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Turbofan

The turbofan or fanjet is a type of airbreathing jet engine that is widely used in aircraft propulsion. The word "turbofan" is a portmanteau of "turbine" and "fan": the turbo portion refers to a gas turbine engine which achieves mechanical energy from combustion,[1] and the fan, a ducted fan that uses the mechanical energy from the gas turbine to force air rearwards. Thus, whereas all the air taken in by a turbojet passes through the combustion chamber and turbines, in a turbofan some of that air bypasses these components. A turbofan thus can be thought of as a turbojet being used to drive a ducted fan, with both of these contributing to the thrust.

Animation of a 2-spool, high-bypass turbofan
  1. Low-pressure spool
  2. High-pressure spool
  3. Stationary components
  1. Nacelle
  2. Fan
  3. Low-pressure compressor
  4. High-pressure compressor
  5. Combustion chamber
  6. High-pressure turbine
  7. Low-pressure turbine
  8. Core nozzle
  9. Fan nozzle

The ratio of the mass-flow of air bypassing the engine core to the mass-flow of air passing through the core is referred to as the bypass ratio. The engine produces thrust through a combination of these two portions working together; engines that use more jet thrust relative to fan thrust are known as low-bypass turbofans, conversely those that have considerably more fan thrust than jet thrust are known as high-bypass. Most commercial aviation jet engines in use today are of the high-bypass type,[2][3] and most modern military fighter engines are low-bypass.[4][5] Afterburners are used on low-bypass turbofan engines with bypass and core mixing before the afterburner.

Modern turbofans have either a large single-stage fan or a smaller fan with several stages. An early configuration combined a low-pressure turbine and fan in a single rear-mounted unit.

Principles

 
Schematic diagram illustrating a modern 2-spool turbofan engine installation in a nacelle. The low-pressure spool is colored blue and the high-pressure one orange.

The turbofan was invented to improve the fuel consumption of the turbojet. It would do this by increasing the mass and lowering the speed of the propelling jet compared to that of the turbojet. This would be done mechanically by adding a ducted fan rather than using viscous forces[6] by adding an ejector, as first envisaged by Whittle.[7]

Frank Whittle envisioned flight speeds of 500 mph in writing his UK patent 471,368 "Improvements relating to the propulsion of aircraft", filed in March 1936, and in which he describes the principles behind the turbofan,[8] although not called as such at that time. The turbojet uses the gas from its thermodynamic cycle as its propelling jet. There are two penalties for using the cycle gas for the propelling jet for aircraft speeds of 500 mph and they are addressed by the turbofan.

There is energy wasted because the propelling jet is going much faster rearwards than the aircraft is going forwards, leaving a very fast wake. The kinetic energy of the wake is a reflection of the fuel used to produce the wake rather than fuel used to move the aircraft forwards and, as such, is fuel wasted. However,it is a fundamental aspect of producing thrust in a fluid by accelerating some of it rearwards whether by a propeller or a combustor in a duct (ramjet) and, as such, can only be reduced and not eliminated. The turbofan reduces the speed of the propelling jet.

The other penalty is present because any action to reduce the fuel consumption of the engine by increasing its pressure ratio or turbine temperature causes a corresponding increase in pressure and temperature in the exhaust duct which in turn cause a higher gas speed from the propelling nozzle (and higher KE and wasted fuel). Although the engine uses less fuel to produce a pound of thrust more fuel is wasted in the faster propelling jet. In other words, the independence of thermal and propulsive efficiencies, as exists with the piston engine/propeller combination which preceded the turbojet, is lost.[9] In contrast, Roth[10] considers regaining this independence the single most important feature of the turbofan which allows specific thrust to be chosen independently of the gas generator cycle.

The working substance of the thermodynamic cycle is the only mass accelerated to produce thrust in a turbojet which is a serious limitation (high fuel consumption) for aircraft speeds below supersonic. For subsonic flight speeds the speed of the propelling jet has to be reduced because there is a price to be paid in producing the thrust. The energy required to accelerate the gas inside the engine (increase in kinetic energy) is expended in two ways, by producing a change in momentum ( ie a force), and a wake which is an unavoidable consequence of producing thrust by an airbreathing engine[11] (or propeller). The wake velocity, and fuel burned to produce it, can be reduced and the required thrust still maintained by increasing the mass accelerated. A turbofan does this by transferring energy available inside the engine, from the gas generator, to a ducted fan which produces a second, additional mass of accelerated air.

The transfer of energy from the core to bypass air results in lower pressure and temperature gas entering the core nozzle (lower exhaust velocity) and fan-produced temperature and pressure entering the fan nozzle. The amount of energy transferred depends on how much pressure rise the fan is designed to produce (fan pressure ratio). The best energy exchange (lowest fuel consumption) between the two flows, and how the jet velocities compare, depends on how efficiently the transfer takes place which depends on the losses in the fan-turbine and fan.[12]

The fan flow has lower exhaust velocity, giving much more thrust per unit energy (lower specific thrust). Both airstreams contribute to the gross thrust of the engine. The additional air for the bypass stream increases the ram drag in the air intake stream-tube, but there is still a significant increase in net thrust. The overall effective exhaust velocity of the two exhaust jets can be made closer to a normal subsonic aircraft's flight speed and gets closer to the ideal Froude efficiency. A turbofan accelerates a larger mass of air more slowly, compared to a turbojet which accelerates a smaller amount more quickly, which is a less efficient way to generate the same thrust (see the efficiency section below).

The ratio of the mass-flow of air bypassing the engine core compared to the mass-flow of air passing through the core is referred to as the bypass ratio. Engines with more jet thrust relative to fan thrust are known as low-bypass turbofans, those that have considerably more fan thrust than jet thrust are known as high-bypass. Most commercial aviation jet engines in use today are high-bypass,[2][3] and most modern fighter engines are low-bypass.[4][5] Afterburners are used on low-bypass turbofans on combat aircraft.

Bypass ratio

The bypass ratio (BPR) of a turbofan engine is the ratio between the mass flow rate of the bypass stream to the mass flow rate entering the core.[13] A bypass ratio of 6, for example, means that 6 times more air passes through the bypass duct than the amount that passes through the combustion chamber.

Turbofan engines are usually described in terms of BPR, which together with overall pressure ratio, turbine inlet temperature and fan pressure ratio are important design parameters. In addition BPR is quoted for turboprop and unducted fan installations because their high propulsive efficiency gives them the overall efficiency characteristics of very high bypass turbofans. This allows them to be shown together with turbofans on plots which show trends of reducing specific fuel consumption (SFC) with increasing BPR.[14] BPR can also be quoted for lift fan installations where the fan airflow is remote from the engine and doesn't flow past the engine core.

Considering a constant core (ie fixed pressure ratio and turbine inlet temperature), core and bypass jet velocities equal and a particular flight condition (ie Mach number and altitude) the fuel consumption per lb of thrust (sfc) decreases with increase in BPR. At the same time gross and net thrusts increase, but by different amounts.[15] There is considerable potential for reducing fuel consumption for the same core cycle by increasing BPR.This is achieved because of the reduction in pounds of thrust per lb/sec of airflow (specific thrust) and the resultant reduction in lost kinetic energy in the jets (increase in propulsive efficiency).[16]

If all the gas power from a gas turbine is converted to kinetic energy in a propelling nozzle, the aircraft is best suited to high supersonic speeds. If it is all transferred to a separate big mass of air with low kinetic energy, the aircraft is best suited to zero speed (hovering). For speeds in between, the gas power is shared between a separate airstream and the gas turbine's own nozzle flow in a proportion which gives the aircraft performance required. The trade off between mass flow and velocity is also seen with propellers and helicopter rotors by comparing disc loading and power loading.[17] For example, the same helicopter weight can be supported by a high power engine and small diameter rotor or, for less fuel, a lower power engine and bigger rotor with lower velocity through the rotor.

Bypass usually refers to transferring gas power from a gas turbine to a bypass stream of air to reduce fuel consumption and jet noise. Alternatively, there may be a requirement for an afterburning engine where the sole requirement for bypass is to provide cooling air. This sets the lower limit for BPR and these engines have been called "leaky" or continuous bleed turbojets[18] (General Electric YJ-101 BPR 0.25) and low BPR turbojets[19] (Pratt & Whitney PW1120). Low BPR (0.2) has also been used to provide surge margin as well as afterburner cooling for the Pratt & Whitney J58.[20]

Efficiency

 
Propulsive efficiency comparison for various gas turbine engine configurations

Propeller engines are most efficient for low speeds, turbojet engines – for high speeds, and turbofan engines – between the two. Turbofans are the most efficient engines in the range of speeds from about 500 to 1,000 km/h (270 to 540 kn; 310 to 620 mph), the speed at which most commercial aircraft operate.[21][22]

In a turbojet (zero-bypass) engine, the high temperature and high pressure exhaust gas is accelerated when it undergoes expansion through a propelling nozzle and produces all the thrust. The compressor absorbs the mechanical power produced by the turbine. In a bypass design, extra turbines drive a ducted fan that accelerates air rearward from the front of the engine. In a high-bypass design, the ducted fan and nozzle produce most of the thrust. Turbofans are closely related to turboprops in principle because both transfer some of the gas turbine's gas power, using extra machinery, to a bypass stream leaving less for the hot nozzle to convert to kinetic energy. Turbofans represent an intermediate stage between turbojets, which derive all their thrust from exhaust gases, and turbo-props which derive minimal thrust from exhaust gases (typically 10% or less).[23] Extracting shaft power and transferring it to a bypass stream introduces extra losses which are more than made up by the improved propulsive efficiency. The turboprop at its best flight speed gives significant fuel savings over a turbojet even though an extra turbine, a gearbox and a propeller were added to the turbojet's low-loss propelling nozzle.[24] The turbofan has additional losses from its greater number of compressor stages/blades, fan and bypass duct.[clarification needed]

Froude, or Propulsive, Efficiency can be defined as:

 

where:

Vj = thrust equivalent jet velocity
Va = aircraft velocity

Thrust

While a turbojet engine uses all of the engine's output to produce thrust in the form of a hot high-velocity exhaust gas jet, a turbofan's cool low-velocity bypass air yields between 30% and 70% of the total thrust produced by a turbofan system.[25]

The thrust (FN) generated by a turbofan depends on the effective exhaust velocity of the total exhaust, as with any jet engine, but because two exhaust jets are present the thrust equation can be expanded as:[26]

 

where:

e = the mass rate of hot combustion exhaust flow from the core engine
o = the mass rate of total air flow entering the turbofan = c + f
c = the mass rate of intake air that flows to the core engine
f = the mass rate of intake air that bypasses the core engine
vf = the velocity of the air flow bypassed around the core engine
vhe = the velocity of the hot exhaust gas from the core engine
vo = the velocity of the total air intake = the true airspeed of the aircraft
BPR = Bypass Ratio

Nozzles

The cold duct and core duct's nozzle systems are relatively complex due to the use of two separate exhaust flows. In high bypass engines, the fan is situated in a short duct near the front of the engine and typically has a convergent cold nozzle, with the tail of the duct forming a low pressure ratio nozzle that under normal conditions will choke creating supersonic flow patterns around the core[citation needed]. The core nozzle is more conventional, but generates less of the thrust, and depending on design choices, such as noise considerations, may conceivably not choke.[27] In low bypass engines the two flows may combine within the ducts, and share a common nozzle, which can be fitted with afterburner.

Noise

 
Chevrons on an Air India Boeing 787 GE GEnx engine

Most of the air flow through a high-bypass turbofan is lower-velocity bypass flow: even when combined with the much-higher-velocity engine exhaust, the average exhaust velocity is considerably lower than in a pure turbojet. Turbojet engine noise is predominately jet noise from the high exhaust velocity. Therefore, turbofan engines are significantly quieter than a pure-jet of the same thrust, and jet noise is no longer the predominant source.[28] Turbofan engine noise propagates both upstream via the inlet and downstream via the primary nozzle and the by-pass duct. Other noise sources are the fan, compressor and turbine.[29]

Modern commercial aircraft employ high-bypass-ratio (HBPR) engines with separate flow, non-mixing, short-duct exhaust systems. Their noise is due to the speed, temperature, and pressure of the exhaust jet, especially during high-thrust conditions, such as those required for takeoff. The primary source of jet noise is the turbulent mixing of shear layers in the engine's exhaust. These shear layers contain instabilities that lead to highly turbulent vortices that generate the pressure fluctuations responsible for sound. To reduce the noise associated with jet flow, the aerospace industry has sought to disrupt shear layer turbulence and reduce the overall noise produced.

Fan noise may come from the interaction of the fan-blade wakes with the pressure field of the downstream fan-exit stator vanes. It may be minimized by adequate axial spacing between blade trailing edge and stator entrance.[30] At high engine speeds, as at takeoff, shock waves from the supersonic fan tips, because of their unequal nature, produce noise of a discordant nature known as "buzz saw" noise.[31][32]

All modern turbofan engines have acoustic liners in the nacelle to damp their noise. They extend as much as possible to cover the largest surface area. The acoustic performance of the engine can be experimentally evaluated by means of ground tests[33] or in dedicated experimental test rigs.[34]

In the aerospace industry, chevrons are the "saw-tooth" patterns on the trailing edges of some jet engine nozzles[35] that are used for noise reduction. The shaped edges smooth the mixing of hot air from the engine core and cooler air flowing through the engine fan, which reduces noise-creating turbulence.[35] Chevrons were developed by GE under a NASA contract.[35][36] Some notable examples of such designs are Boeing 787 and Boeing 747-8 – on the Rolls-Royce Trent 1000 and General Electric GEnx engines.[37]

History

 
Rolls-Royce Conway low-bypass turbofan from a Boeing 707. The bypass air exits from the fins, while the exhaust from the core exits from the central nozzle. This fluted jetpipe design is a noise-reducing method devised by Frederick Greatorex at Rolls-Royce
 
General Electric GEnx-2B turbofan engine as used on a Boeing 747–8. View into the bypass duct looking forward from the bypass nozzle and showing fan exit stators/fan blades

Early turbojet engines were not very fuel-efficient because their overall pressure ratio and turbine inlet temperature were severely limited by the technology and materials available at the time.

The first turbofan engine, which was only run on a test bed, was the German Daimler-Benz DB 670, designated the 109-007 by the Nazi Ministry of Aviation, with a first run date of 27 May 1943, after the testing of the turbomachinery using an electric motor, which had been undertaken on 1 April 1943.[38] Development of the engine was abandoned with its problems unsolved, as the war situation worsened for Germany.

Later in 1943, the British ground tested the Metrovick F.3[39] turbofan, which used the Metrovick F.2 turbojet as a gas generator with the exhaust discharging into a close-coupled aft-fan module comprising a contra-rotating LP turbine system driving two co-axial contra-rotating fans.[40]

Improved materials, and the introduction of twin compressors, such as in the Bristol Olympus,[41] and Pratt & Whitney JT3C engines, increased the overall pressure ratio and thus the thermodynamic efficiency of engines. They also had poor propulsive efficiency, because pure turbojets have a high specific thrust/high velocity exhaust, which is better suited to supersonic flight.

