The advantage of axial face seals (mechanical face seal, shaft seal, slide ring seal, carbon seal
etc.) compared with labyrinth seals, is the minor leakage at
high pressure differences and the
sealing effect during stand still. That is especially important, if during stand still lacking sealing air and
an increase of the labyrinth clearances, especially at oil dampened bearings by the rotor weight, let
escape oil.
The sealing element in axial face seals is formed from an usually axial acting ring shaped
sliding face (Fig. "Face seals for bearing casings"). This sealing principle can be found in aeroengines as built oil seals of
main bearing chambers. In a modified form axial face seals are used for large shaft diameters at main
bearings as „carbon-rubbing oil seal“ (Fig. "Face seals for bearing casings"). As
cartridge seal it is used at gear shafts, pumps
and control units.
As seals of the main shafts axial face seals are used in
surroundings temperatures up to more than 600°C. This requires an intense cooling of the sealing gap. The limit of the
circumferential sliding speed lays at about 120 m/sec, the
pressure difference through the seal at maximum 10 bar.
Axial face seals have proven as especially reliable. In the civil use, safe
overhaul intervals (time between overhaul =TBO) in the range of
104 hours are achieved, under harder military conditions
103 hours. Exeeds the pressure difference to be sealed the capacity of the axial face
seal, they can be combined with labyrinth seals (buffer seals). This configuration of the
„buffered-face seal” is used in the
modern aeroengine technology.
Suffer axial face seals a failure,
dangerous consequences (oil fire, volume 2, Ill. 9.2-13), up to
the drop-out of the aeroengine with fragment exit must be expected. Therefore it is important, to draw
from failure svmptoms and failure modes conclusions at the causes, to introduce targeted remedies .
Fig. "Face seals for bearing casings" (Lit. 23.4.2.2-12, Lit. 23.4.2.2-13 and Lit. 23.4.2.2-14):
Face seals consist of five typical elements
(face seal, sketch above right). These can be designed in different ways. Every
element has its specific problems.
„1“ Sliding ring: This part of the
„split ring type” (sketch below right) can be, depending from
the design, rotating or static. At the`face
type' the sliding ring is static (sketch below left). Its material
is usually relative `soft'. Typical are graphite/carbon
mixtures. These are compressed and/or mixed
for forming with binder. From this production, e.g., the binder and the
porosity depends the sensivity against oil. Reactions with aeroengine typical, hot synthetic oil must not occur. The
oil type (Fig. "Compatibility of oils with materials") is also in an other aspect crucial for the operation behaviour of the seal. Is the oil not
sufficient temperature stable, a coking in the sealing
gap can deteriorate the sliding ring (Fig. "Deteriorating effects by oil coking" and
Fig. "Failure modes of axial face seals").
Frequently the carbon sliding ring is kept in a bearing structure. This guarantees the
mechanical robustness. The type of joining, force fitted or bonded, influences the danger of
distortion of the sealing face and with this the risk of a leak (Fig. "Failure modes of axial face seals").
„2“ Rotating sealing face
(shaft): It contains of a harder material than the sliding ring. Concerned
are hardened steels, hard metal/carbides like tungsten carbide. The selection also depends from the
corrosion influences. The `natural' wear of the sealing face produces fresh reactive metal surfaces and so
promotes corrosion. This is also true, if the wear is rather polishing or occurs as fretting at vibrating
contact/guiding faces. Thereby attention must be payed at possibly touching
corrosion cell forming metals like copper, brass, nickel and cromium. So the danger exists, that the Co/Ni-matrix of a TCcoating will
be selectively etched out.
The material of the bond of coatings or brazed slide shoes must bear the expected overheating
(hot run). Thereby the thermal stresses must not lead to crack development and/or
separating/flaking. Also force-fitted and/or form-locking fixed ceramic inserts must take such conditions. Such a
material is pure silicon carbide (SiC), sintered or reaction sintered.
Important for the function is the transfer of a thin carbon sliding film from the graphite slide shoe
at the rotating sealing face. With this property, the chance for an emergency
operation (dry-running) during a short time drop out of the oil film in the sealing gap is given.
„3” Contact pressure
system/spring: The necessary pressure force takes a mechanical spring
and/or the inner pressure. The contact pressure force must not be too high during operation. Only so, a
sufficient lubricant film can develop. However, it also may not be too low and with this endanger the
sealing effect. Deposits at the centering face and guidances of the slide ring or setting of the springs
can lower the contact pressure force.
