Jet
engine
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A Pratt
& Whitney F100 turbofan
engine for the F-15
Eagle and the F-16
Falcon is tested at Robins
Air Force Base, Georgia,
USA. The tunnel behind the engine muffles noise and allows exhaust
to escape. The mesh cover at the front of the engine (left of photo) prevents
foreign objects (including people) from being pulled into the engine by the
huge volume of air rushing into the inlet.
A jet engine is an engine that discharges a
fast moving jet of fluid
to generate thrust in accordance with Newton's
third law of motion. This broad definition
of jet engines includes turbojets, turbofans, rockets, ramjets and pump-jets, but in common usage, the term generally refers to
a gas
turbine Brayton cycle engine used to produce a jet of high
speed exhaust gases for special propulsive purposes. Jet engines are so
familiar to the modern world that gas turbines are sometimes mistakenly
referred to as a particular application of a jet engine, rather than the other
way around.
[edit] History
See also: Timeline
of jet power
Jet engines can be dated back to the first century
AD, when Hero of Alexandria invented the aeolipile.
This used steam power directed through two jet nozzles so as to cause a sphere
to spin rapidly on its axis. So far as is known, it was little used for
supplying mechanical power, and the potential practical applications of Hero's
invention of the jet engine were not recognized. It was simply considered a
curiosity.
Jet propulsion only literally and figuratively
took off with the invention of the rocket by the Chinese in the 11th century. Rocket exhaust was
initially used in a modest way for fireworks but
gradually progressed to propel formidable weaponry; and there the technology
stalled for hundreds of years.
The problem was that rockets are simply too
inefficient to be useful for general aviation. Instead, by the 1930s, the piston
engine in its many different forms (rotary and static radial, aircooled and
liquid-cooled inline) was the only type of powerplant available to aircraft
designers. This was acceptable as long as only low performance aircraft were
required, and indeed all that were available.
However, engineers were beginning to realize
conceptually that the piston engine was self-limiting in terms of the maximum
performance which could be attained; the limit was essentially one of propeller
efficiency.[1]
This seemed to peak as blade tips approached the speed
of sound. If engine, and thus aircraft, performance were ever to increase
beyond such a barrier, a way would have to be found to radically improve the
design of the piston engine, or a wholly new type of powerplant would have to
be developed. This was the motivation behind the development of the gas turbine
engine, commonly called a "jet" engine, which would become almost as
revolutionary to aviation as the Wright
brothers' first flight.
The earliest attempts at jet engines were hybrid
designs in which an external power source supplied the compression. In this
system (called a thermojet by Secondo
Campini) the air is first compressed by a fan driven by a conventional
piston engine, then it is mixed with fuel and burned for jet thrust. The
examples of this type of design were the Henri
Coandă's Coandă-1910 aircraft, and the much later Campini Caproni CC.2, and the Japanese Tsu-11 engine
intended to power Ohka
kamikaze
planes towards the end of World War II. None were entirely successful and the
CC.2 ended up being slower than the same design with a traditional engine and
propeller combination.
simulation of the Jet Engine Airflow
The key to a practical jet engine was the gas
turbine, used to extract energy from the engine itself to drive the compressor.
The gas
turbine was not an idea developed in the 1930s: the patent for a stationary
turbine was granted to John Barber in England in 1791. The first gas turbine to
successfully run self-sustaining was built in 1903 by Norwegian engineer Ægidius
Elling. The first patents for jet propulsion were issued in 1917.
Limitations in design and practical engineering and metallurgy prevented such
engines reaching manufacture. The main problems were safety, reliability,
weight and, especially, sustained operation.
The W2/700 engine
flew in the Gloster
E.28/39, the first British aircraft to fly with a turbojet engine,
and the Gloster
Meteor.
In 1929, Aircraft apprentice Frank
Whittle formally submitted his ideas for a turbo-jet to his superiors. On
16 January 1930 in England, Whittle submitted his first patent (granted in
1932). The patent showed a two-stage axial compressor feeding a single-sided
centrifugal compressor. Whittle would later concentrate on the simpler
centrifugal compressor only, for a variety of practical reasons.
In 1935 Hans
von Ohain started work on a similar design in Germany,
seemingly unaware of Whittle's work.
Whittle had his first engine running in April
1937. It was liquid-fuelled, and included a self-contained fuel pump. Von
Ohain's engine, as well as being 5 months behind Whittle's, relied on gas
supplied under external pressure, so was not self-contained. Whittle's team
experienced near-panic when the engine would not stop, even after the fuel was
switched off. It turned out that fuel had leaked into the engine and
accumulated in pools. So the engine would not stop until all the leaked fuel
had burned off. Whittle unfortunately failed to secure proper backing for his
project, and so fell behind Von Ohain in the race to get a jet engine into the
air.
Ohain approached Ernst
Heinkel, one of the larger aircraft industrialists of the day, who
immediately saw the promise of the design. Heinkel had recently purchased the
Hirth engine company, and Ohain and his master machinist Max Hahn were set up
there as a new division of the Hirth company. They had their first HeS 1 engine
running by September 1937. Unlike Whittle's design, Ohain used hydrogen as
fuel, supplied under external pressure. Their subsequent designs culminated in
the gasoline-fuelled HeS 3 of 1,100 lbf (5 kN), which was fitted to
Heinkel's simple and compact He
178 airframe and flown by Erich
Warsitz in the early morning of August 27, 1939, from Marienehe
aerodrome, an impressively short time for development. The He 178 was the world's
first jet plane.
Meanwhile, Whittle's engine was starting to look
useful, and his Power Jets Ltd. started receiving Air Ministry money. In
1941 a flyable version of the engine called the W.1, capable of 1000 lbf
(4 kN) of thrust, was fitted to the Gloster
E28/39 airframe
specially built for it, and first flew on May 15, 1941 at RAF
Cranwell.
A picture of an early centrifugal engine (the DH
Goblin II) sectioned to show its internal components
One problem with both of these early designs,
which are called centrifugal-flow engines, was that the
compressor worked by "throwing" (accelerating) air outward from the
central intake to the outer periphery of the engine, where the air was then
compressed by a divergent duct setup, converting its velocity into pressure. An
advantage of this design was that it was already well understood, having been
implemented in centrifugal superchargers. However, given the early
technological limitations on the shaft speed of the engine, the compressor
needed to have a very large diameter to produce the power required. A further
disadvantage was that the air flow had to be "bent" to flow rearwards
through the combustion section and to the turbine and tailpipe.
Austrian Anselm Franz of Junkers' engine division (Junkers Motoren
or Jumo) addressed these problems with the introduction of the axial-flow compressor. Essentially, this is a
turbine in reverse. Air coming in the front of the engine is blown towards the
rear of the engine by a fan stage (convergent ducts), where it is crushed
against a set of non-rotating blades called stators (divergent ducts).
The process is nowhere near as powerful as the centrifugal compressor, so a number
of these pairs of fans and stators are placed in series to get the needed
compression. Even with all the added complexity, the resulting engine is much
smaller in diameter and thus, more aerodynamic. Jumo was assigned the next
engine number, 4, and the result was the Jumo
004 engine. After many lesser technical difficulties were solved, mass
production of this engine started in 1944 as a powerplant for the world's first
jet-fighter aircraft, the Messerschmitt Me 262 (and later the worlds
first jet-bomber aircraft, the Arado Ar
234). Because Hitler insisted the Me 262 be designated a bomber, this delay
caused the fighter version to arrive too late to decisively impact Germany's
position in World War II. Nonetheless, it will be remembered as
the first use of jet engines in service. Following the end of the war the
German jet aircraft and jet engines were extensively studied by the victorious
allies and contributed to work on early Soviet and US jet fighters. The legacy
of the axial-flow engine is seen in the fact that practically all jet engines
on fixed wing aircraft have had some inspiration
from this design.