The original low-bypass turbofan engines were designed to improve propulsive efficiency by reducing the exhaust velocity to a value closer to that of the aircraft. The Rolls-Royce Conway, the world's first production turbofan, had a bypass ratio of 0.3, similar to the modern General Electric F404 fighter engine. Civilian turbofan engines of the 1960s, such as the Pratt & Whitney JT8D and the Rolls-Royce Spey, had bypass ratios closer to 1 and were similar to their military equivalents.

The first Soviet airliner powered by turbofan engines was the Tupolev Tu-124 introduced in 1962. It used the Soloviev D-20.[42] 164 aircraft were produced between 1960 and 1965 for Aeroflot and other Eastern Bloc airlines, with some operating until the early 1990s.

The first General Electric turbofan was the aft-fan CJ805-23, based on the CJ805-3 turbojet. It was followed by the aft-fan General Electric CF700 engine, with a 2.0 bypass ratio. This was derived from the General Electric J85/CJ610 turbojet 2,850 lbf (12,700 N) to power the larger Rockwell Sabreliner 75/80 model aircraft, as well as the Dassault Falcon 20, with about a 50% increase in thrust to 4,200 lbf (19,000 N). The CF700 was the first small turbofan to be certified by the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA). There were at one time over 400 CF700 aircraft in operation around the world, with an experience base of over 10 million service hours. The CF700 turbofan engine was also used to train Moon-bound astronauts in Project Apollo as the powerplant for the Lunar Landing Research Vehicle.

Common types

Low-bypass turbofan

 
Schematic diagram illustrating a 2-spool, low-bypass turbofan engine with a mixed exhaust, showing the low-pressure (green) and high-pressure (purple) spools. The fan (and booster stages) are driven by the low-pressure turbine, whereas the high-pressure compressor is powered by the high-pressure turbine.

A high-specific-thrust/low-bypass-ratio turbofan normally has a multi-stage fan behind inlet guide vanes, developing a relatively high pressure ratio and, thus, yielding a high (mixed or cold) exhaust velocity. The core airflow needs to be large enough to ensure there is sufficient core power to drive the fan. A smaller core flow/higher bypass ratio cycle can be achieved by raising the inlet temperature of the high-pressure (HP) turbine rotor.

To illustrate one aspect of how a turbofan differs from a turbojet, comparisons can be made at the same airflow (to keep a common intake for example) and the same net thrust (i.e. same specific thrust). A bypass flow can be added only if the turbine inlet temperature is not too high to compensate for the smaller core flow. Future improvements in turbine cooling/material technology can allow higher turbine inlet temperature, which is necessary because of increased cooling air temperature, resulting from an overall pressure ratio increase.

The resulting turbofan, with reasonable efficiencies and duct loss for the added components, would probably operate at a higher nozzle pressure ratio than the turbojet, but with a lower exhaust temperature to retain net thrust. Since the temperature rise across the whole engine (intake to nozzle) would be lower, the (dry power) fuel flow would also be reduced, resulting in a better specific fuel consumption (SFC).

Some low-bypass ratio military turbofans (e.g. F404, JT8D) have variable inlet guide vanes to direct air onto the first fan rotor stage. This improves the fan surge margin (see compressor map).

Afterburning turbofan

 
Pratt & Whitney F119 afterburning turbofan on test

Since the 1970s, most jet fighter engines have been low/medium bypass turbofans with a mixed exhaust, afterburner and variable area exit nozzle. An afterburner is a combustor located downstream of the turbine blades and directly upstream of the nozzle, which burns fuel from afterburner-specific fuel injectors. When lit, large volumes of fuel are burnt in the afterburner, raising the temperature of exhaust gases by a significant degree, resulting in a higher exhaust velocity/engine specific thrust. The variable geometry nozzle must open to a larger throat area to accommodate the extra volume and increased flow rate when the afterburner is lit. Afterburning is often designed to give a significant thrust boost for take off, transonic acceleration and combat maneuvers, but is very fuel intensive. Consequently, afterburning can be used only for short portions of a mission.

Unlike in the main engine, where stoichiometric temperatures in the combustor have to be reduced before they reach the turbine, an afterburner at maximum fuelling is designed to produce stoichiometric temperatures at entry to the nozzle, about 2,100 K (3,800 °R; 3,300 °F; 1,800 °C). At a fixed total applied fuel:air ratio, the total fuel flow for a given fan airflow will be the same, regardless of the dry specific thrust of the engine. However, a high specific thrust turbofan will, by definition, have a higher nozzle pressure ratio, resulting in a higher afterburning net thrust and, therefore, a lower afterburning specific fuel consumption (SFC). However, high specific thrust engines have a high dry SFC. The situation is reversed for a medium specific thrust afterburning turbofan: i.e., poor afterburning SFC/good dry SFC. The former engine is suitable for a combat aircraft which must remain in afterburning combat for a fairly long period, but has to fight only fairly close to the airfield (e.g. cross border skirmishes). The latter engine is better for an aircraft that has to fly some distance, or loiter for a long time, before going into combat. However, the pilot can afford to stay in afterburning only for a short period, before aircraft fuel reserves become dangerously low.

The first production afterburning turbofan engine was the Pratt & Whitney TF30, which initially powered the F-111 Aardvark and F-14 Tomcat. Current low-bypass military turbofans include the Pratt & Whitney F119, the Eurojet EJ200, the General Electric F110, the Klimov RD-33, and the Saturn AL-31, all of which feature a mixed exhaust, afterburner and variable area propelling nozzle.

High-bypass turbofan

 
Schematic diagram illustrating a 2-spool, high-bypass turbofan engine with an unmixed exhaust. The low-pressure spool is coloured green and the high-pressure one purple. Again, the fan (and booster stages) are driven by the low-pressure turbine, but more stages are required. A mixed exhaust is often employed nowadays.

To further improve fuel economy and reduce noise, almost all of today's jet airliners and most military transport aircraft (e.g., the C-17) are powered by low-specific-thrust/high-bypass-ratio turbofans. These engines evolved from the high-specific-thrust/low-bypass-ratio turbofans used in such aircraft in the 1960s. Modern combat aircraft tend to use low-bypass ratio turbofans, and some military transport aircraft use turboprops.

Low specific thrust is achieved by replacing the multi-stage fan with a single-stage unit. Unlike some military engines, modern civil turbofans lack stationary inlet guide vanes in front of the fan rotor. The fan is scaled to achieve the desired net thrust.

The core (or gas generator) of the engine must generate enough power to drive the fan at its rated mass flow and pressure ratio. Improvements in turbine cooling/material technology allow for a higher (HP) turbine rotor inlet temperature, which allows a smaller (and lighter) core, potentially improving the core thermal efficiency. Reducing the core mass flow tends to increase the load on the LP turbine, so this unit may require additional stages to reduce the average stage loading and to maintain LP turbine efficiency. Reducing core flow also increases bypass ratio. Bypass ratios greater than 5:1 are increasingly common; the Pratt & Whitney PW1000G, which entered commercial service in 2016, attains 12.5:1.

Further improvements in core thermal efficiency can be achieved by raising the overall pressure ratio of the core. Improvements in blade aerodynamics can reduce the number of extra compressor stages required, and variable geometry (i.e., stators) enable high-pressure-ratio compressors to work surge-free at all throttle settings.

 
Cutaway diagram of the General Electric CF6-6 engine

The first (experimental) high-bypass turbofan engine was the AVCO-Lycoming PLF1A-2, a T55 turboshaft-derived engine that was first run in February 1962. The PLF1A-2 had a 40 in diameter (100 cm) geared fan stage, produced a static thrust of 4,320 lb (1,960 kg),[43] and had a bypass ratio of 6:1.[44] The General Electric TF39 became the first production model, designed to power the Lockheed C-5 Galaxy military transport aircraft.[22] The civil General Electric CF6 engine used a derived design. Other high-bypass turbofans are the Pratt & Whitney JT9D, the three-shaft Rolls-Royce RB211 and the CFM International CFM56; also the smaller TF34. More recent large high-bypass turbofans include the Pratt & Whitney PW4000, the three-shaft Rolls-Royce Trent, the General Electric GE90/GEnx and the GP7000, produced jointly by GE and P&W.

The lower the specific thrust of a turbofan, the lower the mean jet outlet velocity, which in turn translates into a high thrust lapse rate (i.e. decreasing thrust with increasing flight speed). See technical discussion below, item 2. Consequently, an engine sized to propel an aircraft at high subsonic flight speed (e.g., Mach 0.83) generates a relatively high thrust at low flight speed, thus enhancing runway performance. Low specific thrust engines tend to have a high bypass ratio, but this is also a function of the temperature of the turbine system.

The turbofans on twin-engined transport aircraft produce enough take-off thrust to continue a take-off on one engine if the other engine shuts down after a critical point in the take-off run. From that point on the aircraft has less than half the thrust compared to two operating engines because the non-functioning engine is a source of drag. Modern twin engined airliners normally climb very steeply immediately after take-off. If one engine shuts down, the climb-out is much shallower, but sufficient to clear obstacles in the flightpath.

The Soviet Union's engine technology was less advanced than the West's, and its first wide-body aircraft, the Ilyushin Il-86, was powered by low-bypass engines. The Yakovlev Yak-42, a medium-range, rear-engined aircraft seating up to 120 passengers, introduced in 1980, was the first Soviet aircraft to use high-bypass engines.

Turbofan configurations

Turbofan engines come in a variety of engine configurations. For a given engine cycle (i.e., same airflow, bypass ratio, fan pressure ratio, overall pressure ratio and HP turbine rotor inlet temperature), the choice of turbofan configuration has little impact upon the design point performance (e.g., net thrust, SFC), as long as overall component performance is maintained. Off-design performance and stability is, however, affected by engine configuration.

The basic element of a turbofan is a spool, a single combination of fan/compressor, turbine and shaft rotating at a single speed. For a given pressure ratio, the surge margin can be increased by two different design paths:

  1. Splitting the compressor into two smaller spools rotating at different speeds, as with the Pratt & Whitney J57; or
  2. Making the stator vane pitch adjustable, typically in the front stages, as with the J79.

Most modern western civil turbofans employ a relatively high-pressure-ratio high-pressure (HP) compressor, with many rows of variable stators to control surge margin at low rpm. In the three-spool RB211/Trent the core compression system is split into two, with the IP compressor, which supercharges the HP compressor, being on a different coaxial shaft and driven by a separate (IP) turbine. As the HP compressor has a modest pressure ratio its speed can be reduced surge-free, without employing variable geometry. However, because a shallow IP compressor working line is inevitable, the IPC has one stage of variable geometry on all variants except the −535, which has none.[45]

Single-shaft turbofan

Although far from common, the single-shaft turbofan is probably the simplest configuration, comprising a fan and high-pressure compressor driven by a single turbine unit, all on the same spool. The Snecma M53, which powers Dassault Mirage 2000 fighter aircraft, is an example of a single-shaft turbofan. Despite the simplicity of the turbomachinery configuration, the M53 requires a variable area mixer to facilitate part-throttle operation.

Aft-fan turbofan

One of the earliest turbofans was a derivative of the General Electric J79 turbojet, known as the CJ805-23, which featured an integrated aft fan/low-pressure (LP) turbine unit located in the turbojet exhaust jetpipe. Hot gas from the turbojet turbine exhaust expanded through the LP turbine, the fan blades being a radial extension of the turbine blades. This arrangement introduces an additional gas leakage path compared to a front-fan configuration and was a problem with this engine with higher-pressure turbine gas leaking into the fan airflow.[46] An aft-fan configuration was later used for the General Electric GE36 UDF (propfan) demonstrator of the early 1980s.

In 1971 a concept was put forward by the NASA Lewis Research Center for a supersonic transport engine which operated as an aft-fan turbofan at take-off and subsonic speeds and a turbojet at higher speeds. This would give the low noise and high thrust characteristics of a turbofan at take-off, together with turbofan high propulsive efficiency at subsonic flight speeds. It would have the high propulsive efficiency of a turbojet at supersonic cruise speeds.[47]

Basic two-spool

Many turbofans have at least basic two-spool configuration where the fan is on a separate low pressure (LP) spool, running concentrically with the compressor or high pressure (HP) spool; the LP spool runs at a lower angular velocity, while the HP spool turns faster and its compressor further compresses part of the air for combustion.[citation needed] The BR710 is typical of this configuration. At the smaller thrust sizes, instead of all-axial blading, the HP compressor configuration may be axial-centrifugal (e.g., CFE CFE738), double-centrifugal or even diagonal/centrifugal (e.g. Pratt & Whitney Canada PW600).

Boosted two-spool

Higher overall pressure ratios can be achieved by either raising the HP compressor pressure ratio or adding compressor (non-bypass) stages or T-stages to the LP spool, between the fan and the HP compressor, to boost the latter. All of the large American turbofans (e.g. General Electric CF6, GE90, GE9X and GEnx plus Pratt & Whitney JT9D and PW4000) feature T-stages. The Rolls-Royce BR715 is a non-American example of this. The high bypass ratios used in modern civil turbofans tend to reduce the relative diameter of the T-stages, reducing their mean tip speed. Consequently, more T-stages are required to develop the necessary pressure rise.

Three-spool

Rolls-Royce chose a three-spool configuration for their large civil turbofans (i.e. the RB211 and Trent families), where the T-stages of the boosted two-spool configuration are separated into a separate intermediate pressure (IP) spool, driven by its own turbine. The first three-spool engine was the earlier Rolls-Royce RB.203 Trent of 1967.

The Garrett ATF3, powering the Dassault Falcon 20 business jet, has an unusual three spool layout with an aft spool not concentric with the two others.

Ivchenko Design Bureau chose the same configuration as Rolls-Royce for their Lotarev D-36 engine, followed by Lotarev/Progress D-18T and Progress D-436.

The Turbo-Union RB199 military turbofan also has a three-spool configuration, as do the military Kuznetsov NK-25 and NK-321.

Geared fan

 
Geared turbofan. The gearbox is labeled 2.

As bypass ratio increases, the fan blade tip speed increases relative to the LPT blade speed. This will reduce the LPT blade speed, requiring more turbine stages to extract enough energy to drive the fan. Introducing a (planetary) reduction gearbox, with a suitable gear ratio, between the LP shaft and the fan enables both the fan and LP turbine to operate at their optimum speeds. Examples of this configuration are the long-established Garrett TFE731, the Honeywell ALF 502/507, and the recent Pratt & Whitney PW1000G.

Military turbofans

Most of the configurations discussed above are used in civilian turbofans, while modern military turbofans (e.g., Snecma M88) are usually basic two-spool.

High-pressure turbine

Most civil turbofans use a high-efficiency, 2-stage HP turbine to drive the HP compressor. The CFM International CFM56 uses an alternative approach: a single-stage, high-work unit. While this approach is probably less efficient, there are savings on cooling air, weight and cost.