The material of the contact pressure
spring must withstand corrosive influences. To this also
count decomposition products and contaminations of the oil
(chapter 22.3). Especially dangerous are
halogens (chlorine) for springs from stainless steel (Cr-Ni steels). These can produce notches (corrosion
pittings) and/or cracks, caused by stress corrosion.
„4“ The seal/guidance of the slide ring
serves to prevent a leak through bypassing the slidering.
Depending from the operation conditions, O-rings or piston
rings are used. O rings are markedly temperature
limited. Therefore at main bearings piston rings are used. These must guarantee over long operation
periods sufficient sliding properties. Jamming/blocking or
stick-slip-effects must not occur. This requires
an acceptable wear behaviour (fretting) of the tribological system.
Does the sealing face not close, contamination particles with leakage oil can intrude in the sliding
face and produce unacceptable wear.
At elastomers in face seals all material specific failure modes like swelling and cracking can appear
(Fig. "Influences of O-ring materials").
„5” Prevention of the rotation of the sliding
ring: Static sliding rings must be sure hindered to
rotate. This takes place by form-locking. Usually are locking lugs or bolts (anti rotation pins). At
supporting faces, respectively guidance faces, no unacceptable fretting wear must occur. Are the locks
markedly dynamically loaded (bending), during material
selection attention must be payed besides at strength
and wear behaviour also at corrosion.
In the area of the aeroengine main
bearingss (sketch above left) for tightening primarily two
types of axial face seals against oil exit can
be found.
Axial face seal (mechanical seal, face type, sketch above left):
In bearing chambers mainly `built' axial face seals (sketch below left)
are used. For such, which can be taken-apart, a reassembly with
inspected elements is possible. This requires an intense inspection for failures and,
if necessary repairs.
Radial face seals (split ring type, sketch below right):
These are only used for low pressure differences in the region of main
bearings. Its slide ring is segmented. It is pressed at the sliding face of the shaft by
a circumferential spilral spring. Typical is the use for large seal diameters
like main shafts and propeller shafts. Lubrication and cooling takes place
through a special oil supply.
Applications can be found in the compressor region of elder aeroengine
types and at propeller shafts. Thereby, different to labyrinths, the enduring
sealing effect during stand still is important.
Cartridge seals serve as sealing ov shafts in gears and accessory
devices. Its diameter is relatively small. Similar to a radial face seal, all static
elements („1“, „3”, „5“) are in a metal casing (artrdge). An exchange takes place
in one piece. Normally the reuse is not planned.
Fig. "Failure modes of axial face seals" (Lit. 23.4.2.2-2): This picture shall make aware the many damaging effects at an
axial face seal and give so a support for the treatment.
Occurs a failure or problem at an axial face seal, the
failure mode and symptoms can give the
expert important hints at causative
influences. For a statement, as sure as possible, some elements of
the findings have to be combined. Wear patterns at the contact faces of the axial adjustment can
be connected with track/contact patterns (Fig. "Failure causes oat axial face seals").
A survey about the consequences of typical influences
follows:
Corrosion and other chemical
reactions: It must be considered, that wear processes produce
fresh reactive metal surfaces, which are unexpected susceptible to corrosion.
Oil contaminations (Ill.
22.3.3.2-1) and aging products (Ill.
22.3.1-2) can attack seal elements (Fig. "Problems due to change of the oil type"). In all cases, a specific sensitivity of the material is needed. This counts, e.g., for stress corrosion cracking (SCC) or hydrogen
embrittlement of springs made from high strength
steels. The formation of a corrosion cell develops during contact of different metals in an lubrication oil, acting as
electrolyte. This can be traced back to not suitable additives, aging or contaminations.
Hard thermal spray coatings and sinter
layers at the rotating sealing face („2”) can be damaged
by corrosion. From tungsten carbid (TC) in a Co-Ni-matrix, the matrix gets
dissolved. So break out of the hard TC particles occurs. As result a
high wear rate is to be expected.
Elastomers of the static sealing („4“, e.g. O-rings) of the face sealring can be damaged in
different ways (Fig. "Problems due to change of the oil type" and Fig. "O-ring failures and its causes"). Is the axial move of the sealring hampered, a lekage occurs.
Wear can arise in different types.