A cutaway of the Junkers Jumo 004 engine.
Centrifugal-flow engines have improved since their
introduction. With improvements in bearing technology, the shaft speed of the
engine was increased, greatly reducing the diameter of the centrifugal
compressor. The short engine length remains an advantage of this design,
particularly for use in helicopters. Also, its engine components are robust;
axial-flow compressors are more liable to foreign object damage.
British engines also were licensed widely in the
US (see Tizard Mission). Their most famous design, the Nene
would also power the USSR's
jet aircraft after a technology exchange. American designs would not come fully
into their own until the 1960s.
[edit] Types
There are a large number of different types of jet
engines, all of which achieve propulsion from a high speed exhaust jet.
Type
|
Description
|
Advantages
|
Disadvantages
|
Squirts water out the back of a boat
|
Can run in shallow water, powerful,
less harmful to wildlife
|
Can be less efficient than a
propeller, more vulnerable to debris
|
|
Most primitive airbreathing jet
engine. Essentially a supercharged
piston engine with a jet exhaust.
|
Higher exhaust velocity than a
propeller, offering better thrust at high speed
|
Heavy, inefficient and underpowered
|
|
Generic term for simple turbine
engine
|
Simplicity of design, efficient at supersonic
speeds (~M2)
|
Basic design, misses many
improvements in efficiency and power for subsonic flight, relatively noisy.
|
|
Most common form of jet engine in
use today. Used in airliners like the Boeing 747 and military jets, where an
afterburner is often added for supersonic flight. First stage compressor
greatly enlarged to provide bypass airflow around engine core.
|
Quieter due to greater mass flow and
lower total exhaust speed, more efficient for a useful range of subsonic
airspeeds for same reason, cooler exhaust temperature
|
Greater complexity (additional
ducting, usually multiple shafts), large diameter engine, need to contain
heavy blades. More subject to FOD
and ice damage. Top speed is limited due to the potential for shockwaves to
damage engine.
|
|
Carries all propellants and oxidents
onboard, emits jet for propulsion
|
Very few moving parts, Mach 0 to
Mach 25+, efficient at very high speed (> Mach 10.0 or so), thrust/weight
ratio over 100, no complex air inlet, high compression ratio, very high speed
(hypersonic)
exhaust, good cost/thrust ratio, fairly easy to test, works in a
vacuum-indeed works best exoatmospheric which is kinder on vehicle structure
at high speed.
|
Needs lots of propellant- very low specific impulse
— typically 100-450 seconds. Extreme thermal stresses of combustion chamber
can make reuse harder. Typically requires carrying oxidiser onboard which
increases risks. Extraordinarily noisy.
|
|
Intake air is compressed entirely by
speed of oncoming air and duct shape (divergent)
|
Very few moving parts, Mach 0.8 to
Mach 5+, efficient at high speed (> Mach 2.0 or so), lightest of all
airbreathing jets (thrust/weight ratio up to 30 at optimum speed)
|
Must have a high initial speed to
function, inefficient at slow speeds due to poor compression ratio, difficult
to arrange shaft power for accessories, usually limited to a small range of
speeds, intake flow must be slowed to subsonic speeds, noisy, fairly
difficult to test, finicky to keep lit.
|
|
Turboprop (Turboshaft
similar)
|
Strictly not a jet at all — a gas
turbine engine is used as powerplant to drive propeller shaft (or Rotor in
the case of a Helicopter)
|
High efficiency at lower subsonic
airspeeds (300 knots plus), high shaft power to weight
|
Limited top speed (aeroplanes),
somewhat noisy, complex transmission
|
Propfan/Unducted
Fan
|
Turboprop engine drives one or more
propellers. Similar to a turbofan without the fan cowling.
|
Higher fuel efficiency, potentially
less noisy than turbofans, could lead to higher-speed commercial aircraft,
popular in the 1980s during fuel shortages
|
Development of propfan engines has
been very limited, typically more noisy than turbofans, complexity
|
Air is compressed and combusted
intermittently instead of continuously. Some designs use valves.
|
Very simple design, commonly used on
model aircraft
|
Noisy, inefficient (low compression
ratio), works poorly on a large scale, valves on valved designs wear out
quickly
|
|
Similar to a pulsejet, but
combustion occurs as a detonation
instead of a deflagration,
may or may not need valves
|
Maximum theoretical engine
efficiency
|
Extremely noisy, parts subject to
extreme mechanical fatigue, hard to start detonation, not practical for
current use
|
|
Essentially a ramjet where intake
air is compressed and burnt with the exhaust from a rocket
|
Mach 0 to Mach 4.5+ (can also run
exoatmospheric), good efficiency at Mach 2 to 4
|
Similar efficiency to rockets at low
speed or exoatmospheric, inlet difficulties, a relatively undeveloped and
unexplored type, cooling difficulties, very noisy, thrust/weight ratio is
similar to ramjets.
|
|
Similar to a ramjet without a
diffuser; airflow through the entire engine remains supersonic
|
Few mechanical parts, can operate at
very high Mach
numbers (Mach 8 to 15) with good efficiencies[2]
|
Still in development stages, must
have a very high initial speed to function (Mach >6), cooling
difficulties, very poor thrust/weight ratio (~2), extreme aerodynamic
complexity, airframe difficulties, testing difficulties/expense
|
|
Very close to existing designs,
operates in very high altitude, wide range of altitude and airspeed
|
Airspeed limited to same range as
turbojet engine, carrying oxidizer like LOX can be dangerous. Much heavier than simple
rockets.
|
||
Precooled
jets / LACE
|
Intake air is chilled to very low
temperatures at inlet before passing through a ramjet or turbojet engine. Can
be combined with a rocket engine for orbital insertion.
|
Easily tested on ground. Very high
thrust/weight ratios are possible (~14) together with good fuel efficiency
over a wide range of airspeeds, mach 0-5.5+; this combination of efficiencies
may permit launching to orbit, single stage, or very rapid intercontinental
travel.
|
[edit] Type comparison
Comparative suitability for (left to right) turboshaft, low
bypass and turbojet
to fly at 10 km attitude in various speeds. Horizontal axis - speed, m/s.
Vertical axis carries only logical meaning.
Efficiency
as a function of speed of different Jet types. Although efficiency plummets
with speed, greater distances are covered, it turns out that efficiency per
unit distance (per km or mile) is roughly independent of speed for Jet engines
as a group; however airframes become inefficient at supersonic speeds
Dependence of the energy efficiency (η) from the exhaust speed/airplane
speed ratio (c/v)
The motion impulse of the engine is equal to the
air mass multiplied by the speed at which the engine emits this mass:
I = m c
where m is the air mass per second and c is the
exhaust speed. In other words, the plane will fly faster if the engine emits
the air mass with a higher speed or if it emits more air per second with the
same speed. However, when the plane flies with certain velocity v, the air
moves towards it, creating the opposing ram drag at the air intake:
m v
Most types of jet engine have an air intake, which
provides the bulk of the gas exiting the exhaust. Conventional rocket motors,
however, do not have an air intake, the oxidizer and fuel both being carried
within the airframe. Therefore, rocket motors do not have ram drag; the gross
thrust of the nozzle is the net thrust of the engine. Consequently, the thrust
characteristics of a rocket motor are completely different from that of an air
breathing jet engine.