In the RB211 and Trent 3-spool engine series, the HP compressor pressure ratio is modest so only a single HP turbine stage is required. Modern military turbofans also tend to use a single HP turbine stage and a modest HP compressor.

Low-pressure turbine

Modern civil turbofans have multi-stage LP turbines (anywhere from 3 to 7). The number of stages required depends on the engine cycle bypass ratio and the boost (on boosted two-spools). A geared fan may reduce the number of required LPT stages in some applications.[48] Because of the much lower bypass ratios employed, military turbofans require only one or two LP turbine stages.

Overall performance

Cycle improvements

Consider a mixed turbofan with a fixed bypass ratio and airflow. Increasing the overall pressure ratio of the compression system raises the combustor entry temperature. Therefore, at a fixed fuel flow there is an increase in (HP) turbine rotor inlet temperature. Although the higher temperature rise across the compression system implies a larger temperature drop over the turbine system, the mixed nozzle temperature is unaffected, because the same amount of heat is being added to the system. There is, however, a rise in nozzle pressure, because overall pressure ratio increases faster than the turbine expansion ratio, causing an increase in the hot mixer entry pressure. Consequently, net thrust increases, whilst specific fuel consumption (fuel flow/net thrust) decreases. A similar trend occurs with unmixed turbofans.

Turbofan engines can be made more fuel efficient by raising overall pressure ratio and turbine rotor inlet temperature in unison. However, better turbine materials or improved vane/blade cooling are required to cope with increases in both turbine rotor inlet temperature and compressor delivery temperature. Increasing the latter may require better compressor materials.

The overall pressure ratio can be increased by improving fan (or) LP compressor pressure ratio or HP compressor pressure ratio. If the latter is held constant, the increase in (HP) compressor delivery temperature (from raising overall pressure ratio) implies an increase in HP mechanical speed. However, stressing considerations might limit this parameter, implying, despite an increase in overall pressure ratio, a reduction in HP compressor pressure ratio.

According to simple theory, if the ratio of turbine rotor inlet temperature/(HP) compressor delivery temperature is maintained, the HP turbine throat area can be retained. However, this assumes that cycle improvements are obtained, while retaining the datum (HP) compressor exit flow function (non-dimensional flow). In practice, changes to the non-dimensional speed of the (HP) compressor and cooling bleed extraction would probably make this assumption invalid, making some adjustment to HP turbine throat area unavoidable. This means the HP turbine nozzle guide vanes would have to be different from the original. In all probability, the downstream LP turbine nozzle guide vanes would have to be changed anyway.

Thrust growth

Thrust growth is obtained by increasing core power. There are two basic routes available:

  1. hot route: increase HP turbine rotor inlet temperature
  2. cold route: increase core mass flow

Both routes require an increase in the combustor fuel flow and, therefore, the heat energy added to the core stream.

The hot route may require changes in turbine blade/vane materials or better blade/vane cooling. The cold route can be obtained by one of the following:

  1. adding T-stages to the LP/IP compression
  2. adding a zero-stage to the HP compression
  3. improving the compression process, without adding stages (e.g. higher fan hub pressure ratio)

all of which increase both overall pressure ratio and core airflow.

Alternatively, the core size can be increased, to raise core airflow, without changing overall pressure ratio. This route is expensive, since a new (upflowed) turbine system (and possibly a larger IP compressor) is also required.

Changes must also be made to the fan to absorb the extra core power. On a civil engine, jet noise considerations mean that any significant increase in take-off thrust must be accompanied by a corresponding increase in fan mass flow (to maintain a T/O specific thrust of about 30 lbf/lb/s).

Technical discussion

  1. Specific thrust (net thrust/intake airflow) is an important parameter for turbofans and jet engines in general. Imagine a fan (driven by an appropriately sized electric motor) operating within a pipe, which is connected to a propelling nozzle. It is fairly obvious, the higher the fan pressure ratio (fan discharge pressure/fan inlet pressure), the higher the jet velocity and the corresponding specific thrust. Now imagine we replace this set-up with an equivalent turbofan – same airflow and same fan pressure ratio. Obviously, the core of the turbofan must produce sufficient power to drive the fan via the low-pressure (LP) turbine. If we choose a low (HP) turbine inlet temperature for the gas generator, the core airflow needs to be relatively high to compensate. The corresponding bypass ratio is therefore relatively low. If we raise the turbine inlet temperature, the core airflow can be smaller, thus increasing bypass ratio. Raising turbine inlet temperature tends to increase thermal efficiency and, therefore, improve fuel efficiency.
  2. Naturally, as altitude increases, there is a decrease in air density and, therefore, the net thrust of an engine. There is also a flight speed effect, termed thrust lapse rate. Consider the approximate equation for net thrust again:
     
    With a high specific thrust (e.g., fighter) engine, the jet velocity is relatively high, so intuitively one can see that increases in flight velocity have less of an impact upon net thrust than a medium specific thrust (e.g., trainer) engine, where the jet velocity is lower. The impact of thrust lapse rate upon a low specific thrust (e.g., civil) engine is even more severe. At high flight speeds, high-specific-thrust engines can pick up net thrust through the ram rise in the intake, but this effect tends to diminish at supersonic speeds because of shock wave losses.
  3. Thrust growth on civil turbofans is usually obtained by increasing fan airflow, thus preventing the jet noise becoming too high. However, the larger fan airflow requires more power from the core. This can be achieved by raising the overall pressure ratio (combustor inlet pressure/intake delivery pressure) to induce more airflow into the core and by increasing turbine inlet temperature. Together, these parameters tend to increase core thermal efficiency and improve fuel efficiency.
  4. Some high-bypass-ratio civil turbofans use an extremely low area ratio (less than 1.01), convergent-divergent, nozzle on the bypass (or mixed exhaust) stream, to control the fan working line. The nozzle acts as if it has variable geometry. At low flight speeds the nozzle is unchoked (less than a Mach number of unity), so the exhaust gas speeds up as it approaches the throat and then slows down slightly as it reaches the divergent section. Consequently, the nozzle exit area controls the fan match and, being larger than the throat, pulls the fan working line slightly away from surge. At higher flight speeds, the ram rise in the intake increases nozzle pressure ratio to the point where the throat becomes choked (M=1.0). Under these circumstances, the throat area dictates the fan match and, being smaller than the exit, pushes the fan working line slightly towards surge. This is not a problem, since fan surge margin is much better at high flight speeds.
  5. The off-design behaviour of turbofans is illustrated under compressor map and turbine map.
  6. Because modern civil turbofans operate at low specific thrust, they require only a single fan stage to develop the required fan pressure ratio. The desired overall pressure ratio for the engine cycle is usually achieved by multiple axial stages on the core compression. Rolls-Royce tend to split the core compression into two with an intermediate pressure (IP) supercharging the HP compressor, both units being driven by turbines with a single stage, mounted on separate shafts. Consequently, the HP compressor need develop only a modest pressure ratio (e.g., ~4.5:1). US civil engines use much higher HP compressor pressure ratios (e.g., ~23:1 on the General Electric GE90) and tend to be driven by a two-stage HP turbine. Even so, there are usually a few IP axial stages mounted on the LP shaft, behind the fan, to further supercharge the core compression system. Civil engines have multi-stage LP turbines, the number of stages being determined by the bypass ratio, the amount of IP compression on the LP shaft and the LP turbine blade speed.
  7. Because military engines usually have to be able to fly very fast at sea level, the limit on HP compressor delivery temperature is reached at a fairly modest design overall pressure ratio, compared with that of a civil engine. Also the fan pressure ratio is relatively high, to achieve a medium to high specific thrust. Consequently, modern military turbofans usually have only 5 or 6 HP compressor stages and require only a single-stage HP turbine. Low-bypass-ratio military turbofans usually have one LP turbine stage, but higher bypass ratio engines need two stages. In theory, by adding IP compressor stages, a modern military turbofan HP compressor could be used in a civil turbofan derivative, but the core would tend to be too small for high thrust applications.

Improvements

Aerodynamic modelling

Aerodynamics is a mix of subsonic, transonic and supersonic airflow on a single fan/gas compressor blade in a modern turbofan. The airflow past the blades has to be maintained within close angular limits to keep the air flowing against an increasing pressure. Otherwise the air will come back out of the intake.[49]

The Full Authority Digital Engine Control (FADEC) needs accurate data for controlling the engine. The critical turbine inlet temperature (TIT) is too harsh an environment, at 1,700 °C (3,100 °F) and 17 bar (250 psi), for reliable sensors. Therefore, during development of a new engine type a relation is established between a more easily measured temperature like exhaust gas temperature and the TIT. Monitoring the exhaust gas temperature is then used to make sure the engine does not run too hot.[49]

Blade technology

A 100 g (3.5 oz) turbine blade is subjected to 1,700 °C (3,100 °F), at 17 bar (250 psi) and a centrifugal force of 40 kN (9,000 lbf), well above the point of plastic deformation and even above the melting point. Exotic alloys, sophisticated air cooling schemes and special mechanical design are needed to keep the physical stresses within the strength of the material. Rotating seals must withstand harsh conditions for 10 years, 20,000 missions and rotating at 10 to 20,000 rpm.[49]

Fan blades

Fan blades have been growing as jet engines have been getting bigger: each fan blade carries the equivalent of nine double-decker buses and swallows air the equivalent volume of a squash court every second. Advances in computational fluid dynamics (CFD) modelling have permitted complex, 3D curved shapes with very wide chord, keeping the fan capabilities while minimizing the blade count to lower costs. Coincidentally, the bypass ratio grew to achieve higher propulsive efficiency and the fan diameter increased.[50]

Rolls-Royce pioneered the hollow, titanium wide-chord fan blade in the 1980s for aerodynamic efficiency and foreign object damage resistance in the RB211 then for the Trent. GE Aviation introduced carbon fiber composite fan blades on the GE90 in 1995, manufactured today with a carbon-fiber tape-layer process. GE partner Safran developed a 3D woven technology with Albany Composites for the CFM56 and CFM LEAP engines.[50]

Future progress

Engine cores are shrinking as they are operating at higher pressure ratios and becoming more efficient, and become smaller compared to the fan as bypass ratios increase. Blade tip clearances are harder to maintain at the exit of the high-pressure compressor where blades are 0.5 in (13 mm) high or less; backbone bending further affects clearance control as the core is proportionately longer and thinner and the fan to low-pressure turbine driveshaft is in constrained space within the core.[51]

For Pratt & Whitney VP technology and environment Alan Epstein "Over the history of commercial aviation, we have gone from 20% to 40% [cruise efficiency], and there is a consensus among the engine community that we can probably get to 60%".[52]

Geared turbofans and further fan pressure ratio reductions will continue to improve propulsive efficiency. The second phase of the FAA's Continuous Lower Energy, Emissions and Noise (CLEEN) program is targeting for the late 2020s reductions of 33% fuel burn, 60% emissions and 32 dB EPNdb noise compared with the 2000s state-of-the-art. In summer 2017 at NASA Glenn Research Center in Cleveland, Ohio, Pratt has finished testing a very-low-pressure-ratio fan on a PW1000G, resembling an open rotor with fewer blades than the PW1000G's 20.[52]

The weight and size of the nacelle would be reduced by a short duct inlet, imposing higher aerodynamic turning loads on the blades and leaving less space for soundproofing, but a lower-pressure-ratio fan is slower. UTC Aerospace Systems Aerostructures will have a full-scale ground test in 2019 of its low-drag Integrated Propulsion System with a thrust reverser, improving fuel burn by 1% and with 2.5-3 EPNdB lower noise.[52]

Safran can probably deliver another 10–15% in fuel efficiency through the mid-2020s before reaching an asymptote, and next will have to introduce a breakthrough: to increase the bypass ratio to 35:1 instead of 11:1 for the CFM LEAP, it is demonstrating a counterrotating open rotor unducted fan (propfan) in Istres, France, under the European Clean Sky technology program. Modeling advances and high specific strength materials may help it succeed where previous attempts failed. When noise levels will be within current standards and similar to the Leap engine, 15% lower fuel burn will be available and for that Safran is testing its controls, vibration and operation, while airframe integration is still challenging.[52]

For GE Aviation, the energy density of jet fuel still maximises the Breguet range equation and higher pressure ratio cores; lower pressure ratio fans, low-loss inlets and lighter structures can further improve thermal, transfer and propulsive efficiency. Under the U.S. Air Force’s Adaptive Engine Transition Program, adaptive thermodynamic cycles will be used for the sixth-generation jet fighter, based on a modified Brayton cycle and Constant volume combustion. Additive manufacturing in the advanced turboprop will reduce weight by 5% and fuel burn by 20%.[52]

Rotating and static ceramic matrix composite (CMC) parts operates 500 °F (260 °C) hotter than metal and are one-third its weight. With $21.9 million from the Air Force Research Laboratory, GE is investing $200 million in a CMC facility in Huntsville, Alabama, in addition to its Asheville, North Carolina site, mass-producing silicon carbide matrix with silicon-carbide fibers in 2018. CMCs will be used ten times more by the mid-2020s: the CFM LEAP requires 18 CMC turbine shrouds per engine and the GE9X will use it in the combustor and for 42 HP turbine nozzles.[52]

Rolls-Royce Plc aim for a 60:1 pressure ratio core for the 2020s Ultrafan and began ground tests of its 100,000 hp (75,000 kW) gear for 100,000 lbf (440 kN) and 15:1 bypass ratios. Nearly stoichiometric turbine entry temperatures approaches the theoretical limit and its impact on emissions has to be balanced with environmental performance goals. Open rotors, lower pressure ratio fans and potentially distributed propulsion offer more room for better propulsive efficiency. Exotic cycles, heat exchangers and pressure gain/constant volume combustion can improve thermodynamic efficiency. Additive manufacturing could be an enabler for intercooler and recuperators. Closer airframe integration and hybrid or electric aircraft can be combined with gas turbines.[52]

Current Rolls-Royce engines have a 72–82% propulsive efficiency and 42–49% thermal efficiency for a 0.63–0.49 lb/lbf/h (64,000–50,000 g/kN/h) TSFC at Mach 0.8, and aim for theoretical limits of 95% for open rotor propulsive efficiency and 60% for thermal efficiency with stoichiometric turbine entry temperature and 80:1 overall pressure ratio for a 0.35 lb/lbf/h (36,000 g/kN/h) TSFC[53]

As teething troubles may not show up until several thousand hours, the latest turbofans technical problems disrupt airlines operations and manufacturers deliveries while production rates are rising sharply. Trent 1000 cracked blades grounded almost 50 Boeing 787s and reduced ETOPS to 2.3 hours down from 5.5, costing Rolls-Royce plc almost $950 million. PW1000G knife-edge seal fractures have caused Pratt & Whitney to fall way behind in deliveries, leaving about 100 engineless A320neos waiting for their powerplants. The CFM LEAP introduction was smoother but a ceramic composite HP Turbine coating is prematurely lost, necessitating a new design, causing 60 A320neo engine removal for modification, as deliveries are up to six weeks late.[54]

On a widebody, Safran estimates 5–10% of fuel could be saved by reducing power intake for hydraulic systems, while swapping to electrical power could save 30% of weight, as initiated on the Boeing 787, while Rolls-Royce plc hopes for up to 5%.[55]

Manufacturers

The turbofan engine market is dominated by General Electric, Rolls-Royce plc and Pratt & Whitney, in order of market share. General Electric and SNECMA of France have a joint venture, CFM International. Pratt & Whitney also have a joint venture, International Aero Engines with Japanese Aero Engine Corporation and MTU Aero Engines of Germany, specializing in engines for the Airbus A320 family. Pratt & Whitney and General Electric have a joint venture, Engine Alliance selling a range of engines for aircraft such as the Airbus A380.