A further problem, are abrasive particles/oil contaminations or
Cavitation (volume 1, Ill. 5.3.1-11.2) depends from flow conditions in the oil. It is influenced by
pressure, temperature and velocity. Also characteristics of the sealing faces like planarity, have a crucial
effect. So it comes to the formation of gas bubbles and vapor bubbles in the lubrication gap with break
outs and abrasion at the sliding faces.
New parts production and repair: Primarily the sealing faces of the seal ring and the shaft are
affected by aberrations:
Assembling and handling problems: An appropriate storage must already guarantee the defect
free condition of the seal. That is especially applied for the sensititve carbon sealring. Typical
assembly relevant problems are
Operational mechanical loads: Occur failures at axial face seals, they are probably secondary.
Thereby it must be checked, if operation conditions
existed, which explain unnormal high mechanical/physical loads:
Fig. "Failure causes oat axial face seals" (Lit. 23.4.2.2-5, Lit.
23.4.2.2-10 and Lit. 23.4.2.2-11): The sliding
face of an axial face seal can give important
hints at problems and failure causes. The pictures show
typical schematic features for the tribological
system carbon slide ring - steel race. The
associated causes and relevant influences are
described more detailed in Fig. "Failure modes of axial face seals".
Typical symptoms of the contact pattern are
(see also Ill. 4.2.3.2-8):
Rotating sliding face
Failures of the race track at the rotating sliding face:
Static sliding surface (carbon ring)
Fig. "Damages at rotating sliding faces" (Lit. 23.4.2.2-5): In this picture it is attempted to display schematic details of
typical failure modes with typical features of sliding ring
tracks from axial face seals.
„A“ Nonuniform sliding
track, possible causes:
„B” Scratched sliding track, „C“ Erosion, possible causes:
„D” Coke formation, possible causes:
„E“ Thermal crack formation, possible causes:
„F” Break outs at the edges of the sliding race, possible causes:
Fig. "Seal carbon blistering" (Lit. 23.4.2.2-5 and Lit. 23.4.2.2-9):
Carbon blistering at carbon sealing rings for
the sealing of oil, apparently is the most important cause of leakages.
The failure mode are bright areas. Sometimes they show small radial cracks and/or pits at a broken
up blister (detail below right). The blistering in the race track disturbs the evenness, needed for the
sealing effect of the sliding face.
Three features are distinguished:
Type I: Bright spot.
Type II: Bright spot with origins of radial micro cracks.
Type III: Pitting shaped break out with radial micro cracks.
Formation mechanism of the blister (middle frame): This failure forms even at a
few damaging cycles. This is a question of a
self-energizing cyclic damage mechanism. In the initial phase (type I) a
polishing effect creates the bright
surface. The hydrodynamic oil film penetrates the pores
near the surface in the carbon slidering („1” and „2“). During a fast
temperature rise, due to high oil temperatures
or friction heat, the oil expands in the pores („3”). Is the oil not able to escape fast enough, a zone
below the sliding face bursts open (upper detail). Thereby the affected area (`cover') will be slightly
lifted. Even about ten damaging temperature cycles can trigger blistering. This shows, that the
temperature cycles are crucial. In the region of a blister the contact pressure and friction heat increases. So
thermal stresses and mechanical bending stresses in the `blister cover' develop. Further loadcycles
produce cracks (Type II) until the friction forces lift the blister cover (Typ III).
The blistering will be intensified
This behavior is material dependend for all three parameters (cycles, oil pressure and oil viscosity). For example the damaging blister formation on the sliding ring is at a ceramic counter face generally weaker than at a steel face.
Fig. "Accident by a worn axial face ring" (Lit. 23.4.2.2-15): After the landing, the aeroengine was checked from the operator.
It appeared, that the smoke in the cabin came from the left aeroengine. After this the aeroengine
was transferred for an investigation to the OEM. The following
failure sequence could be reconstructed:
The bearing chambers „2“ und „3” have
labyrinth seals. These act function determined with a
sealing gap. Obviously the leaking air led to a
pressure rise in the casing of the accessory
gear. This lowered the pressure difference to the sealing air at the bearing chambers (volume 2, Ill. 9.2-1). So the
sealing effect of the labyrinth seals deteriorated further. The high pressure in the accessory gear let oil
exit through a worn carbon axial face seal in the bearing chamber „1“.