The air breathing engine is only useful if the
velocity of the gas from the engine, c, is greater than the airplane velocity,
v. The net engine thrust is the same as if the gas were emitted with the
velocity c-v. So the pushing moment is actually equal to
S = m (c-v)
The turboprop has
a wide rotating fan that takes and accelerates the large mass of air but only
till the limited speed of any propeller driven airplane. When the plane speed
exceeds this limit, propellers no longer provide any thrust (c-v < 0).
The turbojets and other similar engines accelerate much smaller
mass of the air and burned fuel, but they emit it at the much higher speeds
possible with a de Laval nozzle. This is why they are suitable for
supersonic and higher speeds.
From the other side, the propulsive efficiency
(essentially energy efficiency) is highest when the engine
emits an exhaust jet at a speed that is the same as the airplane velocity. The
exact formula, given in the literature,[3] is
The low bypass turbofans have the mixed exhaust of the two air
flows, running at different speeds (c1 and c2). The pushing moment of such
engine is
S = m1 (c1 - v) + m2 (c2 - v)
where m1 and m2 are the air masses, being blown
from the both exhausts. Such engines are effective at lower speeds, than the
pure jets, but at higher speeds than the turboshafts and propellers in general.
For instance, at the 10 km attitude, turboshafts are most effective at about
0.4 mach, low bypass turbofans become more effective at about 0.75 mach and
true jets become more effective as mixed exaust engines when the speed
approaches 1 mach - the speed of sound.
Rocket engines are best suited for high speeds and
altitudes. At any given throttle, the thrust and efficiency of a rocket motor
improves slightly with increasing altitude (because the back-pressure falls
thus increasing net thrust at the nozzle exit plane), whereas with a turbojet
(or turbofan) the falling density of the air entering the intake (and the hot
gases leaving the nozzle) causes the net thrust to decrease with increasing
altitude. Rocket engines are more efficient than even scramjets above roughly
Mach 15.[4]
[edit] Turbojet engines
A turbojet engine, in its simplest form is simply a gas turbine with a
nozzle attached
Main article: Turbojet
A turbojet engine is a type of internal combustion engine often used to
propel aircraft.
Air is drawn into the rotating compressor via the intake and is compressed,
through successive stages, to a higher pressure before entering the combustion
chamber. Fuel is
mixed with the compressed air and ignited by flame in the eddy of a flame
holder. This combustion process significantly raises the temperature of
the gas. Hot combustion products leaving the combustor expand through the turbine, where
power is extracted to drive the compressor. Although this expansion process
reduces both the gas temperature and pressure at exit from the turbine, both
parameters are usually still well above ambient conditions. The gas stream
exiting the turbine expands to ambient pressure via the propelling nozzle,
producing a high velocity jet in the exhaust plume. If the jet velocity exceeds
the aircraft flight velocity, there is a net forward thrust upon the
airframe.
Under normal circumstances, the pumping action of
the compressor prevents any backflow, thus facilitating the continuous-flow
process of the engine. Indeed, the entire process is similar to a four-stroke
cycle, but with induction, compression, ignition, expansion and exhaust
taking place simultaneously, but in different sections of the engine. The efficiency of a jet engine is strongly
dependent upon the overall pressure ratio (combustor entry pressure/intake
delivery pressure) and the turbine inlet temperature of the cycle.
It is also perhaps instructive to compare turbojet
engines with propeller engines. Turbojet engines take a relatively small mass of air and
accelerate it by a large amount, whereas a propeller
takes a large mass of air and accelerates it by a small amount. The high-speed
exhaust of a turbojet engine makes it efficient at high speeds (especially supersonic
speeds) and high altitudes. On slower aircraft and those required to fly short
stages, a gas
turbine-powered propeller engine, commonly known as a turboprop, is
more common and much more efficient. Very small aircraft generally use
conventional piston engines to drive a propeller but small
turboprops are getting smaller as engineering technology improves.
The turbojet described above is a single-spool
design, in which a single shaft connects the turbine to the compressor. Higher
overall pressure ratio designs often have two concentric
shafts, to improve compressor stability during engine throttle movements. The
outer high pressure (HP) shaft connects the HP compressor to the HP turbine.
This HP Spool, with the combustor, forms the core or gas generator of the
engine. The inner shaft connects the low pressure (LP) compressor to the LP
Turbine to create the LP Spool. Both spools are free to operate at their
optimum shaft speed. (Concorde used this type).
[edit] Turbofan engines
Main article: Turbofan
Most modern jet engines are actually turbofans,
where the low pressure compressor acts as a fan, supplying supercharged air to
not only the engine core, but to a bypass duct. The bypass airflow either
passes to a separate 'cold nozzle' or mixes with low pressure turbine exhaust
gases, before expanding through a 'mixed flow nozzle'.
Forty years ago there was little difference
between civil and military jet engines, apart from the use of afterburning
in some (supersonic) applications.
Civil turbofans today have a low specific thrust
(net thrust divided by airflow) to keep jet noise to a minimum and to improve
fuel efficiency. Consequently the bypass
ratio (bypass flow divided by core flow) is relatively high (ratios from
4:1 up to 8:1 are common). Only a single fan stage is required, because a low
specific thrust implies a low fan pressure ratio.
Today's military turbofans, however, have a
relatively high specific thrust, to maximize the thrust for a given frontal
area, jet noise being of less concern in military uses relative to civil uses.
Multistage fans are normally needed to reach the relatively high fan pressure
ratio needed for high specific thrust. Although high turbine inlet temperatures
are often employed, the bypass ratio tends to be low, usually significantly
less than 2.0.
An approximate equation for calculating the net
thrust of a jet engine, be it a turbojet or a mixed turbofan, is:
where:
intake mass flow
rate
fully expanded jet velocity
(in the exhaust plume)
aircraft flight velocity
While the term represents the
gross thrust of the nozzle, the term represents the ram
drag of the intake.
[edit] Major components
Basic components of a jet engine (Axial flow design)
The major components of a jet engine are similar
across the major different types of engines, although not all engine types have
all components. The major parts include:
- Cold Section:
- Air intake (Inlet) — The standard reference
frame for a jet engine is the aircraft itself. For subsonic
aircraft, the air intake to a jet engine presents no special
difficulties, and consists essentially of an opening which is designed to
minimise drag, as with any other aircraft component. However, the air
reaching the compressor of a normal jet engine must be travelling below
the speed of sound, even for supersonic aircraft, to sustain the flow
mechanics of the compressor and turbine blades. At supersonic flight
speeds, shockwaves form in the intake system and reduce the recovered
pressure at inlet to the compressor. So some supersonic intakes use
devices, such as a cone or ramp, to increase pressure recovery, by making
more efficient use of the shock wave system.
- Compressor or Fan
— The compressor is made up of stages. Each stage consists of vanes which
rotate, and stators which remain stationary. As air is drawn deeper
through the compressor, its heat and pressure increases. Energy is
derived from the turbine (see below), passed along the shaft.
- Common:
- Shaft — The shaft connects the turbine to
the compressor, and runs most of the length of the engine. There
may be as many as three concentric shafts, rotating at independent
speeds, with as many sets of turbines and compressors. Other services,
like a bleed of cool air, may also run down the shaft.
- Hot section:
- Combustor or Can or Flameholders
or Combustion Chamber — This is a chamber where fuel is
continuously burned in the compressed air.
- Turbine — The turbine acts like a windmill,
gaining energy from the hot gases leaving the combustor. This
energy is used to drive the compressor (or props, or bypass fans)
via the shaft, or even (for a gas turbine-powered
helicopter) converted entirely to rotational energy for use elsewhere.
Relatively cool air, bled from the compressor, may be used to cool the
turbine blades and vanes, to prevent them from melting.