For airliners and cargo aircraft, the in-service fleet in 2016 is 60,000 engines and should grow to 103,000 in 2035 with 86,500 deliveries according to Flight Global. A majority will be medium-thrust engines for narrow-body aircraft with 54,000 deliveries, for a fleet growing from 28,500 to 61,000. High-thrust engines for wide-body aircraft, worth 40–45% of the market by value, will grow from 12,700 engines to over 21,000 with 18,500 deliveries. The regional jet engines below 20,000 lb (89 kN) fleet will grow from 7,500 to 9,000 and the fleet of turboprops for airliners will increase from 9,400 to 10,200. The manufacturers market share should be led by CFM with 44% followed by Pratt & Whitney with 29% and then Rolls-Royce and General Electric with 10% each.[56]

Commercial turbofans in production

Commercial turbofans in production[57]
Model Start Bypass Length Fan Weight Thrust Major applications
GE GE90 1992 8.7–9.9 5.18–5.40 m 3.12–3.25 m 7.56–8.62 t 330–510 kN B777
P&W PW4000 1984 4.8–6.4 3.37–4.95 m 2.84 m 4.18–7.48 t 222–436 kN A300/A310, A330, B747, B767, B777, MD-11
R-R Trent XWB 2010 9.3 5.22 m 3.00 m 7.28 t 330–430 kN A350XWB
R-R Trent 800 1993 5.7–5.79 4.37 m 2.79 m 5.96–5.98 t 411–425 kN B777
EA GP7000 2004 8.7 4.75 m 2.95 m 6.09–6.71 t 311–363 kN A380
R-R Trent 900 2004 8.7 4.55 m 2.95 m 6.18–6.25 t 340–357 kN A380
R-R Trent 1000 2006 10.8–11 4.74 m 2.85 m 5.77 t 265.3–360.4 kN B787
GE GEnx[58] 2006 8.0–9.3 4.31-4.69 m 2.66-2.82 m 5.62-5.82 t 296-339 kN B747-8, B787
R-R Trent 700 1990 4.9 3.91 m 2.47 m 4.79 t 320 kN A330
GE CF6 1971 4.3–5.3 4.00–4.41 m 2.20–2.79 m 3.82–5.08 t 222–298 kN A300/A310, A330, B747, B767, MD-11, DC-10
R-R Trent 500 1999 8.5 3.91 m 2.47 m 4.72 t 252 kN A340-500/600
P&W PW1000G[59] 2008 9.0–12.5 3.40 m 1.42–2.06 m 2.86 t 67–160 kN A320neo, A220, E-Jets E2
CFM LEAP[60] 2013 9.0–11.0 3.15–3.33 m 1.76–1.98 m 2.78–3.15 t 100–146 kN A320neo, B737Max
CFM56 1974 5.0–6.6 2.36–2.52 m 1.52–1.84 m 1.95–2.64 t 97.9-151 kN A320, A340-200/300, B737, KC-135, DC-8
IAE V2500 1987 4.4–4.9 3.20 m 1.60 m 2.36–2.54 t 97.9-147 kN A320, MD-90
P&W PW6000 2000 4.90 2.73 m 1.44 m 2.36 t 100.2 kN Airbus A318
R-R BR700 1994 4.2–4.5 3.41–3.60 m 1.32–1.58 m 1.63–2.11 t 68.9–102.3 kN B717, Global Express, Gulfstream V
GE Passport 2013 5.6 3.37 m 1.30 m 2.07 t 78.9–84.2 kN Global 7000/8000
GE CF34 1982 5.3–6.3 2.62–3.26 m 1.25–1.32 m 0.74–1.12 t 41–82.3 kN Challenger 600, CRJ, E-jets
P&WC PW800 2012 5.5 1.30 m 67.4–69.7 kN Gulfstream G500/G600
R-R Tay 1984 3.1–3.2 2.41 m 1.12–1.14 m 1.42–1.53 t 61.6–68.5 kN Gulfstream IV, Fokker 70/100
Silvercrest 2012 5.9 1.90 m 1.08 m 1.09 t 50.9 kN Citation Hemisphere, Falcon 5X
R-R AE 3007 1991 5.0 2.71 m 1.11 m 0.72 t 33.7 kN ERJ, Citation X
P&WC PW300 1988 3.8–4.5 1.92–2.07 m 0.97 m 0.45–0.47 t 23.4–35.6 kN Citation Sovereign, G200, Falcon 7X, Falcon 2000
HW HTF7000 1999 4.4 2.29 m 0.87 m 0.62 t 28.9 kN Challenger 300, G280, Legacy 500
HW TFE731 1970 2.66–3.9 1.52–2.08 m 0.72–0.78 m 0.34–0.45 t 15.6–22.2 kN Learjet 70/75, G150, Falcon 900
Williams FJ44 1985 3.3–4.1 1.36–2.09 m 0.53–0.57 m 0.21–0.24 t 6.7–15.6 kN CitationJet, Citation M2
P&WC PW500 1993 3.90 1.52 m 0.70 m 0.28 t 13.3 kN Citation Excel, Phenom 300
GE-H HF120 2009 4.43 1.12 m 0.54 m 0.18 t 7.4 kN HondaJet
Williams FJ33 1998 0.98 m 0.53 m 0.14 t 6.7 kN Cirrus SF50
P&WC PW600 2001 1.8–2.8 0.67 m 0.36 m 0.15 t 6.0 kN Citation Mustang, Eclipse 500, Phenom 100
PS-90 1992 4.4 4.96 m 1.9 m 2.95 t 157–171 kN Il-76, Il-96, Tu-204
PowerJet SaM146 2008 4–4.1 3.59 m 1.22 m 2.260 t 71.6–79.2 kN Sukhoi Superjet 100

Extreme bypass jet engines

In the 1970s, Rolls-Royce/SNECMA tested a M45SD-02 turbofan fitted with variable-pitch fan blades to improve handling at ultralow fan pressure ratios and to provide thrust reverse down to zero aircraft speed. The engine was aimed at ultraquiet STOL aircraft operating from city-centre airports.

In a bid for increased efficiency with speed, a development of the turbofan and turboprop known as a propfan engine was created that had an unducted fan. The fan blades are situated outside of the duct, so that it appears like a turboprop with wide scimitar-like blades. Both General Electric and Pratt & Whitney/Allison demonstrated propfan engines in the 1980s. Excessive cabin noise and relatively cheap jet fuel prevented the engines being put into service. The Progress D-27 propfan, developed in the U.S.S.R., was the only propfan engine equipped on a production aircraft.

Terminology

Afterburner
jetpipe equipped for afterburning[61]
Augmentor
afterburner for turbofan with burning in hot and cold flows[61]
Bypass
that part of the engine as distinct from the core in terms of components and airflow, eg that part of fan blading (fan outer) and stators which pass bypass air, bypass duct, bypass nozzle
Bypass ratio
bypass air mass flow /core air mass flow[62]
Core
that part of the engine as distinct from the bypass in terms of components and airflow, eg core cowl, core nozzle, core airflow and associated machinery, combustor and fuel system
Core power
also known as "available energy" or "gas horsepower". It is used to measure the theoretical (isentropic expansion) shaft work available from a gas generator or core by expanding hot, high pressure gas to ambient pressure. Since the power depends on the pressure and temperature of the gas (and the ambient pressure) a related figure of merit for thrust-producing engines is one which measures the thrust-producing potential from hot, high pressure gas and known as "stream thrust". It is obtained by calculating the velocity obtained with isentropic expansion to atmospheric pressure. The significance of the thrust obtained appears when multiplied by the aircraft velocity to give the thrust work. The thrust work which is potentially available is far less than the gas horsepower due to the increasing waste in the exhaust kinetic energy with increasing pressure and temperature before expansion to atmospheric pressure. The two are related by the propulsive efficiency,[63] a measure of the energy wasted as a result of producing a force (ie thrust) in a fluid by increasing the speed (ie momentum) of the fluid.
Dry
engine ratings/ throttle lever positions below afterburning selection
EGT
exhaust gas temperature
EPR
engine pressure ratio
Fan
turbofan LP compressor
Fanjet
turbofan or aircraft powered by turbofan (colloquial)[64]
Fan pressure ratio
fan outlet total pressure/fan inlet total pressure
Flex temp
At reduced take-off weights commercial aircraft can use reduced thrust which increases engine life and reduces maintenance costs. Flex temperature is a higher than actual outside air temperature (OAT) which is input to the engine monitoring computer to achieve the required reduced thrust (also known as "assumed temperature thrust reduction").[65]
Gas generator
that part of the engine core which provides the hot, high pressure gas for fan-driving turbines (turbofan), for propelling nozzles (turbojet), for propeller- and rotor-driving turbines (turboprop and turboshaft), for industrial and marine power turbines[66]
HP
high-pressure
Intake ram drag
Loss in momentum of engine stream tube from freestream to intake entrance, ie amount of energy imparted to air required to accelerate air from a stationary atmosphere to aircraft speed.
IEPR
integrated engine pressure ratio
IP
intermediate pressure
LP
low-pressure
Net thrust
nozzle thrust in stationary air (gross thrust) – engine stream tube ram drag (loss in momentum from freestream to intake entrance, ie amount of energy imparted to air required to accelerate air from a stationary atmosphere to aircraft speed). This is the thrust acting on the airframe.
Overall pressure ratio
combustor inlet total pressure/intake delivery total pressure
Overall efficiency
thermal efficiency * propulsive efficiency
Propulsive efficiency
propulsive power/rate of production of propulsive kinetic energy (maximum propulsive efficiency occurs when jet velocity equals flight velocity, which implies zero net thrust!)
Specific fuel consumption (SFC)
total fuel flow/net thrust (proportional to flight velocity/overall thermal efficiency)
Spooling up
increase in RPM (colloquial)
Stage loading
For a turbine, the purpose of which is to produce power, the loading is an indicator of power developed per lb/sec of gas (specific power). A turbine stage turns the gas from an axial direction and speeds it up (in the nozzle guide vanes) to turn the rotor most effectively ( rotor blades must produce high lift), the proviso being that this is done efficiently, ie with acceptable losses.[67] For a compressor stage, the purpose of which is to produce a pressure rise, a diffusion process is used. How much diffusion may be allowed ( and pressure rise obtained) before unacceptable flow separation occurs (ie losses) may be regarded as a loading limit.[68]
Static pressure
pressure of the fluid which is associated not with its motion but with its state[69] or, alternatively, pressure due to the random motion of the fluid molecules that would be felt or measured if moving with the flow[70]
Specific thrust
net thrust/intake airflow
Thermal efficiency
rate of production of propulsive kinetic energy/fuel power
Total fuel flow
combustor (plus any afterburner) fuel flow rate (e.g., lb/s or g/s)
Total pressure
static pressure plus kinetic energy term
Turbine rotor inlet temperature
maximum cycle temperature, ie temperature at which work transfer takes place

See also

References

  1. ^ Marshall Brain (April 2000). "How Gas Turbine Engines Work". howstuffworks.com. Retrieved 2010-11-24.
  2. ^ a b Hall, Nancy (May 5, 2015). "Turbofan Engine". Glenn Research Center. NASA. Retrieved October 25, 2015. Most modern airliners use turbofan engines because of their high thrust and good fuel efficiency.
  3. ^ a b Michael Hacker; David Burghardt; Linnea Fletcher; Anthony Gordon; William Peruzzi (March 18, 2009). Engineering and Technology. Cengage Learning. p. 319. ISBN 978-1-285-95643-5. Retrieved October 25, 2015. All modern jet-powered commercial aircraft use high bypass turbofan engines [...]
  4. ^ a b Verma, Bharat (January 1, 2013). Indian Defence Review: Apr–Jun 2012. Lancer Publishers. p. 18. ISBN 978-81-7062-259-8. Retrieved October 25, 2015. Military power plants may be divided into some major categories – low bypass turbofans that generally power fighter jets…
  5. ^ a b Frank Northen Magill, ed. (1993). Magill's Survey of Science: Applied science series, Volume 3. Salem Press. p. 1431. ISBN 9780893567088. Most tactical military aircraft are powered by low-bypass turbofan engines.
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External links