This got into the intake area of the low pressure
compressor. The high operation temperature of the components evaporated
and decomposed (smoke) the oil. The bleed air for the cabin
is taken behind the high pressure compressor. It was corresponding contaminated by the oil.
To the contamination with the oil, obviously also the deterioration of a static seal between two
casings has contributed. It let also oil into the cabin air. Also interesting is, that an improved
sealing packing of fluorocarbon (PTFE) was concerned. It was only short time ago introduced, instructed by the OEM.
To solve the problem of the pressure rise in the casing of the accessory drive, from the OEM a
vent pipe from the gear into the exhaust gas casing was drafted. This prevented a too high pressure in the
gear casing.
Comment: From the cited literature the cause of the damage of the carbon face seals is not
definitely clear. Besides the high sealing
pressure, also seems the high temperature of the leaking air
stream into the gear casing as cause absolutely plausible.
The remedy with a vent pipe shows, that this problem is not a single case. Probably it already exists
for a long time. At this points the actual cause, i.e. the labyrinth seals at the bearing chambers as a
design feature.
The introduction of the static sealing packing of PTFE seems to be a typical case of
disimprovement (volume 1, Ill. 3.3). Here the question after the sufficient near operation-conditions testing
arises. Above all a decomposition of PTFE may itself ad to an alarming air contamination (fluor).
References
23.4.2.2-1 „Why Seals Fail” , TWI Press Inc.2000, www.Maintenanceresources.com, Page 1-8.
23.4.2.2-2 „Troubleshooting pumps“ , www.mcnallyinstitute.com, 2006, ca. 120 Pages.
23.4.2.2-3 „End face mechanical seals” , en.wikipedia.org/wikRotating_face_mechanical_seal,
2006, 5 Pages.
23.4.2.2-4 „Mechanical seal, seal face, seal face material, Carbon in a Metal Holder“,
Zeitschrift „Maintenance World”, www.maintenanceworld.com, 2004, 1 Page.
23.4.2.2-5 „Troubleshooting Process (part 1and 2)“, Zeitschrift „Maitenance
World”, www.maintenanceworld.com, 2004, 9 Pages.
23.4.2.2-6 Xu Hua, Zhu Jun, „Influence of the Mechanical Seals on the Dynamic Performance of
Rotor-Bearing Systems“, Zeitschrift „Frontiers of Mechanical Engineering in China”, Volume 1,
Number 1, Januar 2006, Page 96-100.
23.4.2.2-7 A.L.King, B.S.Nau, H.S.Stephens, „Film Cavitation Observations in Face Seals“,
Proceedings der „Fourth International Conference on Fluid Sealing”, Philadelphia,1969, Page 190-198.
23.4.2.2-8 M.Pohl, „Kavitationserosion“, Zeitschrift „Praktische Metallografie” 33 (1996) 4, Page
168-186.
23.4.2.2-9 E.W.Strugala, „The Nature and Cause of Seal Carbon Blistering“, Zeitschrift „ Journal
of American Society of Lubrication Engineers”, September 1972, Page 333-339.
23.4.2.2-10 „Identifying Your Mechanical Seal, Wear Patterns, Their Meanings & Suggested
Solutions“, Fa. Ne Seal Industrial Products LTD., www.neseal.com, 2006, 8 Pages.
23.4.2.2-11 W.Schmidthals, H.W.Seffler,,Schadensfälle - Analysen und Ursachen”, „Handbuch
der Dichtungstechnik“, Kapitel 13.4, Expert Verlag, Page 403-423.
23.4.2.2-12 V.P.Povinelli, Jr.,,Current Seal Designs and Future Requirements for Turbine Engine
Seals and Bearings”, Zeitschrift „Journal of Aircraft“, April 1975, Vol. 12, No. 4, Page 266-273.
23.4.2.2-13 ,,JT8D Bearings & Seals”, 2001, www.boeing-727.com, Page 1-4.
23.4.2.2-14 I.E.Traeger, „Aircraft Gas Turbine Engine Technology, Second Edition“, Verlag :
Glencoe/McGraw-Hill 1994, ISBN 0-07-065158-2, Page 278, 401, 562.
23.4.2.2-15 Australian Transport Safety Bureau (ATSB), Transport Safety Investigation
Report, Aviation Occurrence Report - 200606215, „Smoke event - 19 October 2006, de
Havilland Canada DHC-8-202”, Page 1-3.