- Afterburner or reheat (chiefly UK) —
(mainly military) Produces extra thrust by burning extra fuel, usually
inefficiently, to significantly raise Nozzle Entry Temperature at the exhaust.
Owing to a larger volume flow (i.e. lower density) at exit from the
afterburner, an increased nozzle flow area is required, to maintain
satisfactory engine matching, when the afterburner is alight.
- Exhaust or Nozzle
— Hot gases leaving the engine exhaust to atmospheric pressure via a
nozzle, the objective being to produce a high velocity jet. In most
cases, the nozzle is convergent and of fixed flow area.
- Supersonic nozzle — If the Nozzle Pressure Ratio
(Nozzle Entry Pressure/Ambient Pressure) is very high, to maximize thrust
it may be worthwhile, despite the additional weight, to fit a convergent-divergent
(de Laval) nozzle. As the name suggests, initially this type
of nozzle is convergent, but beyond the throat (smallest flow area), the
flow area starts to increase to form the divergent portion. The expansion
to atmospheric pressure and supersonic gas velocity continues downstream
of the throat, whereas in a convergent nozzle the expansion beyond sonic
velocity occurs externally, in the exhaust plume. The former process is
more efficient than the latter.
The various components named above have constraints on how they are put together to generate the most efficiency or performance. The performance and efficiency of an engine can never be taken in isolation; for example fuel/distance efficiency of a supersonic jet engine maximises at about mach 2, whereas the drag for the vehicle carrying it is increasing as a square law and has much extra drag in the transonic region. The highest fuel efficiency for the overall vehicle is thus typically at Mach ~0.85.
For the engine optimisation for its intended use,
important here is air intake design, overall size, number of compressor stages
(sets of blades), fuel type, number of exhaust stages, metallurgy of
components, amount of bypass air used, where the bypass air is introduced, and
many other factors. For instance, let us consider design of the air intake.
[edit] Air intakes
See also: Inlet cone
[edit] Subsonic inlets
Pitot intake operating modes
Pitot intakes are the dominant type for subsonic
applications. A subsonic pitot inlet is little more than a tube with an
aerodynamic fairing around it.
At zero airspeed (i.e., rest), air approaches the
intake from a multitude of directions: from directly ahead, radially, or even
from behind the plane of the intake lip.
At low airspeeds, the streamtube approaching the
lip is larger in cross-section than the lip flow area, whereas at the intake
design flight Mach number the two flow areas are equal. At high flight speeds
the streamtube is smaller, with excess air spilling over the lip.
Beginning around 0.85 Mach, shock waves can occur
as the air accelerates through the intake throat.
Careful radiusing of the lip region is required to
optimize intake pressure recovery (and distortion) throughout the flight
envelope.
[edit] Supersonic inlets
Supersonic intakes exploit shock waves to
decelerate the airflow to a subsonic condition at compressor entry.
There are basically two forms of shock waves:
1) Normal shock waves lie perpendicular to the
direction of the flow. These form sharp fronts and shock the flow to subsonic
speeds. Microscopically the air molecules smash into the subsonic crowd of
molecules like alpha rays. Normal shock waves tend to cause a large drop
in stagnation pressure. Basically, the higher the
supersonic entry Mach number to a normal shock wave, the lower the subsonic
exit Mach number and the stronger the shock (i.e. the greater the loss in
stagnation pressure across the shock wave).
2) Conical (3-dimensional) and oblique shock waves
(2D) are angled rearwards, like the bow wave on a ship or boat, and radiate
from a flow disturbance such as a cone or a ramp. For a given inlet Mach
number, they are weaker than the equivalent normal shock wave and, although the
flow slows down, it remains supersonic throughout. Conical and oblique shock
waves turn the flow, which continues in the new direction, until another flow
disturbance is encountered downstream.
Note: Comments made regarding 3 dimensional
conical shock waves, generally also apply to 2D oblique shock waves.
A sharp-lipped version of the pitot intake,
described above for subsonic applications, performs quite well at moderate
supersonic flight speeds. A detached normal shock wave forms just ahead of the
intake lip and 'shocks' the flow down to a subsonic velocity. However, as
flight speed increases, the shock wave becomes stronger, causing a larger
percentage decrease in stagnation pressure (i.e. poorer pressure recovery). An
early US supersonic fighter, the F-100
Super Sabre, used such an intake.
An unswept lip generate a shock wave, which is reflected multiple times in
the inlet. The more reflections before the flow gets subsonic, the better
pressure recovery
More advanced supersonic intakes, excluding
pitots:
a) exploit a combination of conical shock wave/s
and a normal shock wave to improve pressure recovery at high supersonic flight
speeds. Conical shock wave/s are used to reduce the supersonic Mach number at
entry to the normal shock wave, thereby reducing the resultant overall shock
losses.
b) have a design shock-on-lip flight Mach number,
where the conical/oblique shock wave/s intercept the cowl lip, thus enabling
the streamtube capture area to equal the intake lip area. However, below the
shock-on-lip flight Mach number, the shock wave angle/s are less oblique,
causing the streamline approaching the lip to be deflected by the presence of
the cone/ramp. Consequently, the intake capture area is less than the intake
lip area, which reduces the intake airflow. Depending on the airflow
characteristics of the engine, it may be desirable to lower the ramp angle or
move the cone rearwards to refocus the shockwaves onto the cowl lip to maximise
intake airflow.
c) are designed to have a normal shock in the ducting
downstream of intake lip, so that the flow at compressor/fan entry is always
subsonic. However, if the engine is throttled back, there is a reduction in the
corrected airflow of the LP compressor/fan, but (at supersonic conditions) the
corrected airflow at the intake lip remains constant, because it is determined
by the flight Mach number and intake incidence/yaw. This discontinuity is
overcome by the normal shock moving to a lower cross-sectional area in the
ducting, to decrease the Mach number at entry to the shockwave. This weakens
the shockwave, improving the overall intake pressure recovery. So, the absolute
airflow stays constant, whilst the corrected airflow at compressor entry falls
(because of a higher entry pressure). Excess intake airflow may also be dumped
overboard or into the exhaust system, to prevent the conical/oblique shock
waves being disturbed by the normal shock being forced too far forward by
engine throttling.
Many second generation supersonic fighter aircraft
featured an inlet
cone, which was used to form the conical shock wave. This type of inlet
cone is clearly seen at the very front of the English Electric Lightning and MiG-21 aircraft,
for example.
The same approach can be used for air intakes
mounted at the side of the fuselage, where a half cone serves the same purpose
with a semicircular air intake, as seen on the F-104
Starfighter and BAC TSR-2.
Some intakes are biconic; that is
they feature two conical surfaces: the first cone is supplemented by a second,
less oblique, conical surface, which generates an extra conical shockwave,
radiating from the junction between the two cones. A biconic intake is usually
more efficient than the equivalent conical intake, because the entry Mach
number to the normal shock is reduced by the presence of the second conical
shock wave.
A very sophisticated conical intake was featured
on the SR-71's Pratt & Whitney J58s that could move a conical spike
fore and aft within the engine nacelle, preventing the shockwave formed on the
spike from entering the engine and stalling the engine, while keeping it close
enough to give good compression. Movable cones are uncommon.
A more sophisticated design than cones is to angle
the intake so that one of its edges forms a ramp. An oblique shockwave will
form at the start of the ramp. The Century
Series of US jets featured several variants of this approach, usually with
the ramp at the outer vertical edge of the intake, which was then angled back
inward towards the fuselage. Typical examples include the Republic F-105 Thunderchief and F-4 Phantom.
