of the accompanying drawings.
4. A fuel control system for a gas turbine engine substantially as hereinbefore described with reference to Fig. 3 of the accompanying drawings.
GB8029730A 1979-09-21 1980-09-15 Gas turbine engine fuel control system Expired GB2059631B (en)

Priority Applications (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
GB8029730A GB2059631B (en) 1979-09-21 1980-09-15 Gas turbine engine fuel control system

Applications Claiming Priority (2)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
GB7932878 1979-09-21
GB8029730A GB2059631B (en) 1979-09-21 1980-09-15 Gas turbine engine fuel control system

Publications (2)

Publication Number Publication Date
GB2059631A true GB2059631A (en) 1981-04-23
GB2059631B GB2059631B (en) 1983-09-07

Family

ID=26272969

Family Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
GB8029730A Expired GB2059631B (en) 1979-09-21 1980-09-15 Gas turbine engine fuel control system

Country Status (1)

Country Link
GB (1) GB2059631B (en)

Cited By (3)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
GB2171224A (en) * 1983-01-28 1986-08-20 Gen Electric Isochronous gas turbine speed control
FR2630780A1 (en) * 1988-04-29 1989-11-03 United Technologies Corp CEILING LOOP CONTROL SYSTEM
US8099227B2 (en) 2009-03-19 2012-01-17 Pratt & Whitney Canada Corp. Control of gas turbine engine

Cited By (6)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
GB2171224A (en) * 1983-01-28 1986-08-20 Gen Electric Isochronous gas turbine speed control
FR2630780A1 (en) * 1988-04-29 1989-11-03 United Technologies Corp CEILING LOOP CONTROL SYSTEM
US8099227B2 (en) 2009-03-19 2012-01-17 Pratt & Whitney Canada Corp. Control of gas turbine engine
US8538658B2 (en) 2009-03-19 2013-09-17 Pratt & Whitney Canada Corp. Control of gas turbine engine
US8886438B2 (en) 2009-03-19 2014-11-11 Pratt & Whitney Canada Corp. Control of gas turbine engine
US9382849B2 (en) 2009-03-19 2016-07-05 Pratt & Whitney Canada Corp. Control of gas turbine engine

Also Published As

Publication number Publication date
GB2059631B (en) 1983-09-07

Similar Documents

Publication Publication Date Title
US5083277A (en) Fuel control system
US5023793A (en) Apparatus and method for dynamic compensation of a propeller pitch speed control governor
JP3039947B2 (en) Gas turbine fuel control system
US4995232A (en) Running control for a gas turbine engine
US3421317A (en) Electrical control systems for engines
US4018044A (en) Electronic fuel control for a gas turbine engine
EP0185600B1 (en) A transient derivative scheduling control system
US4437303A (en) Fuel control system for a gas turbine engine
US4423592A (en) Fuel control system for gas turbine engine
US4100731A (en) Fuel control for a multi-engine gas turbine installation
JPH0416618B2 (en)
US4380148A (en) Device for adjusting gas turbine engine fuel control system in accordance with engine parameter
US4206597A (en) Fan R.P.M. control loop stabilization using high rotor speed
JPS646481B2 (en)
US4644744A (en) Control device for controlling an engine of a turbine power system having more than one engine
KR0151710B1 (en) System for regulating a operative parameter of an internal combustion engine of a motor vehicle
KR910004767B1 (en) Rpm control device for internal combustion engine
US3888078A (en) Governing device for a gas turbine system exemplified by a vehicular or aircraft engine
JPS6130142B2 (en)
US3820321A (en) Acceleration control for gas turbine engine
GB2059631A (en) Gas turbine engine fuel control system
US3938321A (en) Gas turbine control
GB2171224A (en) Isochronous gas turbine speed control
GB2121986A (en) Gas turbine engine fuel control systems
US4407118A (en) Gas turbine engine fuel control system

Legal Events

Date Code Title Description
PCNP Patent ceased through non-payment of renewal fee

Effective date: 19970915