  • Wikibooks: Jet propulsion
  • Malcolm Gibson (Aug 2011). "The Chevron Nozzle: A Novel Approach to Reducing Jet Noise" (PDF). NASA Innovation in Aeronautics NASA/TM-2011-216987.
  • "The Engine Yearbook". UBM Aviation. 2012.
  • "Commercial engines 2017". Flight Global.
  • Bjorn Fehrm (April 14, 2017). "Bjorn's Corner: Aircraft engines, sum up". Leeham Co. and previous series

turbofan, confused, with, propfan, turboprop, this, article, about, mechanism, used, jets, turbo, like, pressure, blower, sometimes, misnamed, turbo, centrifugal, turbofan, fanjet, type, airbreathing, engine, that, widely, used, aircraft, propulsion, word, tur. Not to be confused with propfan or turboprop This article is about the mechanism used in jets For the turbo like air pressure blower sometimes misnamed Turbo fan see Centrifugal fan The turbofan or fanjet is a type of airbreathing jet engine that is widely used in aircraft propulsion The word turbofan is a portmanteau of turbine and fan the turbo portion refers to a gas turbine engine which achieves mechanical energy from combustion 1 and the fan a ducted fan that uses the mechanical energy from the gas turbine to force air rearwards Thus whereas all the air taken in by a turbojet passes through the combustion chamber and turbines in a turbofan some of that air bypasses these components A turbofan thus can be thought of as a turbojet being used to drive a ducted fan with both of these contributing to the thrust Animation of a 2 spool high bypass turbofan Low pressure spoolHigh pressure spoolStationary componentsNacelleFanLow pressure compressorHigh pressure compressorCombustion chamberHigh pressure turbineLow pressure turbineCore nozzleFan nozzle The ratio of the mass flow of air bypassing the engine core to the mass flow of air passing through the core is referred to as the bypass ratio The engine produces thrust through a combination of these two portions working together engines that use more jet thrust relative to fan thrust are known as low bypass turbofans conversely those that have considerably more fan thrust than jet thrust are known as high bypass Most commercial aviation jet engines in use today are of the high bypass type 2 3 and most modern military fighter engines are low bypass 4 5 Afterburners are used on low bypass turbofan engines with bypass and core mixing before the afterburner Modern turbofans have either a large single stage fan or a smaller fan with several stages An early configuration combined a low pressure turbine and fan in a single rear mounted unit Contents 1 Principles 1 1 Bypass ratio 1 2 Efficiency 1 3 Thrust 1 4 Nozzles 1 5 Noise 2 History 3 Common types 3 1 Low bypass turbofan 3 2 Afterburning turbofan 3 3 High bypass turbofan 4 Turbofan configurations 4 1 Single shaft turbofan 4 2 Aft fan turbofan 4 3 Basic two spool 4 4 Boosted two spool 4 5 Three spool 4 6 Geared fan 4 7 Military turbofans 4 8 High pressure turbine 4 9 Low pressure turbine 5 Overall performance 5 1 Cycle improvements 5 2 Thrust growth 5 3 Technical discussion 6 Improvements 6 1 Aerodynamic modelling 6 2 Blade technology 6 3 Fan blades 6 4 Future progress 7 Manufacturers 7 1 Commercial turbofans in production 8 Extreme bypass jet engines 9 Terminology 10 See also 11 References 12 External linksPrinciples Edit Schematic diagram illustrating a modern 2 spool turbofan engine installation in a nacelle The low pressure spool is colored blue and the high pressure one orange The turbofan was invented to improve the fuel consumption of the turbojet It would do this by increasing the mass and lowering the speed of the propelling jet compared to that of the turbojet This would be done mechanically by adding a ducted fan rather than using viscous forces 6 by adding an ejector as first envisaged by Whittle 7 Frank Whittle envisioned flight speeds of 500 mph in writing his UK patent 471 368 Improvements relating to the propulsion of aircraft filed in March 1936 and in which he describes the principles behind the turbofan 8 although not called as such at that time The turbojet uses the gas from its thermodynamic cycle as its propelling jet There are two penalties for using the cycle gas for the propelling jet for aircraft speeds of 500 mph and they are addressed by the turbofan There is energy wasted because the propelling jet is going much faster rearwards than the aircraft is going forwards leaving a very fast wake The kinetic energy of the wake is a reflection of the fuel used to produce the wake rather than fuel used to move the aircraft forwards and as such is fuel wasted However it is a fundamental aspect of producing thrust in a fluid by accelerating some of it rearwards whether by a propeller or a combustor in a duct ramjet and as such can only be reduced and not eliminated The turbofan reduces the speed of the propelling jet The other penalty is present because any action to reduce the fuel consumption of the engine by increasing its pressure ratio or turbine temperature causes a corresponding increase in pressure and temperature in the exhaust duct which in turn cause a higher gas speed from the propelling nozzle and higher KE and wasted fuel Although the engine uses less fuel to produce a pound of thrust more fuel is wasted in the faster propelling jet In other words the independence of thermal and propulsive efficiencies as exists with the piston engine propeller combination which preceded the turbojet is lost 9 In contrast Roth 10 considers regaining this independence the single most important feature of the turbofan which allows specific thrust to be chosen independently of the gas generator cycle The working substance of the thermodynamic cycle is the only mass accelerated to produce thrust in a turbojet which is a serious limitation high fuel consumption for aircraft speeds below supersonic For subsonic flight speeds the speed of the propelling jet has to be reduced because there is a price to be paid in producing the thrust The energy required to accelerate the gas inside the engine increase in kinetic energy is expended in two ways by producing a change in momentum ie a force and a wake which is an unavoidable consequence of producing thrust by an airbreathing engine 11 or propeller The wake velocity and fuel burned to produce it can be reduced and the required thrust still maintained by increasing the mass accelerated A turbofan does this by transferring energy available inside the engine from the gas generator to a ducted fan which produces a second additional mass of accelerated air The transfer of energy from the core to bypass air results in lower pressure and temperature gas entering the core nozzle lower exhaust velocity and fan produced temperature and pressure entering the fan nozzle The amount of energy transferred depends on how much pressure rise the fan is designed to produce fan pressure ratio The best energy exchange lowest fuel consumption between the two flows and how the jet velocities compare depends on how efficiently the transfer takes place which depends on the losses in the fan turbine and fan 12 The fan flow has lower exhaust velocity giving much more thrust per unit energy lower specific thrust Both airstreams contribute to the gross thrust of the engine The additional air for the bypass stream increases the ram drag in the air intake stream tube but there is still a significant increase in net thrust The overall effective exhaust velocity of the two exhaust jets can be made closer to a normal subsonic aircraft s flight speed and gets closer to the ideal Froude efficiency A turbofan accelerates a larger mass of air more slowly compared to a turbojet which accelerates a smaller amount more quickly which is a less efficient way to generate the same thrust see the efficiency section below The ratio of the mass flow of air bypassing the engine core compared to the mass flow of air passing through the core is referred to as the bypass ratio Engines with more jet thrust relative to fan thrust are known as low bypass turbofans those that have considerably more fan thrust than jet thrust are known as high bypass Most commercial aviation jet engines in use today are high bypass 2 3 and most modern fighter engines are low bypass 4 5 Afterburners are used on low bypass turbofans on combat aircraft Bypass ratio Edit Main article Bypass ratio The bypass ratio BPR of a turbofan engine is the ratio between the mass flow rate of the bypass stream to the mass flow rate entering the core 13 A bypass ratio of 6 for example means that 6 times more air passes through the bypass duct than the amount that passes through the combustion chamber Turbofan engines are usually described in terms of BPR which together with overall pressure ratio turbine inlet temperature and fan pressure ratio are important design parameters In addition BPR is quoted for turboprop and unducted fan installations because their high propulsive efficiency gives them the overall efficiency characteristics of very high bypass turbofans This allows them to be shown together with turbofans on plots which show trends of reducing specific fuel consumption SFC with increasing BPR 14 BPR can also be quoted for lift fan installations where the fan airflow is remote from the engine and doesn t flow past the engine core Considering a constant core ie fixed pressure ratio and turbine inlet temperature core and bypass jet velocities equal and a particular flight condition ie Mach number and altitude the fuel consumption per lb of thrust sfc decreases with increase in BPR At the same time gross and net thrusts increase but by different amounts 15 There is considerable potential for reducing fuel consumption for the same core cycle by increasing BPR This is achieved because of the reduction in pounds of thrust per lb sec of airflow specific thrust and the resultant reduction in lost kinetic energy in the jets increase in propulsive efficiency 16 If all the gas power from a gas turbine is converted to kinetic energy in a propelling nozzle the aircraft is best suited to high supersonic speeds If it is all transferred to a separate big mass of air with low kinetic energy the aircraft is best suited to zero speed hovering For speeds in between the gas power is shared between a separate airstream and the gas turbine s own nozzle flow in a proportion which gives the aircraft performance required The trade off between mass flow and velocity is also seen with propellers and helicopter rotors by comparing disc loading and power loading 17 For example the same helicopter weight can be supported by a high power engine and small diameter rotor or for less fuel a lower power engine and bigger rotor with lower velocity through the rotor Bypass usually refers to transferring gas power from a gas turbine to a bypass stream of air to reduce fuel consumption and jet noise Alternatively there may be a requirement for an afterburning engine where the sole requirement for bypass is to provide cooling air This sets the lower limit for BPR and these engines have been called leaky or continuous bleed turbojets 18 General Electric YJ 101 BPR 0 25 and low BPR turbojets 19 Pratt amp Whitney PW1120 Low BPR 0 2 has also been used to provide surge margin as well as afterburner cooling for the Pratt amp Whitney J58 20 Efficiency Edit Propulsive efficiency comparison for various gas turbine engine configurations Propeller engines are most efficient for low speeds turbojet engines for high speeds and turbofan engines between the two Turbofans are the most efficient engines in the range of speeds from about 500 to 1 000 km h 270 to 540 kn 310 to 620 mph the speed at which most commercial aircraft operate 21 22 In a turbojet zero bypass engine the high temperature and high pressure exhaust gas is accelerated when it undergoes expansion through a propelling nozzle and produces all the thrust The compressor absorbs the mechanical power produced by the turbine In a bypass design extra turbines drive a ducted fan that accelerates air rearward from the front of the engine In a high bypass design the ducted fan and nozzle produce most of the thrust Turbofans are closely related to turboprops in principle because both transfer some of the gas turbine s gas power using extra machinery to a bypass stream leaving less for the hot nozzle to convert to kinetic energy Turbofans represent an intermediate stage between turbojets which derive all their thrust from exhaust gases and turbo props which derive minimal thrust from exhaust gases typically 10 or less 23 Extracting shaft power and transferring it to a bypass stream introduces extra losses which are more than made up by the improved propulsive efficiency The turboprop at its best flight speed gives significant fuel savings over a turbojet even though an extra turbine a gearbox and a propeller were added to the turbojet s low loss propelling nozzle 24 The turbofan has additional losses from its greater number of compressor stages blades fan and bypass duct clarification needed Froude or Propulsive Efficiency can be defined as h f 2 1 V j V a displaystyle eta f frac 2 1 frac V j V a where Vj thrust equivalent jet velocityVa aircraft velocityThrust Edit While a turbojet engine uses all of the engine s output to produce thrust in the form of a hot high velocity exhaust gas jet a turbofan s cool low velocity bypass air yields between 30 and 70 of the total thrust produced by a turbofan system 25 The thrust FN generated by a turbofan depends on the effective exhaust velocity of the total exhaust as with any jet engine but because two exhaust jets are present the thrust equation can be expanded as 26 F N m e v h e m o v o B P R m c v f displaystyle F N dot m e v he dot m o v o BPR dot m c v f where ṁe the mass rate of hot combustion exhaust flow from the core engineṁo the mass rate of total air flow entering the turbofan ṁc ṁfṁc the mass rate of intake air that flows to the core engineṁf the mass rate of intake air that bypasses the core enginevf the velocity of the air flow bypassed around the core enginevhe the velocity of the hot exhaust gas from the core enginevo the velocity of the total air intake the true airspeed of the aircraftBPR Bypass RatioNozzles Edit The cold duct and core duct s nozzle systems are relatively complex due to the use of two separate exhaust flows In high bypass engines the fan is situated in a short duct near the front of the engine and typically has a convergent cold nozzle with the tail of the duct forming a low pressure ratio nozzle that under normal conditions will choke creating supersonic flow patterns around the core citation needed The core nozzle is more conventional but generates less of the thrust and depending on design choices such as noise considerations may conceivably not choke 27 In low bypass engines the two flows may combine within the ducts and share a common nozzle which can be fitted with afterburner Noise Edit Chevrons on an Air India Boeing 787 GE GEnx engine Most of the air flow through a high bypass turbofan is lower velocity bypass flow even when combined with the much higher velocity engine exhaust the average exhaust velocity is considerably lower than in a pure turbojet Turbojet engine noise is predominately jet noise from the high exhaust velocity Therefore turbofan engines are significantly quieter than a pure jet of the same thrust and jet noise is no longer the predominant source 28 Turbofan engine noise propagates both upstream via the inlet and downstream via the primary nozzle and the by pass duct Other noise sources are the fan compressor and turbine 29 Modern commercial aircraft employ high bypass ratio HBPR engines with separate flow non mixing short duct exhaust systems Their noise is due to the speed temperature and pressure of the exhaust jet especially during high thrust conditions such as those required for takeoff The primary source of jet noise is the turbulent mixing of shear layers in the engine s exhaust These shear layers contain instabilities that lead to highly turbulent vortices that generate the pressure fluctuations responsible for sound To reduce the noise associated with jet flow the aerospace industry has sought to disrupt shear layer turbulence and reduce the overall noise produced Fan noise may come from the interaction of the fan blade wakes with the pressure field of the downstream fan exit stator vanes It may be minimized by adequate axial spacing between blade trailing edge and stator entrance 30 At high engine speeds as at takeoff shock waves from the supersonic fan tips because of their unequal nature produce noise of a discordant nature known as buzz saw noise 31 32 All modern turbofan engines have acoustic liners in the nacelle to damp their noise They extend as much as possible to cover the largest surface area The acoustic performance of the engine can be experimentally evaluated by means of ground tests 33 or in dedicated experimental test rigs 34 In the aerospace industry chevrons are the saw tooth patterns on the trailing edges of some jet engine nozzles 35 that are used for noise reduction The shaped edges smooth the mixing of hot air from the engine core and cooler air flowing through the engine fan which reduces noise creating turbulence 35 Chevrons were developed by GE under a NASA contract 35 36 Some notable examples of such designs are Boeing 787 and Boeing 747 8 