Concorde intake operating modes
Later this evolved so that the ramp was at the top
horizontal edge rather than the outer vertical edge, with a pronounced angle
downwards and rearwards. This design simplified the construction of intakes and
allowed use of variable ramps to control airflow into the engine. Most designs
since the early 1960s now feature this style of intake, for example the F-14 Tomcat,
Panavia
Tornado and Concorde.
From another point of view, like in a supersonic
nozzle the corrected (or non-dimensional) flow has to be the
same at the intake lip, at the intake throat and at the turbine. One of this
three can be fixed. For inlets the throat is made variable and some air is
bypassed around the turbine and directly fed into the afterburner. Unlike in a
nozzle the inlet is either unstable or inefficient, because a normal shock wave
in the throat will suddenly move to the lip, thereby increasing the pressure at
the lip, leading to drag and reducing the pressure recovery, leading to turbine
surge and the loss of one SR-71.
[edit] Compressors
Compressor stage GE J79
Axial compressors rely on spinning blades that
have aerofoil sections, similar to aeroplane wings. As with aeroplane wings in
some conditions the blades can stall. If this happens, the airflow around the
stalled compressor can reverse direction violently. Each design of a compressor
has an associated operating map of airflow versus rotational speed for
characteristics peculiar to that type (see compressor
map).
At a given throttle condition, the compressor
operates somewhere along the steady state running line. Unfortunately, this
operating line is displaced during transients. Many compressors are fitted with
anti-stall systems in the form of bleed bands or variable geometry stators to
decrease the likelihood of surge. Another method is to split the compressor
into two or more units, operating on separate concentric shafts.
Another design consideration is the average stage
loading. This can be kept at a sensible level either by increasing the number
of compression stages (more weight/cost) or the mean blade speed (more
blade/disc stress).
Although large flow compressors are usually
all-axial, the rear stages on smaller units are too small to be robust.
Consequently, these stages are often replaced by a single centrifugal unit.
Very small flow compressors often employ two centrifugal compressors, connected
in series. Although in isolation centrifugal compressors are capable of running
at quite high pressure ratios (e.g. 10:1), impeller stress considerations (i.e.
T3, NH implications) limit the pressure ratio that can be employed in high
overall pressure ratio engine cycles.
Increasing overall pressure ratio implies raising
the high pressure compressor exit temperature (i.e. T3). This implies a higher
high pressure shaft speed, to maintain the datum blade tip Mach number on the
rear compressor stage. Stress considerations, however, may limit the shaft
speed increase, causing the original compressor to throttle-back
aerodynamically to a lower pressure ratio than datum.
Combustion chamber GE J79
[edit] Combustors
Great care must be taken to keep the flame burning
in a moderately fast moving airstream, at all throttle conditions, as
efficiently as possible. Since the turbine cannot withstand stoichiometric
temperatures, resulting from the optimum combustion process, some of the
compressor air is used to quench the exit temperature of the combustor to an
acceptable level. Air used for combustion is considered to be primary airflow,
while excess air used for cooling is called secondary airflow. Combustor
configurations include can, annular, and can-annular.
[edit] Turbines
Turbine Stage GE J79
Because a turbine expands from high to low
pressure, there is no such thing as turbine surge or stall. The turbine needs
fewer stages than the compressor, mainly because the higher inlet temperature
reduces the deltaT/T (and thereby the pressure ratio) of the expansion process.
The blades have more curvature and the gas stream velocities are higher.
Designers must, however, prevent the turbine
blades and vanes from melting in a very high temperature and stress
environment. Consequently bleed air extracted from the compression system is
often used to cool the turbine blades/vanes internally. Other solutions are improved
materials and/or special insulating coatings. The discs must be specially
shaped to withstand the huge stresses imposed by the rotating blades. They take
the form of impulse, reaction, or combination impulse-reaction shapes. Improved
materials help to keep disc weight down.
[edit] Turbopumps
Main article: Turbopump
Turbopumps are centrifugal pumps which are spun by
gas turbines and are used to raise the propellant pressure above the pressure
in the combustion chamber so that it can be injected and burnt. Turbopumps are
very commonly used with rockets, but ramjets and turbojets also have been known
to use them.
[edit] Nozzles
Afterburner GE J79
The primary object of a nozzle is to expand the
exhaust stream to atmospheric pressure, thereby producing a high velocity jet,
relative to the vehicle. If the fully expanded jet has a higher impulse than
the moving aircraft, there will be a forward thrust on the airframe.
Simple convergent nozzles are used on many jet
engines. If the nozzle pressure ratio is above the critical value (about 1.8:1)
a convergent nozzle will choke, resulting in some of the expansion to
atmospheric pressure taking place downstream of the throat (i.e. smallest flow
area), in the jet wake. Although much of the gross thrust produced will still
be from the jet momentum, additional (pressure) thrust will come from the
imbalance between the throat static pressure and atmospheric pressure.
Many military combat engines incorporate an
afterburner (or reheat) in the engine exhaust system. When the system is lit,
the nozzle throat area must be increased, to accommodate the extra exhaust
volume flow, so that the turbomachinery is unaware that the afterburner is lit.
A variable throat area is achieved by moving a series of overlapping petals,
which approximate the circular nozzle cross-section.
At high nozzle pressure ratios, much of the
expansion will take place downstream of a convergent nozzle, which is somewhat
inefficient. Consequently, some jet engines incorporate a convergent-divergent
nozzle, to allow most of the expansion to take place within the nozzle to
maximise thrust. However, unlike the con-di nozzle used on a conventional
rocket motor, when such a device is used on a jet engine it has to be a complex
variable geometry device, to cope with the wide variation in nozzle pressure
ratio encountered in flight and engine throttling. This further increases the
weight and cost of such an installation.
Variable Exhaust Nozzle, on the GE F404-400 low-bypass turbofan installed
on a Boeing F-18
The simpler of the two is the ejector nozzle,
which creates an effective nozzle through a secondary airflow and spring-loaded
petals. At subsonic speeds, the airflow constricts the exhaust to a convergent
shape. As the aircraft speeds up, the two nozzles dilate, which allows the
exhaust to form a convergent-divergent shape, speeding the exhaust gasses past
Mach 1. More complex engines can actually use a tertiary airflow to reduce exit
area at very low speeds. Advantages of the ejector nozzle are relative
simplicity and reliability. Disadvantages are average performance (compared to
the other nozzle type) and relatively high drag due to the secondary airflow.
Notable aircraft to have utilized this type of nozzle include the SR-71, Concorde, F-111, and Saab Viggen
For higher performance, it is necessary to use an iris
nozzle. This type uses overlapping, hydraulically adjustable
"petals". Although more complex than the ejector nozzle, it has
significantly higher performance and smoother airflow. As such, it is employed
primarily on high-performance fighters such as the F-14, F-15, F-16, though is also
used in high-speed bombers such as the B-1B. Some modern iris
nozzle additionally have the ability to change the angle of the thrust (see thrust
vectoring).
Iris vectored thrust nozzle
Rocket motors also employ convergent-divergent
nozzles, but these are usually of fixed geometry, to minimize weight. Because
of the much higher nozzle pressure ratios experienced, rocket motor con-di
nozzles have a much greater area ratio (exit/throat) than those fitted to jet
engines.
At the other extreme, some high bypass
ratio civil turbofans
use an extremely low area ratio (less than 1.01 area ratio),
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.
[edit] Cooling systems
All jet engines require high temperature gas for
good efficiency, typically achieved by combusting hydrocarbon or hydrogen fuel.
Combustion temperatures can be as high as 3500K (5000F), above the melting
point of most materials.
Cooling systems are employed to keep the
temperature of the solid parts below the failure temperature.
[edit] Air systems
A complex air system is built into most turbine
based jet engines, primarily to cool the turbine blades, vanes and discs.
Air, bled from the compressor exit, passes around
combustor and is injected into the rim of the rotating turbine disc. The
cooling air then passes through complex passages within the turbine blades.
After removing heat from the blade material, the air (now fairly hot) is
vented, via cooling holes, into the main gas stream. Cooling air for the
turbine vanes undergoes a similar process.
Cooling the leading edge of the blade can be
difficult, because the pressure of the cooling air just inside the cooling hole
may not be much different from that of the oncoming gas stream. One solution is
to incorporate a cover plate on the disc. This acts as a centrifugal compressor
to pressurize the cooling air before it enters the blade. Another solution is
to use an ultra-efficient turbine rim seal to pressurize the area where the
cooling air passes across to the rotating disc.
Seals are used to prevent oil leakage, control air
for cooling and prevent stray air flows into turbine cavities.
A series of (e.g. labyrinth) seals allow a small
flow of bleed air to wash the turbine disc to extract heat and, at the same
time, pressurize the turbine rim seal, to prevent hot gases entering the inner
part of the engine. Other types of seals are hydraulic, brush, carbon etc.
Small quantities of compressor bleed air are also
used to cool the shaft, turbine shrouds, etc. Some air is also used to keep the
temperature of the combustion chamber walls below critical. This is done using
primary and secondary airholes which allow a thin layer of air to cover the
inner walls of the chamber preventing excessive heating.
Exit temperature is dependent on the turbine upper
temperature limit depending on the material. Reducing the temperature will also
prevent thermal fatigue and hence failure. Accessories may also need their own
cooling systems using air from the compressor or outside air.
Air from compressor stages is also used for heating
of the fan, airframe anti-icing and for cabin heat. Which stage is bled from
depends on the atmospheric conditions at that altitude.
[edit] Rocket engines
Main article: Rocket engine
Rocket engines have extreme cooling requirements,
due to the simultaneous combination of both high pressures (typically 20-200
bar) and high temperatures (typically ~3500 K) found in the combustion chamber.
Rocket engines often use liquid coolant, typically
the propellant is passed around the hot parts of the engine (regenerative cooling); but other techniques
such as radiative cooling or dump cooling can be
used.
In addition, the chamber is normally designed so
that the injectors provide for cooler gas at the circumference (curtain
cooling) or cool liquid: film cooling however these techniques
reduce performance somewhat due to incompletely burnt propellant being ejected,
but are nevertherless used by many engines.
[edit] Fuel system
Apart from providing fuel to the engine, the fuel
system is also used to control propeller speeds, compressor airflow and cool
lubrication oil. Fuel is usually introduced by an atomized spray, the amount of
which is controlled automatically depending on the rate of airflow.
So the sequence of events for increasing thrust
is, the throttle opens and fuel spray pressure is increased, increasing the
amount of fuel being burned. This means that exhaust gases are hotter and so
are ejected at higher acceleration, which means they exert higher forces and
therefore increase the engine thrust directly. It also increases the energy
extracted by the turbine which drives the compressor even faster and so there
is an increase in air flowing into the engine as well.
Obviously, it is the rate of the mass of
the airflow that matters since it is the change in momentum (mass x velocity)
that produces the force. However, density varies with altitude and hence inflow
of mass will also vary with altitude, temperature etc. which means that
throttle values will vary according to all these parameters without changing
them manually.
This is why fuel flow is controlled automatically.
Usually there are 2 systems, one to control the pressure and the other to
control the flow. The inputs are usually from pressure and temperature probes
from the intake and at various points through the engine. Also throttle inputs,
engine speed etc. are required. These affect the high pressure fuel pump.
[edit] Fuel control unit
(FCU)
This element is something like a mechanical
computer. It determines the output of the fuel pump by a system of valves which
can change the pressure used to cause the pump stroke, thereby varying the
amount of flow.
Take the possibility of increased altitude where
there will be reduced air intake pressure. In this case, the chamber within the
FCU will expand which causes the spill valve to bleed more fuel. This causes
the pump to deliver less fuel until the opposing chamber pressure is equivalent
to the air pressure and the spill valve goes back to its position.
When the throttle is opened, it releases i.e.
lessens the pressure which lets the throttle valve fall. The pressure is
transmitted (because of a back-pressure valve i.e. no air gaps in fuel flow)
which closes the FCU spill valves (as they are commonly called) which then
increases the pressure and causes a higher flow rate.
The engine speed governor is used to prevent the
engine from over-speeding. It has the capability of disregarding the FCU
control. It does this by use of a diaphragm which senses the engine speed in
terms of the centrifugal pressure caused by the rotating rotor of the pump. At
a critical value, this diaphragm causes another spill valve to open and bleed
away the fuel flow.
There are other ways of controlling fuel flow for
example with the dash-pot throttle lever. The throttle has a gear which meshes
with the control valve (like a rack and pinion) causing it to slide along a
cylinder which has ports at various positions. Moving the throttle and hence
sliding the valve along the cylinder, opens and closes these ports as designed.
There are actually 2 valves viz. the throttle and the control valve. The
control valve is used to control pressure on one side of the throttle valve
such that it gives the right opposition to the throttle control pressure. It
does this by controlling the fuel outlet from within the cylinder.
So for example, if the throttle valve is moved up
to let more fuel in, it will mean that the throttle valve has moved into a
position which allows more fuel to flow through and on the other side, the
required pressure ports are opened to keep the pressure balance so that the
throttle lever stays where it is.
At initial acceleration, more fuel is required and
the unit is adapted to allow more fuel to flow by opening other ports at a
particular throttle position. Changes in pressure of outside air i.e. altitude,
speed of aircraft etc are sensed by an air capsule.
[edit] Fuel pump
Fuel pumps are used to raise the fuel pressure
above the pressure in the combustion chamber so that the fuel can be injected.
Fuel pumps are usually driven by the main shaft, via gearing.
Turbopumps are very commonly used with liquid-fuelled
rockets and rely on the expansion of an onboard gas through a turbine.
Ramjet turbopumps use ram air expanding through a
turbine.
[edit] Engine starting
system
The fuel system as explained above, is one of the
2 systems required for starting the engine. The other is the actual ignition of
the air/fuel mixture in the chamber. Usually, an auxiliary power unit is used
to start the engines. It has a starter motor which has a high torque
transmitted to the compressor unit. When the optimum speed is reached, i.e. the
flow of gas through the turbine is sufficient, the turbines take over. There
are a number of different starting methods such as electric, hydraulic,
pneumatic etc.
The electric starter works with gears and
clutch plate linking the motor and the engine. The clutch is used to disengage
when optimum speed is achieved. This is usually done automatically. The
electric supply is used to start the motor as well as for ignition. The voltage
is usually built up slowly as starter gains speed.
Some military aircraft need to be started quicker
than the electric method permits and hence they use other methods such as a
turbine starter. This is an impulse turbine impacted by burning gases from a
cartridge. It is geared to rotate the engine and also connected to an automatic
disconnect system. The cartridge is set alight electrically and used to turn
the turbine.
Another turbine starter system is almost exactly
like a little engine. Again the turbine is connected to the engine via gears.
However, the turbine is turned by burning gases - usually the fuel is isopropyl
nitrate stored in a tank and sprayed into a combustion chamber. Again, it
is ignited with a spark plug. Everything is electrically controlled, such as
speed etc.