on the Rolls Royce Trent 1000 and General Electric GEnx engines 37 History Edit Rolls Royce Conway low bypass turbofan from a Boeing 707 The bypass air exits from the fins while the exhaust from the core exits from the central nozzle This fluted jetpipe design is a noise reducing method devised by Frederick Greatorex at Rolls Royce General Electric GEnx 2B turbofan engine as used on a Boeing 747 8 View into the bypass duct looking forward from the bypass nozzle and showing fan exit stators fan blades Early turbojet engines were not very fuel efficient because their overall pressure ratio and turbine inlet temperature were severely limited by the technology and materials available at the time The first turbofan engine which was only run on a test bed was the German Daimler Benz DB 670 designated the 109 007 by the Nazi Ministry of Aviation with a first run date of 27 May 1943 after the testing of the turbomachinery using an electric motor which had been undertaken on 1 April 1943 38 Development of the engine was abandoned with its problems unsolved as the war situation worsened for Germany Later in 1943 the British ground tested the Metrovick F 3 39 turbofan which used the Metrovick F 2 turbojet as a gas generator with the exhaust discharging into a close coupled aft fan module comprising a contra rotating LP turbine system driving two co axial contra rotating fans 40 Improved materials and the introduction of twin compressors such as in the Bristol Olympus 41 and Pratt amp Whitney JT3C engines increased the overall pressure ratio and thus the thermodynamic efficiency of engines They also had poor propulsive efficiency because pure turbojets have a high specific thrust high velocity exhaust which is better suited to supersonic flight The original low bypass turbofan engines were designed to improve propulsive efficiency by reducing the exhaust velocity to a value closer to that of the aircraft The Rolls Royce Conway the world s first production turbofan had a bypass ratio of 0 3 similar to the modern General Electric F404 fighter engine Civilian turbofan engines of the 1960s such as the Pratt amp Whitney JT8D and the Rolls Royce Spey had bypass ratios closer to 1 and were similar to their military equivalents The first Soviet airliner powered by turbofan engines was the Tupolev Tu 124 introduced in 1962 It used the Soloviev D 20 42 164 aircraft were produced between 1960 and 1965 for Aeroflot and other Eastern Bloc airlines with some operating until the early 1990s The first General Electric turbofan was the aft fan CJ805 23 based on the CJ805 3 turbojet It was followed by the aft fan General Electric CF700 engine with a 2 0 bypass ratio This was derived from the General Electric J85 CJ610 turbojet 2 850 lbf 12 700 N to power the larger Rockwell Sabreliner 75 80 model aircraft as well as the Dassault Falcon 20 with about a 50 increase in thrust to 4 200 lbf 19 000 N The CF700 was the first small turbofan to be certified by the Federal Aviation Administration FAA There were at one time over 400 CF700 aircraft in operation around the world with an experience base of over 10 million service hours The CF700 turbofan engine was also used to train Moon bound astronauts in Project Apollo as the powerplant for the Lunar Landing Research Vehicle Common types EditLow bypass turbofan Edit Schematic diagram illustrating a 2 spool low bypass turbofan engine with a mixed exhaust showing the low pressure green and high pressure purple spools The fan and booster stages are driven by the low pressure turbine whereas the high pressure compressor is powered by the high pressure turbine A high specific thrust low bypass ratio turbofan normally has a multi stage fan behind inlet guide vanes developing a relatively high pressure ratio and thus yielding a high mixed or cold exhaust velocity The core airflow needs to be large enough to ensure there is sufficient core power to drive the fan A smaller core flow higher bypass ratio cycle can be achieved by raising the inlet temperature of the high pressure HP turbine rotor To illustrate one aspect of how a turbofan differs from a turbojet comparisons can be made at the same airflow to keep a common intake for example and the same net thrust i e same specific thrust A bypass flow can be added only if the turbine inlet temperature is not too high to compensate for the smaller core flow Future improvements in turbine cooling material technology can allow higher turbine inlet temperature which is necessary because of increased cooling air temperature resulting from an overall pressure ratio increase The resulting turbofan with reasonable efficiencies and duct loss for the added components would probably operate at a higher nozzle pressure ratio than the turbojet but with a lower exhaust temperature to retain net thrust Since the temperature rise across the whole engine intake to nozzle would be lower the dry power fuel flow would also be reduced resulting in a better specific fuel consumption SFC Some low bypass ratio military turbofans e g F404 JT8D have variable inlet guide vanes to direct air onto the first fan rotor stage This improves the fan surge margin see compressor map The widely produced Pratt amp Whitney JT8D used on many early narrowbody jetliners The fan is located behind the inlet guide vanes Soloviev D 30 which powers the Ilyushin Il 76 amp Il 62M Mikoyan MiG 31 Xian H 6K amp Y 20 Saturn AL 31 which powers the Chengdu J 10 amp J 20 Shenyang J 11 J 15 amp J 16 Sukhoi Su 30 amp Su 27 Williams F107 which powers the Raytheon BGM 109 Tomahawk cruise missile NPO Saturn AL 55 which powers certain HAL HJT 36 Sitara Eurojet EJ200 which powers the Eurofighter Typhoon Ishikawajima Harima F3 which powers the Kawasaki T 4 GTRE GTX 35VS Kaveri developed by GTREAfterburning turbofan Edit Further information Afterburner Pratt amp Whitney F119 afterburning turbofan on test Since the 1970s most jet fighter engines have been low medium bypass turbofans with a mixed exhaust afterburner and variable area exit nozzle An afterburner is a combustor located downstream of the turbine blades and directly upstream of the nozzle which burns fuel from afterburner specific fuel injectors When lit large volumes of fuel are burnt in the afterburner raising the temperature of exhaust gases by a significant degree resulting in a higher exhaust velocity engine specific thrust The variable geometry nozzle must open to a larger throat area to accommodate the extra volume and increased flow rate when the afterburner is lit Afterburning is often designed to give a significant thrust boost for take off transonic acceleration and combat maneuvers but is very fuel intensive Consequently afterburning can be used only for short portions of a mission Unlike in the main engine where stoichiometric temperatures in the combustor have to be reduced before they reach the turbine an afterburner at maximum fuelling is designed to produce stoichiometric temperatures at entry to the nozzle about 2 100 K 3 800 R 3 300 F 1 800 C At a fixed total applied fuel air ratio the total fuel flow for a given fan airflow will be the same regardless of the dry specific thrust of the engine However a high specific thrust turbofan will by definition have a higher nozzle pressure ratio resulting in a higher afterburning net thrust and therefore a lower afterburning specific fuel consumption SFC However high specific thrust engines have a high dry SFC The situation is reversed for a medium specific thrust afterburning turbofan i e poor afterburning SFC good dry SFC The former engine is suitable for a combat aircraft which must remain in afterburning combat for a fairly long period but has to fight only fairly close to the airfield e g cross border skirmishes The latter engine is better for an aircraft that has to fly some distance or loiter for a long time before going into combat However the pilot can afford to stay in afterburning only for a short period before aircraft fuel reserves become dangerously low The first production afterburning turbofan engine was the Pratt amp Whitney TF30 which initially powered the F 111 Aardvark and F 14 Tomcat Current low bypass military turbofans include the Pratt amp Whitney F119 the Eurojet EJ200 the General Electric F110 the Klimov RD 33 and the Saturn AL 31 all of which feature a mixed exhaust afterburner and variable area propelling nozzle High bypass turbofan Edit Further information Bypass ratio Schematic diagram illustrating a 2 spool high bypass turbofan engine with an unmixed exhaust The low pressure spool is coloured green and the high pressure one purple Again the fan and booster stages are driven by the low pressure turbine but more stages are required A mixed exhaust is often employed nowadays To further improve fuel economy and reduce noise almost all of today s jet airliners and most military transport aircraft e g the C 17 are powered by low specific thrust high bypass ratio turbofans These engines evolved from the high specific thrust low bypass ratio turbofans used in such aircraft in the 1960s Modern combat aircraft tend to use low bypass ratio turbofans and some military transport aircraft use turboprops Low specific thrust is achieved by replacing the multi stage fan with a single stage unit Unlike some military engines modern civil turbofans lack stationary inlet guide vanes in front of the fan rotor The fan is scaled to achieve the desired net thrust The core or gas generator of the engine must generate enough power to drive the fan at its rated mass flow and pressure ratio Improvements in turbine cooling material technology allow for a higher HP turbine rotor inlet temperature which allows a smaller and lighter core potentially improving the core thermal efficiency Reducing the core mass flow tends to increase the load on the LP turbine so this unit may require additional stages to reduce the average stage loading and to maintain LP turbine efficiency Reducing core flow also increases bypass ratio Bypass ratios greater than 5 1 are increasingly common the Pratt amp Whitney PW1000G which entered commercial service in 2016 attains 12 5 1 Further improvements in core thermal efficiency can be achieved by raising the overall pressure ratio of the core Improvements in blade aerodynamics can reduce the number of extra compressor stages required and variable geometry i e stators enable high pressure ratio compressors to work surge free at all throttle settings Cutaway diagram of the General Electric CF6 6 engine The first experimental high bypass turbofan engine was the AVCO Lycoming PLF1A 2 a T55 turboshaft derived engine that was first run in February 1962 The PLF1A 2 had a 40 in diameter 100 cm geared fan stage produced a static thrust of 4 320 lb 1 960 kg 43 and had a bypass ratio of 6 1 44 The General Electric TF39 became the first production model designed to power the Lockheed C 5 Galaxy military transport aircraft 22 The civil General Electric CF6 engine used a derived design Other high bypass turbofans are the Pratt amp Whitney JT9D the three shaft Rolls Royce RB211 and the CFM International CFM56 also the smaller TF34 More recent large high bypass turbofans include the Pratt amp Whitney PW4000 the three shaft Rolls Royce Trent the General Electric GE90 GEnx and the GP7000 produced jointly by GE and P amp W The lower the specific thrust of a turbofan the lower the mean jet outlet velocity which in turn translates into a high thrust lapse rate i e decreasing thrust with increasing flight speed See technical discussion below item 2 Consequently an engine sized to propel an aircraft at high subsonic flight speed e g Mach 0 83 generates a relatively high thrust at low flight speed thus enhancing runway performance Low specific thrust engines tend to have a high bypass ratio but this is also a function of the temperature of the turbine system The turbofans on twin engined transport aircraft produce enough take off thrust to continue a take off on one engine if the other engine shuts down after a critical point in the take off run From that point on the aircraft has less than half the thrust compared to two operating engines because the non functioning engine is a source of drag Modern twin engined airliners normally climb very steeply immediately after take off If one engine shuts down the climb out is much shallower but sufficient to clear obstacles in the flightpath The Soviet Union s engine technology was less advanced than the West s and its first wide body aircraft the Ilyushin Il 86 was powered by low bypass engines The Yakovlev Yak 42 a medium range rear engined aircraft seating up to 120 passengers introduced in 1980 was the first Soviet aircraft to use high bypass engines PowerJet SaM146 which powers Sukhoi Superjet 100 General Electric CF6 which powers the Airbus A300 Boeing 747 Douglas DC 10 and other aircraft Rolls Royce Trent 900 powering the Airbus A380 Pratt amp Whitney PW4000 powering the Boeing 777 MD 11 and Airbus A330 The CFM56 which powers the Boeing 737 the Airbus A320 and other aircraft Engine Alliance GP7000 turbofan for the Airbus A380 Aviadvigatel PS 90 which powers the Ilyushin Il 96 Tupolev Tu 204 Ilyushin Il 76 Lycoming ALF 502 which powers the British Aerospace 146 Aviadvigatel PD 14 which will be used on the Irkut MC 21 Three shaft Progress D 436 Trent 1000 powering the Boeing 787 GE90 powering the Boeing 777 the most powerful aircraft engineTurbofan configurations EditTurbofan engines come in a variety of engine configurations For a given engine cycle i e same airflow bypass ratio fan pressure ratio overall pressure ratio and HP turbine rotor inlet temperature the choice of turbofan configuration has little impact upon the design point performance e g net thrust SFC as long as overall component performance is maintained Off design performance and stability is however affected by engine configuration The basic element of a turbofan is a spool a single combination of fan compressor turbine and shaft rotating at a single speed For a given pressure ratio the surge margin can be increased by two different design paths Splitting the compressor into two smaller spools rotating at different speeds as with the Pratt amp Whitney J57 or Making the stator vane pitch adjustable typically in the front stages as with the J79 Most modern western civil turbofans employ a relatively high pressure ratio high pressure HP compressor with many rows of variable stators to control surge margin at low rpm In the three spool RB211 Trent the core compression system is split into two with the IP compressor which supercharges the HP compressor being on a different coaxial shaft and driven by a separate IP turbine As the HP compressor has a modest pressure ratio its speed can be reduced surge free without employing variable geometry However because a shallow IP compressor working line is inevitable the IPC has one stage of variable geometry on all variants except the 535 which has none 45 Single shaft turbofan Edit Although far from common the single shaft turbofan is probably the simplest configuration comprising a fan and high pressure compressor driven by a single turbine unit all on the same spool The Snecma M53 which powers Dassault Mirage 2000 fighter aircraft is an example of a single shaft turbofan Despite the simplicity of the turbomachinery configuration the M53 requires a variable area mixer to facilitate part throttle operation Aft fan turbofan Edit One of the earliest turbofans was a derivative of the General Electric J79 turbojet known as the CJ805 23 which featured an integrated aft fan low pressure LP turbine unit located in the turbojet exhaust jetpipe Hot gas from the turbojet turbine exhaust expanded through the LP turbine the fan blades being a radial extension of the turbine blades This arrangement introduces an additional gas leakage path compared to a front fan configuration and was a problem with this engine with higher pressure turbine gas leaking into the fan airflow 46 An aft fan configuration was later used for the General Electric GE36 UDF propfan demonstrator of the early 1980s In 1971 a concept was put forward by the NASA Lewis Research Center for a supersonic transport engine which operated as an aft fan turbofan at take off and subsonic speeds and a turbojet at higher speeds This would give the low noise and high thrust characteristics of a turbofan at take off together with turbofan high propulsive efficiency at subsonic flight speeds It would have the high propulsive efficiency of a turbojet at supersonic cruise speeds 47 Basic two spool Edit Many turbofans have at least basic two spool configuration where the fan is on a separate low pressure LP spool running concentrically with the compressor or high pressure HP spool the LP spool runs at a lower angular velocity while the HP spool turns faster and its compressor further compresses part of the air for combustion citation needed The BR710 is typical of this configuration At the smaller thrust sizes instead of all axial blading the HP compressor configuration may be axial centrifugal e g CFE CFE738 double centrifugal or even diagonal centrifugal e g Pratt amp Whitney Canada PW600 Boosted two spool Edit Higher overall pressure ratios can be achieved by either raising the HP compressor pressure ratio or adding compressor non bypass stages or T stages to the LP spool