Most Commercial aircraft and large Military
Transport airplanes usually use what is called an auxiliary power unit or APU. It is
normally a small gas turbine. Thus, one could say that using such an APU is
using a small jet engine to start a larger one. High pressure air from the
compressor section of the APU is bled off through a system of pipes to the
engines where it is directed into the starting system. This "bleed
air" is directed into a mechanism to start the engine turning and begin
pulling in air. When the rotating speed of the engine is sufficient to pull in
enough air to support combustion, fuel is introduced and ignited. Once the
engine ignites and reaches idle speed, the bleed air is shut off.
The APUs on aircraft such as the Boeing 737
and Airbus
A320 can be seen at the extreme rear of the aircraft. This is the typical
location for an APU on most commercial airliners although some may be within
the wing root (Boeing 727) or the aft fuselage (DC-9/MD80) as examples and
some military transports carry their APU's in one of the main landing gear pods
(C-141).
The APUs also provide enough power to keep the
cabin lights, pressure and other systems on while the engines are off. The
valves used to control the airflow are usually electrically controlled. They
automatically close at a pre-determined speed. As part of the starting sequence
on some engines fuel is combined with the supplied air and burned instead of
using just air. This usually produces more power per unit weight.
Usually an APU is started by its own electric
starter motor which is switched off at the proper speed automatically. When the
main engine starts up and reaches the right conditions, this auxiliary unit is
then switched off and disengages slowly.
Hydraulic pumps can also be used to start some
engines through gears. The pumps are electrically controlled on the ground.
A variation of this is the APU installed in a
Boeing F-18; it is started by a hydraulic motor, which itself receives energy
stored in an accumulator. This accumulator is recharged after the right engine
is started and develops hydraulic pressure, or by a hand pump in the right hand
main landing gear well.
[edit] Ignition
Usually there are 2 igniter plugs in different
positions in the combustion system. A high voltage spark is used to ignite the
gases. The voltage is stored up from a low voltage supply provided by the
starter system. It builds up to the right value and is then released as a high
energy spark. Depending on various conditions, the igniter continues to provide
sparks to prevent combustion from failing if the flame inside goes out. Of
course, in the event that the flame does go out, there must be provision to
relight. There is a limit of altitude and air speed at which an engine can
obtain a satisfactory relight.
For example, the General Electric F404-400 uses
one ignitor for the combustor and one for the afterburner; the ignition system
for the A/B incorporates an ultraviolet flame sensor to activate the ignitor.
It should be noted that most modern ignition
systems provide enough energy to be a lethal hazard should a person be in
contact with the electrical lead when the system is activated, so team
communication is vital when working on these systems.
[edit] Lubrication system
A lubrication system serves to ensure lubrication
of the bearings and to maintain sufficiently cool temperatures, mostly by
eliminating friction.
The lubrication system as a whole should be able
to prevent foreign material from entering the plane, and reaching the bearings,
gears, and other moving parts. The lubricant must be able to flow easily at
relatively low temperatures and not disintegrate or break down at very high
temperatures.
Usually the lubrication system has subsystems that
deal individually with the pressure of an engine, scavenging, and a breather.
The pressure system components are an oil tank and
de-aerator, main oil pump, main oil filter/filter bypass valve,
pressure regulating valve (PRV), oil cooler/by pass valve and
tubing/jets.
Usually the flow is from the tank to the pump inlet and PRV, pumped to main oil filter or its bypass valve and oil cooler, then through some more filters to jets in the bearings.
Usually the flow is from the tank to the pump inlet and PRV, pumped to main oil filter or its bypass valve and oil cooler, then through some more filters to jets in the bearings.
Using the PRV method of control, means that the
pressure of the feed oil must be below a critical value (usually controlled by
other valves which can leak out excess oil back to tank if it exceeds the
critical value). The valve opens at a certain pressure and oil is kept moving
at a constant rate into the bearing chamber.
If the engine speed increases, the pressure within
the bearing chamber also increases, which means the pressure difference between
the lubricant feed and the chamber reduces which could reduce slow rate of oil
when it is needed even more. As a result, some PRVs can adjust their spring
force values using this pressure change in the bearing chamber proportionally
to keep the lubricant flow constant.
[edit] Advanced designs
[edit] J-58 combined
ramjet/turbojet
The SR-71's Pratt & Whitney J58 engines were rather
unusual. They could convert in flight from being largely a turbojet to being
largely a compressor-assisted ramjet. At high speeds (above Mach 2.4), the
engine used variable geometry vanes to direct excess air through 6 bypass pipes
from downstream of the fourth compressor stage into the afterburner.[5] 80% of the
SR-71's thrust at high speed was generated in this way, giving much higher
thrust, improving specific impulse by 10-15%, and permitting
continuous operation at Mach 3.2. The name coined for this configuration is turbo-ramjet.
[edit] Pre-cooled
turbojets
An idea originated by Robert P. Carmichael in 1955
[6] is
that hydrogen fuelled engines could theoretically have much higher performance
than hydrocarbon fuelled engines if a heat exchanger is used to cool the
incoming air. The low temperature allows lighter materials to be used, a higher
mass-flow through the engines, and provides lower temperatures which permits
combustors to inject more fuel without overheating the engine.
This idea leads to plausible designs like SABRE, that might
permit single-stage-to-orbit,[7] and ATREX, that might
permit jet engines to be used up to hypersonic speeds and high altitudes for
boosters for launch vehicles.
[edit] Nuclear-powered
ramjet
Project
Pluto was a nuclear-powered ramjet, intended for use in a cruise
missile. Rather than combusting fuel as in regular jet engines, air was
heated using a high-temperature, unshielded nuclear reactor. This raised the specific
impulse of the engine by stupendous amounts, and the ramjet was predicted
to be able to fly for months at supersonic speeds (Mach 3 at tree-top height).
However, there was no obvious way to stop it once it had taken off, which is a
great disadvantage. Unfortunately, because the reactor was unshielded, it was
dangerous to be in or around the flight path of the vehicle (although the
exhaust itself wasn't radioactive).
[edit] Scramjets
Main article: Scramjet
Scramjets are an evolution of the ramjet that are
able to operate at much higher speeds than ramjets (or any other kind of
airbreathing engine) are capable of reaching. They share a similar structure
with ramjets, being a specially-shaped tube that compresses air with no moving
parts through ram-air compression. Scramjets, however, operate with supersonic
airflow through the entire engine. Thus, scramjets do not have the diffuser
required by ramjets to slow the incoming airflow to subsonic speeds.
Scramjets start working at speeds of at least Mach
4, and have a maximum useful speed of approximately Mach 17[8]. Due to
aerodynamic heating at these high speeds, cooling poses a challenge to
engineers.
[edit] Afterburners and
Thrust Reversers
A basic discussion of these important devices is
in the turbojet
article. Wikipedia also has a more extensive discussion of each (see below for
links).
[edit] Trivia
- A Scrapheap
Challenge team once made a big truck's turbocharger
into a crude but working turbojet engine.
- The J-58 engines were believed to be
capable of about Mach 4.5, but the SR-71 airframe they were installed in
would have gotten too hot if it exceeded Mach 3.2.
- In the severe winter of 1946-1947 in the UK,
there were instances of jet engines (blowing forwards) mounted on railway
trucks being used for snow clearance.
Jet
engine
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Jump to: navigation, search
A Pratt
& Whitney F100 turbofan
engine for the F-15
Eagle and the F-16
Falcon is tested at Robins
Air Force Base, Georgia,
USA. The tunnel behind the engine muffles noise and allows exhaust
to escape. The mesh cover at the front of the engine (left of photo) prevents
foreign objects (including people) from being pulled into the engine by the
huge volume of air rushing into the inlet.