between the fan and the HP compressor to boost the latter All of the large American turbofans e g General Electric CF6 GE90 GE9X and GEnx plus Pratt amp Whitney JT9D and PW4000 feature T stages The Rolls Royce BR715 is a non American example of this The high bypass ratios used in modern civil turbofans tend to reduce the relative diameter of the T stages reducing their mean tip speed Consequently more T stages are required to develop the necessary pressure rise Three spool Edit Rolls Royce chose a three spool configuration for their large civil turbofans i e the RB211 and Trent families where the T stages of the boosted two spool configuration are separated into a separate intermediate pressure IP spool driven by its own turbine The first three spool engine was the earlier Rolls Royce RB 203 Trent of 1967 The Garrett ATF3 powering the Dassault Falcon 20 business jet has an unusual three spool layout with an aft spool not concentric with the two others Ivchenko Design Bureau chose the same configuration as Rolls Royce for their Lotarev D 36 engine followed by Lotarev Progress D 18T and Progress D 436 The Turbo Union RB199 military turbofan also has a three spool configuration as do the military Kuznetsov NK 25 and NK 321 Geared fan Edit Main article Geared turbofan Geared turbofan The gearbox is labeled 2 As bypass ratio increases the fan blade tip speed increases relative to the LPT blade speed This will reduce the LPT blade speed requiring more turbine stages to extract enough energy to drive the fan Introducing a planetary reduction gearbox with a suitable gear ratio between the LP shaft and the fan enables both the fan and LP turbine to operate at their optimum speeds Examples of this configuration are the long established Garrett TFE731 the Honeywell ALF 502 507 and the recent Pratt amp Whitney PW1000G Military turbofans Edit Most of the configurations discussed above are used in civilian turbofans while modern military turbofans e g Snecma M88 are usually basic two spool High pressure turbine Edit Most civil turbofans use a high efficiency 2 stage HP turbine to drive the HP compressor The CFM International CFM56 uses an alternative approach a single stage high work unit While this approach is probably less efficient there are savings on cooling air weight and cost In the RB211 and Trent 3 spool engine series the HP compressor pressure ratio is modest so only a single HP turbine stage is required Modern military turbofans also tend to use a single HP turbine stage and a modest HP compressor Low pressure turbine Edit Modern civil turbofans have multi stage LP turbines anywhere from 3 to 7 The number of stages required depends on the engine cycle bypass ratio and the boost on boosted two spools A geared fan may reduce the number of required LPT stages in some applications 48 Because of the much lower bypass ratios employed military turbofans require only one or two LP turbine stages Overall performance EditCycle improvements Edit Consider a mixed turbofan with a fixed bypass ratio and airflow Increasing the overall pressure ratio of the compression system raises the combustor entry temperature Therefore at a fixed fuel flow there is an increase in HP turbine rotor inlet temperature Although the higher temperature rise across the compression system implies a larger temperature drop over the turbine system the mixed nozzle temperature is unaffected because the same amount of heat is being added to the system There is however a rise in nozzle pressure because overall pressure ratio increases faster than the turbine expansion ratio causing an increase in the hot mixer entry pressure Consequently net thrust increases whilst specific fuel consumption fuel flow net thrust decreases A similar trend occurs with unmixed turbofans Turbofan engines can be made more fuel efficient by raising overall pressure ratio and turbine rotor inlet temperature in unison However better turbine materials or improved vane blade cooling are required to cope with increases in both turbine rotor inlet temperature and compressor delivery temperature Increasing the latter may require better compressor materials The overall pressure ratio can be increased by improving fan or LP compressor pressure ratio or HP compressor pressure ratio If the latter is held constant the increase in HP compressor delivery temperature from raising overall pressure ratio implies an increase in HP mechanical speed However stressing considerations might limit this parameter implying despite an increase in overall pressure ratio a reduction in HP compressor pressure ratio According to simple theory if the ratio of turbine rotor inlet temperature HP compressor delivery temperature is maintained the HP turbine throat area can be retained However this assumes that cycle improvements are obtained while retaining the datum HP compressor exit flow function non dimensional flow In practice changes to the non dimensional speed of the HP compressor and cooling bleed extraction would probably make this assumption invalid making some adjustment to HP turbine throat area unavoidable This means the HP turbine nozzle guide vanes would have to be different from the original In all probability the downstream LP turbine nozzle guide vanes would have to be changed anyway Thrust growth Edit Thrust growth is obtained by increasing core power There are two basic routes available hot route increase HP turbine rotor inlet temperature cold route increase core mass flowBoth routes require an increase in the combustor fuel flow and therefore the heat energy added to the core stream The hot route may require changes in turbine blade vane materials or better blade vane cooling The cold route can be obtained by one of the following adding T stages to the LP IP compression adding a zero stage to the HP compression improving the compression process without adding stages e g higher fan hub pressure ratio all of which increase both overall pressure ratio and core airflow Alternatively the core size can be increased to raise core airflow without changing overall pressure ratio This route is expensive since a new upflowed turbine system and possibly a larger IP compressor is also required Changes must also be made to the fan to absorb the extra core power On a civil engine jet noise considerations mean that any significant increase in take off thrust must be accompanied by a corresponding increase in fan mass flow to maintain a T O specific thrust of about 30 lbf lb s Technical discussion Edit Specific thrust net thrust intake airflow is an important parameter for turbofans and jet engines in general Imagine a fan driven by an appropriately sized electric motor operating within a pipe which is connected to a propelling nozzle It is fairly obvious the higher the fan pressure ratio fan discharge pressure fan inlet pressure the higher the jet velocity and the corresponding specific thrust Now imagine we replace this set up with an equivalent turbofan same airflow and same fan pressure ratio Obviously the core of the turbofan must produce sufficient power to drive the fan via the low pressure LP turbine If we choose a low HP turbine inlet temperature for the gas generator the core airflow needs to be relatively high to compensate The corresponding bypass ratio is therefore relatively low If we raise the turbine inlet temperature the core airflow can be smaller thus increasing bypass ratio Raising turbine inlet temperature tends to increase thermal efficiency and therefore improve fuel efficiency Naturally as altitude increases there is a decrease in air density and therefore the net thrust of an engine There is also a flight speed effect termed thrust lapse rate Consider the approximate equation for net thrust again F n m V j f e V a displaystyle F n m cdot V jfe V a With a high specific thrust e g fighter engine the jet velocity is relatively high so intuitively one can see that increases in flight velocity have less of an impact upon net thrust than a medium specific thrust e g trainer engine where the jet velocity is lower The impact of thrust lapse rate upon a low specific thrust e g civil engine is even more severe At high flight speeds high specific thrust engines can pick up net thrust through the ram rise in the intake but this effect tends to diminish at supersonic speeds because of shock wave losses Thrust growth on civil turbofans is usually obtained by increasing fan airflow thus preventing the jet noise becoming too high However the larger fan airflow requires more power from the core This can be achieved by raising the overall pressure ratio combustor inlet pressure intake delivery pressure to induce more airflow into the core and by increasing turbine inlet temperature Together these parameters tend to increase core thermal efficiency and improve fuel efficiency Some high bypass ratio civil turbofans use an extremely low area ratio less than 1 01 convergent divergent nozzle on the bypass or mixed exhaust stream to control the fan working line The nozzle acts as if it has variable geometry At low flight speeds the nozzle is unchoked less than a Mach number of unity so the exhaust gas speeds up as it approaches the throat and then slows down slightly as it reaches the divergent section Consequently the nozzle exit area controls the fan match and being larger than the throat pulls the fan working line slightly away from surge At higher flight speeds the ram rise in the intake increases nozzle pressure ratio to the point where the throat becomes choked M 1 0 Under these circumstances the throat area dictates the fan match and being smaller than the exit pushes the fan working line slightly towards surge This is not a problem since fan surge margin is much better at high flight speeds The off design behaviour of turbofans is illustrated under compressor map and turbine map Because modern civil turbofans operate at low specific thrust they require only a single fan stage to develop the required fan pressure ratio The desired overall pressure ratio for the engine cycle is usually achieved by multiple axial stages on the core compression Rolls Royce tend to split the core compression into two with an intermediate pressure IP supercharging the HP compressor both units being driven by turbines with a single stage mounted on separate shafts Consequently the HP compressor need develop only a modest pressure ratio e g 4 5 1 US civil engines use much higher HP compressor pressure ratios e g 23 1 on the General Electric GE90 and tend to be driven by a two stage HP turbine Even so there are usually a few IP axial stages mounted on the LP shaft behind the fan to further supercharge the core compression system Civil engines have multi stage LP turbines the number of stages being determined by the bypass ratio the amount of IP compression on the LP shaft and the LP turbine blade speed Because military engines usually have to be able to fly very fast at sea level the limit on HP compressor delivery temperature is reached at a fairly modest design overall pressure ratio compared with that of a civil engine Also the fan pressure ratio is relatively high to achieve a medium to high specific thrust Consequently modern military turbofans usually have only 5 or 6 HP compressor stages and require only a single stage HP turbine Low bypass ratio military turbofans usually have one LP turbine stage but higher bypass ratio engines need two stages In theory by adding IP compressor stages a modern military turbofan HP compressor could be used in a civil turbofan derivative but the core would tend to be too small for high thrust applications Improvements EditAerodynamic modelling Edit Aerodynamics is a mix of subsonic transonic and supersonic airflow on a single fan gas compressor blade in a modern turbofan The airflow past the blades has to be maintained within close angular limits to keep the air flowing against an increasing pressure Otherwise the air will come back out of the intake 49 The Full Authority Digital Engine Control FADEC needs accurate data for controlling the engine The critical turbine inlet temperature TIT is too harsh an environment at 1 700 C 3 100 F and 17 bar 250 psi for reliable sensors Therefore during development of a new engine type a relation is established between a more easily measured temperature like exhaust gas temperature and the TIT Monitoring the exhaust gas temperature is then used to make sure the engine does not run too hot 49 Blade technology Edit A 100 g 3 5 oz turbine blade is subjected to 1 700 C 3 100 F at 17 bar 250 psi and a centrifugal force of 40 kN 9 000 lbf well above the point of plastic deformation and even above the melting point Exotic alloys sophisticated air cooling schemes and special mechanical design are needed to keep the physical stresses within the strength of the material Rotating seals must withstand harsh conditions for 10 years 20 000 missions and rotating at 10 to 20 000 rpm 49 Fan blades Edit Fan blades have been growing as jet engines have been getting bigger each fan blade carries the equivalent of nine double decker buses and swallows air the equivalent volume of a squash court every second Advances in computational fluid dynamics CFD modelling have permitted complex 3D curved shapes with very wide chord keeping the fan capabilities while minimizing the blade count to lower costs Coincidentally the bypass ratio grew to achieve higher propulsive efficiency and the fan diameter increased 50 Rolls Royce pioneered the hollow titanium wide chord fan blade in the 1980s for aerodynamic efficiency and foreign object damage resistance in the RB211 then for the Trent GE Aviation introduced carbon fiber composite fan blades on the GE90 in 1995 manufactured today with a carbon fiber tape layer process GE partner Safran developed a 3D woven technology with Albany Composites for the CFM56 and CFM LEAP engines 50 Future progress Edit Engine cores are shrinking as they are operating at higher pressure ratios and becoming more efficient and become smaller compared to the fan as bypass ratios increase Blade tip clearances are harder to maintain at the exit of the high pressure compressor where blades are 0 5 in 13 mm high or less backbone bending further affects clearance control as the core is proportionately longer and thinner and the fan to low pressure turbine driveshaft is in constrained space within the core 51 For Pratt amp Whitney VP technology and environment Alan Epstein Over the history of commercial aviation we have gone from 20 to 40 cruise efficiency and there is a consensus among the engine community that we can probably get to 60 52 Geared turbofans and further fan pressure ratio reductions will continue to improve propulsive efficiency The second phase of the FAA s Continuous Lower Energy Emissions and Noise CLEEN program is targeting for the late 2020s reductions of 33 fuel burn 60 emissions and 32 dB EPNdb noise compared with the 2000s state of the art In summer 2017 at NASA Glenn Research Center in Cleveland Ohio Pratt has finished testing a very low pressure ratio fan on a PW1000G resembling an open rotor with fewer blades than the PW1000G s 20 52 The weight and size of the nacelle would be reduced by a short duct inlet imposing higher aerodynamic turning loads on the blades and leaving less space for soundproofing but a lower pressure ratio fan is slower UTC Aerospace Systems Aerostructures will have a full scale ground test in 2019 of its low drag Integrated Propulsion System with a thrust reverser improving fuel burn by 1 and with 2 5 3 EPNdB lower noise 52 Safran can probably deliver another 10 15 in fuel efficiency through the mid 2020s before reaching an asymptote and next will have to introduce a breakthrough to increase the bypass ratio to 35 1 instead of 11 1 for the CFM LEAP it is demonstrating a counterrotating open rotor unducted fan propfan in Istres France under the European Clean Sky technology program Modeling advances and high specific strength materials may help it succeed where previous attempts failed When noise levels will be within current standards and similar to the Leap engine 15 lower fuel burn will be available and for that Safran is testing its controls vibration and operation while airframe integration is still challenging 52 For GE Aviation the energy density of jet fuel still maximises the Breguet range equation and higher pressure ratio cores lower pressure ratio fans low loss inlets and lighter structures can further improve thermal transfer and propulsive efficiency Under the U S Air Force s Adaptive Engine Transition Program adaptive thermodynamic cycles will be used for the sixth generation jet fighter based on a modified Brayton cycle and Constant volume combustion Additive manufacturing in the advanced turboprop will reduce weight by 5 and fuel burn by 20 52 Rotating and static ceramic matrix composite CMC parts operates 500 F 260 C hotter than metal and are one third its weight With 21 9 million from the Air Force Research Laboratory GE is investing 200 million in a CMC facility in Huntsville Alabama in addition to its Asheville North Carolina site mass producing silicon carbide matrix with silicon carbide fibers in 2018 CMCs will be used ten times more by the mid 2020s the CFM LEAP requires 18 CMC turbine shrouds per engine and the GE9X will use it in the combustor and for 42 HP turbine nozzles 52 Rolls Royce Plc aim for a 60 1 pressure ratio core for the 2020s Ultrafan and began ground tests of its 100 000 hp 75 000 kW gear for 100 000 lbf 440 kN and 15 1 bypass ratios Nearly stoichiometric turbine entry temperatures approaches the theoretical limit and its impact on emissions has to be balanced with environmental performance goals Open rotors lower pressure ratio fans and potentially distributed propulsion offer more room for better propulsive efficiency Exotic cycles heat exchangers and pressure gain constant volume combustion can improve thermodynamic efficiency Additive manufacturing could be an enabler for intercooler and recuperators Closer airframe integration and hybrid or electric aircraft can be combined with gas turbines 52 Current Rolls Royce engines have a 72 82 propulsive efficiency and 42 49 thermal efficiency for a 0 63 0 49 lb lbf h 64 000 50 000 g kN h TSFC at Mach 0 8 and aim for theoretical limits of 95 for open rotor propulsive efficiency and 60 for thermal efficiency with stoichiometric turbine entry temperature and 80 1 overall pressure ratio for a 0 35 lb lbf h 36 000 g kN h TSFC 53 As teething troubles may not show up until several thousand hours the latest turbofans technical problems disrupt airlines operations and manufacturers deliveries while production rates are rising sharply Trent 1000 cracked blades grounded almost 50 Boeing 787s and reduced ETOPS to 2 3 hours down from 5 5 costing Rolls Royce plc almost 950 million PW1000G knife edge seal fractures have caused Pratt amp Whitney to fall way behind in deliveries leaving about 100 engineless A320neos waiting for their powerplants The CFM LEAP introduction was smoother but a ceramic composite HP Turbine coating is prematurely lost necessitating a new design causing 60 A320neo engine removal for modification as deliveries are up to six weeks late 54 On a widebody Safran estimates 5 10 of fuel could be saved by reducing power intake for hydraulic systems while swapping to electrical power could save 30 of weight as initiated on the Boeing 787 while Rolls Royce plc hopes for up to 5 55 Manufacturers EditMain article List of turbofan manufacturers The turbofan engine market is dominated by General Electric Rolls Royce plc and Pratt amp Whitney in order of market share General Electric and SNECMA of France have a joint venture CFM International Pratt amp Whitney also have a joint venture International Aero Engines with Japanese Aero Engine Corporation and MTU Aero Engines of Germany specializing in engines for the Airbus A320 family Pratt amp Whitney and General Electric have a joint venture Engine Alliance selling a range of engines for aircraft such as the Airbus A380 For airliners and cargo aircraft the in service fleet in 2016 is 60 000 engines and should grow to 103 000 in 2035 with 86 500 deliveries according to Flight Global A majority will be medium thrust engines for narrow body aircraft with 54 000 deliveries for a fleet growing from 28 500 to 61 000 High thrust engines for wide body aircraft worth 40 45 of the market by value will grow from 12 700 engines to over 21 000 with 18 500 deliveries The regional jet engines below 20 000 lb 89 kN fleet will grow from 7 500 to 9 000 and the fleet of turboprops for airliners will increase from 9 400 to 10 200 The manufacturers market share should be led by CFM with 44 followed by Pratt amp Whitney with 29 and then Rolls Royce and General Electric with 10 each 56 Commercial turbofans in production Edit Commercial turbofans in production 57 Model Start Bypass Length Fan Weight Thrust Major applicationsGE GE90 1992 8 7 9 9 5 18 5 40 m 3 12 3 25 m 7 56 8 62 t 330 510 kN B777P amp W PW4000 1984 4 8 6 4 3 37 4 95 m 2 84 m 4 18 7 48 t 222 436 kN A300 A310 A330 B747 B767 B777 MD 11R R Trent XWB 2010 9 3 5 22 m 3 00 m 7 28 t 330 430 kN A350XWBR R Trent 800 1993 5 7 5 79 4 37 m 2 79 m 5 96 5 98 t 411 425 kN B777EA GP7000 2004 8 7 4 75 m 2 95 m 6 09 6 71 t 311 363 kN A380R R Trent 900 2004 8 7 4 55 m 2 95 m 6 18 6 25 t 340 357 kN A380R R Trent 1000 2006 10 8 11 4 74 m 2 85 m 5 77 t 265 3 360 4 kN B787GE GEnx 58 2006 8 0 9 3 4 31 4 69 m 2 66 2 82 m 5 62 5 82 t 296 339 kN B747 8 B787R R Trent 700 1990 4 9 3 91 m 2 47 m 4 79 t 320 kN A330GE CF6 1971 4 3 5 3 4 00 4 41 m 2 20 2 79 m 3 82 5 08 t 222 298 kN A300 A310 A330 B747 B767 MD 11 DC 10R R Trent 500 1999 8 5 3 91 m 2 47 m 4 72 t 252 kN A340 500 600P amp W PW1000G 59 2008 9 0 12 5 3 40 m 1 42 2 06 m 2 86 t 67 160 kN A320neo A220 E Jets E2CFM LEAP 60 2013 9 0 11 0 3 15 3 33 m 1 76 1 98 m 2 78 3 15 t 100 146 kN A320neo B737MaxCFM56 1974 5 0 6 6 2 36 2 52 m 1 52 1 84 m 1 95 2 64 t 97 9 151 kN A320 A340 200 300 B737 KC 135 DC 8IAE V2500 1987 4 4 4 9 3 20 m 1 60 m 2 36 2 54 t 97 9 147 kN A320 MD 90P amp W PW6000 2000 4 90 2 73 m 1 44 m 2 36 t 100 2 kN Airbus A318R R BR700 1994 4 2 4 5 3 41 3 60 m 1 32 1 58 m 1 63 2 11 t 68 9 102 3 kN B717 Global Express Gulfstream VGE Passport 2013 5 6 3 37 m 1 30 m 2 07 t 78 9 84 2 kN Global 7000 8000GE CF34 1982 5 3 6 3 2 62 3 26 m 1 25 1 32 m 0 74 1 12 t 41 82 3 kN Challenger 600 CRJ E jetsP amp WC PW800 2012 5 5 1 30 m 67 4 69 7 kN Gulfstream G500 G600R R Tay 1984 3 1 3 2 2 41 m 1 12 1 14 m 1 42 1 53 t 61 6 68 5 kN Gulfstream IV Fokker 70 100Silvercrest 2012 5 9 1 90 m 1 08 m 1 09 t 50 9 kN Citation Hemisphere Falcon 5XR R AE 3007 1991 5 0 2 71 m 1 11 m 0 72 t 33 7 kN ERJ Citation XP amp WC PW300 1988 3 8 4 5 1 92 2 07 m 0 97 m 0 45 0 47 t 23 4 35 6 kN Citation Sovereign G200 Falcon 7X Falcon 2000HW HTF7000 1999 4 4 2 29 m 0 87 m 0 62 t 28 9 kN Challenger 300 G280 Legacy 500HW TFE731 1970 2 66 3 9 1 52 2 08 m 0 72 0 78 m 0 34 0 45 t 15 6 22 2 kN Learjet 70 75 G150 Falcon 900Williams FJ44 1985 3 3 4 1 1 36 2 09 m 0 53 0 57 m 0 21 0 24 t 6 7 15 6 kN CitationJet Citation M2P amp WC PW500 1993 3 90 1 52 m 0 70 m 0 28 t 13 3 kN Citation Excel Phenom 300GE H HF120 2009 4 43 1 12 m 0 54 m 0 18 t 7 4 kN HondaJetWilliams FJ33 1998 0 98 m 0 53 m 0 14 t 6 7 kN Cirrus SF50P amp WC PW600 2001 1 8 2 8 0 67 m 0 36 m 0 15 t 6 0 kN Citation Mustang Eclipse 500 Phenom 100PS 90 1992 4 4 4 96 m 1 9 m 2 95 t 157 171 kN Il 76 Il 96 Tu 204PowerJet SaM146 2008 4 4 1 3 59 m 1 22 m 2 260 t 71 6 79 2 kN Sukhoi Superjet 100Extreme bypass jet engines EditIn the 1970s Rolls Royce SNECMA tested a M45SD 02 turbofan fitted with variable pitch fan blades to improve handling at ultralow fan pressure ratios and to provide thrust reverse down to zero aircraft speed The engine was aimed at ultraquiet STOL aircraft operating from city centre airports In a bid for increased efficiency with speed a development of the turbofan and turboprop known as a propfan engine was created that had an unducted fan The fan blades are situated outside of the duct so that it appears like a turboprop with wide scimitar like blades Both General Electric and Pratt amp Whitney Allison demonstrated propfan engines in the 1980s Excessive cabin noise and relatively cheap jet fuel prevented the engines being put into service The Progress D 27 propfan developed in the U S S R was the only propfan engine equipped on a production aircraft Terminology EditAfterburner jetpipe equipped for afterburning 61 Augmentor afterburner for turbofan with burning in hot and cold flows 61 Bypass that part of the engine as distinct from the core in terms of components and airflow eg that part of fan blading fan outer and stators which pass bypass air bypass duct bypass nozzle Bypass ratio bypass air mass flow core air mass flow 62 Core that part of the engine as distinct from the bypass in terms of components and airflow eg core cowl core nozzle core airflow and associated machinery combustor and fuel system Core power also known as available energy or gas horsepower It is used to measure the theoretical isentropic expansion shaft work available from a gas generator or core by expanding hot high pressure gas to ambient pressure Since the power depends on the pressure and temperature of the gas and the ambient pressure a related figure of merit for thrust producing engines is one which measures the thrust producing potential from hot high pressure gas and known as stream thrust It is obtained by calculating the velocity obtained with isentropic expansion to atmospheric pressure The significance of the thrust obtained appears when multiplied by the aircraft velocity to give the thrust work The thrust work which is potentially available is far less than the gas horsepower due to the increasing waste in the exhaust kinetic energy with increasing pressure and temperature before expansion to atmospheric pressure The two are related by the propulsive efficiency 63 a measure of the energy wasted as a result of producing a force ie thrust in a fluid by increasing the speed ie momentum of the fluid Dry engine ratings throttle lever positions below afterburning selection EGT exhaust gas temperature EPR engine pressure ratio Fan turbofan LP compressor Fanjet turbofan or aircraft powered by turbofan colloquial 64 Fan pressure ratio fan outlet total pressure fan inlet total pressure Flex temp At reduced take off weights commercial aircraft can use reduced thrust which increases engine life and reduces maintenance costs Flex temperature is a higher than actual outside air temperature OAT which is input to the engine monitoring computer to achieve the required reduced thrust also known as assumed temperature thrust reduction 65 Gas generator that part of the engine core which provides the hot high pressure gas for fan driving turbines turbofan for propelling nozzles turbojet for propeller and rotor driving turbines turboprop and turboshaft for industrial and marine power turbines 66 HP high pressure Intake ram drag Loss in momentum of engine stream tube from freestream to intake entrance ie amount of energy imparted to air required to accelerate air from a stationary atmosphere to aircraft speed IEPR integrated engine pressure ratio IP intermediate pressure LP low pressure Net thrust nozzle thrust in stationary air gross thrust engine stream tube ram drag loss in momentum from freestream to intake entrance ie amount of energy imparted to air required to accelerate air from a stationary atmosphere to aircraft speed This is the thrust acting on the airframe Overall pressure ratio combustor inlet total pressure intake delivery total pressure Overall efficiency thermal efficiency propulsive efficiency Propulsive efficiency propulsive power rate of production of propulsive kinetic energy maximum propulsive efficiency occurs when jet velocity equals flight velocity which implies zero net thrust Specific fuel consumption SFC total fuel flow net thrust proportional to flight velocity overall thermal efficiency Spooling up increase in RPM colloquial Stage loading For a turbine the purpose of which is to produce power the loading is an indicator of power developed per lb sec of gas specific power A turbine stage turns the gas from an axial direction and speeds it up in the nozzle guide vanes to turn the rotor most effectively rotor blades must produce high lift the proviso being that this is done efficiently ie with acceptable losses 67 For a compressor stage the purpose of which is to produce a pressure rise a diffusion process is used How much diffusion may be allowed and pressure rise obtained before unacceptable flow separation occurs ie losses may be regarded as a loading limit 68 Static pressure pressure of the fluid which is associated not with its motion but with its state 69 or alternatively pressure due to the random motion of the fluid molecules that would be felt or measured if moving with the flow 70 Specific thrust net thrust intake airflow Thermal efficiency rate of production of propulsive kinetic energy fuel power Total fuel flow combustor plus any afterburner fuel flow rate e g lb s or g s Total pressure static pressure plus kinetic energy term Turbine rotor inlet temperature maximum cycle temperature ie temperature at which work transfer takes placeSee also EditJet engine Turbojet Turboprop Turboshaft Propfan Axial fan design Variable cycle engine Jet engine performance Gas turbine Turbine engine failureReferences Edit Marshall Brain April 2000 How Gas Turbine Engines Work howstuffworks com Retrieved 2010 11 24 a b Hall Nancy May 5 2015 Turbofan Engine Glenn Research Center NASA Retrieved October 25 2015 Most modern airliners use turbofan engines because of their high thrust and good fuel efficiency a b Michael Hacker David Burghardt Linnea Fletcher Anthony Gordon William Peruzzi March 18 2009 Engineering and Technology Cengage Learning p 319 ISBN 978 1 285 95643 5 Retrieved October 25 2015 All modern jet powered commercial aircraft use high bypass turbofan engines a b Verma Bharat January 1 2013 Indian Defence Review Apr Jun 2012 Lancer Publishers p 18 ISBN 978 81 7062 259 8 Retrieved October 25 2015 Military power plants may be divided into some major categories low bypass turbofans that generally power fighter jets a b Frank Northen Magill ed 1993 Magill s Survey of Science Applied science series Volume 3 Salem Press p 1431 ISBN 9780893567088 Most tactical military aircraft are powered by low bypass turbofan engines Thrust Augmentation with Mixer Ejector systems Presz Reynolds Hunter AIAA 2002 0230 p 3 Gas Turbine Aerothermodynamics With Special Reference To Aircraft propulsion Sir Frank Whittle 1981 ISBN 0 08 026719 X p 217 Gas Turbine Aerothermodynamics With Special Reference To Aircraft propulsion Sir Frank Whittle 1981 ISBN 0 08 026719 X p 218 https ntrs nasa gov citations 19930093532 pp 2 3 https ui adsabs harvard edu abs 2000PhDT 101R abstract p 76 https archive org details sim journal of aircraft september october 1966 3 5 p 386 https archive org details sim journal of aircraft september october 1966 3 5 p 387 Bypass ratio Britannica Thermodynamics MIT archived from the original on 2013 05 28 Jet Propulsion Nicholas Cumpsty 2003 ISBN 978 0 521 54144 2 Figure 7 3 Predicted variation in thrust and sfc with bypass ratio for a constant core Practical considerations in designing the engine cycle M G Philpot AGARD LS 183 Steady and Transient Performance Prediction ISBN 92 835 0674 X p 2 12 Flight global PDF Flightglobal com Taylor John W R ed All The World s Aircraft 1975 1976 Paulton House 8 Sheperdess Walk London N1 7LW Jane s p 748 a href Template Citation html title Template Citation citation a CS1 maint location link Proceedings ASME 15 April 2015 doi 10 1115 84 GT 230 PW tales Road runners Internationale Turbofan Engine GRC NASA Retrieved 2010 11 24 a b Neumann Gerhard 2004 Morrow 1984 Herman the German Enemy Alien U S Army Master Sergeant Republished with minor or no changes Herman the German Just Lucky I Guess Bloomington IN USA Authorhouse pp 228 30 ISBN 1 4184 7925 X The turbofan engine Archived 2015 04 18 at the Wayback Machine p 7 SRM Institute of Science and Technology Department of aerospace engineering Cohen Rogers Saravanamuttoo 1972 Gas Turbine Theory 2nd ed Longmans p 85 ISBN 0 582 44927 8 FAA H 8083 3B Airplane Flying Handbook Handbook PDF Federal Aviation Administration 2004 Archived from the original PDF on 2012 09 21 Turbofan Thrust Grc nasa gov Retrieved 1 March 2022 Goulos Ioannis Stankowski Tomasz 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Engines 4th edition Bill Gunston 2006 ISBN 0 7509 4477 3 p 197 Boyne Walter J ed 2002 Air warfare An international encyclopedia A L ABC CLIO p 235 ISBN 978 1 57607 345 2 Lycoming PLF1A 2 turbofan engine Smithsonian National Air and Space Museum Retrieved December 31 2021 RB211 535E4 PDF Archived from the original PDF on 3 January 2011 Retrieved 1 March 2022 p 01 7 PDF Icas rg Retrieved 1 March 2022 Webber Richard J 1971 VARIABLE GEOMETRY AFT FAN FORTAKEOFFQUIETINGOR THRUST AUGMENTATION OF A TURBOJET ENGINE Ohio Lewis Research Centre NASA The geared turbofan technology Opportunities challenges and readiness status PDF Archived from the original PDF on 2013 05 20 C Riegler C Bichlmaier 1st CEAS European Air and Space Conference 10 13 September 2007 Berlin Germany a b c Bjorn Fehrm October 21 2016 Bjorn s Corner The Engine challenge Leeham News a b Ben Hargreaves Sep 28 2017 Understanding Complexities Of Bigger Fan Blades Aviation Week Network Guy Norris and Graham Warwick Mar 26 2015 A 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Dictionary Bill Gunston 2004 ISBN 978 0 511 33833 5 Reduced Thrust Takeoff 30 May 2021 Gas Turbine Performance Second Edition Walsh and Fletcher 2004 ISBN 0 632 06434 X p 5 Jet Engines and Propulsion Systems For Engineers Human Resource Development GE Aircraft Engines 1989 p 5 9 Aerodynamic Design Of Axial Flow Compressors N65 23345 1965 NASA SP 36 p 68 Clancy L J Aerodynamics page 21 Introduction To Aerospace Engineering With A Flight Test Perspective Stephen Corda 2017 ISBN 9781118953389 p 185External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Turbofan engines Wikibooks Jet propulsion Malcolm Gibson Aug 2011 The Chevron Nozzle A Novel Approach to Reducing Jet Noise PDF NASA Innovation in Aeronautics NASA TM 2011 216987 The Engine Yearbook UBM Aviation 2012 Commercial engines 2017 Flight Global Bjorn Fehrm April 14 2017 Bjorn s Corner Aircraft engines sum up Leeham Co and previous series Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Turbofan amp oldid 1135064876, 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