A jet engine is an engine that discharges a
fast moving jet of fluid
to generate thrust in accordance with Newton's
third law of motion. This broad definition
of jet engines includes turbojets, turbofans, rockets, ramjets and pump-jets, but in common usage, the term generally refers to
a gas
turbine Brayton cycle engine used to produce a jet of high
speed exhaust gases for special propulsive purposes. Jet engines are so
familiar to the modern world that gas turbines are sometimes mistakenly
referred to as a particular application of a jet engine, rather than the other
way around.
[edit] History
See also: Timeline
of jet power
Jet engines can be dated back to the first century
AD, when Hero of Alexandria invented the aeolipile.
This used steam power directed through two jet nozzles so as to cause a sphere
to spin rapidly on its axis. So far as is known, it was little used for
supplying mechanical power, and the potential practical applications of Hero's
invention of the jet engine were not recognized. It was simply considered a
curiosity.
Jet propulsion only literally and figuratively
took off with the invention of the rocket by the Chinese in the 11th century. Rocket exhaust was
initially used in a modest way for fireworks but
gradually progressed to propel formidable weaponry; and there the technology
stalled for hundreds of years.
The problem was that rockets are simply too
inefficient to be useful for general aviation. Instead, by the 1930s, the piston
engine in its many different forms (rotary and static radial, aircooled and
liquid-cooled inline) was the only type of powerplant available to aircraft
designers. This was acceptable as long as only low performance aircraft were
required, and indeed all that were available.
However, engineers were beginning to realize
conceptually that the piston engine was self-limiting in terms of the maximum
performance which could be attained; the limit was essentially one of propeller
efficiency.[1]
This seemed to peak as blade tips approached the speed
of sound. If engine, and thus aircraft, performance were ever to increase
beyond such a barrier, a way would have to be found to radically improve the
design of the piston engine, or a wholly new type of powerplant would have to
be developed. This was the motivation behind the development of the gas turbine
engine, commonly called a "jet" engine, which would become almost as
revolutionary to aviation as the Wright
brothers' first flight.
The earliest attempts at jet engines were hybrid
designs in which an external power source supplied the compression. In this
system (called a thermojet by Secondo
Campini) the air is first compressed by a fan driven by a conventional
piston engine, then it is mixed with fuel and burned for jet thrust. The
examples of this type of design were the Henri
Coandă's Coandă-1910 aircraft, and the much later Campini Caproni CC.2, and the Japanese Tsu-11 engine
intended to power Ohka
kamikaze
planes towards the end of World War II. None were entirely successful and the
CC.2 ended up being slower than the same design with a traditional engine and
propeller combination.
simulation of the Jet Engine Airflow
The key to a practical jet engine was the gas
turbine, used to extract energy from the engine itself to drive the compressor.
The gas
turbine was not an idea developed in the 1930s: the patent for a stationary
turbine was granted to John Barber in England in 1791. The first gas turbine to
successfully run self-sustaining was built in 1903 by Norwegian engineer Ægidius
Elling. The first patents for jet propulsion were issued in 1917.
Limitations in design and practical engineering and metallurgy prevented such
engines reaching manufacture. The main problems were safety, reliability,
weight and, especially, sustained operation.
The W2/700 engine
flew in the Gloster
E.28/39, the first British aircraft to fly with a turbojet engine,
and the Gloster
Meteor.
In 1929, Aircraft apprentice Frank
Whittle formally submitted his ideas for a turbo-jet to his superiors. On
16 January 1930 in England, Whittle submitted his first patent (granted in
1932). The patent showed a two-stage axial compressor feeding a single-sided
centrifugal compressor. Whittle would later concentrate on the simpler
centrifugal compressor only, for a variety of practical reasons.
In 1935 Hans
von Ohain started work on a similar design in Germany,
seemingly unaware of Whittle's work.
Whittle had his first engine running in April
1937. It was liquid-fuelled, and included a self-contained fuel pump. Von
Ohain's engine, as well as being 5 months behind Whittle's, relied on gas
supplied under external pressure, so was not self-contained. Whittle's team
experienced near-panic when the engine would not stop, even after the fuel was
switched off. It turned out that fuel had leaked into the engine and
accumulated in pools. So the engine would not stop until all the leaked fuel
had burned off. Whittle unfortunately failed to secure proper backing for his
project, and so fell behind Von Ohain in the race to get a jet engine into the
air.
Ohain approached Ernst
Heinkel, one of the larger aircraft industrialists of the day, who
immediately saw the promise of the design. Heinkel had recently purchased the
Hirth engine company, and Ohain and his master machinist Max Hahn were set up
there as a new division of the Hirth company. They had their first HeS 1 engine
running by September 1937. Unlike Whittle's design, Ohain used hydrogen as
fuel, supplied under external pressure. Their subsequent designs culminated in
the gasoline-fuelled HeS 3 of 1,100 lbf (5 kN), which was fitted to
Heinkel's simple and compact He
178 airframe and flown by Erich
Warsitz in the early morning of August 27, 1939, from Marienehe
aerodrome, an impressively short time for development. The He 178 was the world's
first jet plane.
Meanwhile, Whittle's engine was starting to look
useful, and his Power Jets Ltd. started receiving Air Ministry money. In
1941 a flyable version of the engine called the W.1, capable of 1000 lbf
(4 kN) of thrust, was fitted to the Gloster
E28/39 airframe
specially built for it, and first flew on May 15, 1941 at RAF
Cranwell.
A picture of an early centrifugal engine (the DH
Goblin II) sectioned to show its internal components
One problem with both of these early designs,
which are called centrifugal-flow engines, was that the
compressor worked by "throwing" (accelerating) air outward from the
central intake to the outer periphery of the engine, where the air was then
compressed by a divergent duct setup, converting its velocity into pressure. An
advantage of this design was that it was already well understood, having been
implemented in centrifugal superchargers. However, given the early
technological limitations on the shaft speed of the engine, the compressor
needed to have a very large diameter to produce the power required. A further
disadvantage was that the air flow had to be "bent" to flow rearwards
through the combustion section and to the turbine and tailpipe.
Austrian Anselm Franz of Junkers' engine division (Junkers Motoren
or Jumo) addressed these problems with the introduction of the axial-flow compressor. Essentially, this is a
turbine in reverse. Air coming in the front of the engine is blown towards the
rear of the engine by a fan stage (convergent ducts), where it is crushed
against a set of non-rotating blades called stators (divergent ducts).
The process is nowhere near as powerful as the centrifugal compressor, so a number
of these pairs of fans and stators are placed in series to get the needed
compression. Even with all the added complexity, the resulting engine is much
smaller in diameter and thus, more aerodynamic. Jumo was assigned the next
engine number, 4, and the result was the Jumo
004 engine. After many lesser technical difficulties were solved, mass
production of this engine started in 1944 as a powerplant for the world's first
jet-fighter aircraft, the Messerschmitt Me 262 (and later the worlds
first jet-bomber aircraft, the Arado Ar
234). Because Hitler insisted the Me 262 be designated a bomber, this delay
caused the fighter version to arrive too late to decisively impact Germany's
position in World War II. Nonetheless, it will be remembered as
the first use of jet engines in service. Following the end of the war the
German jet aircraft and jet engines were extensively studied by the victorious
allies and contributed to work on early Soviet and US jet fighters. The legacy
of the axial-flow engine is seen in the fact that practically all jet engines
on fixed wing aircraft have had some inspiration
from this design.
A cutaway of the Junkers Jumo 004 engine.
Centrifugal-flow engines have improved since their
introduction. With improvements in bearing technology, the shaft speed of the
engine was increased, greatly reducing the diameter of the centrifugal
compressor. The short engine length remains an advantage of this design,
particularly for use in helicopters. Also, its engine components are robust;
axial-flow compressors are more liable to foreign object damage.
British engines also were licensed widely in the
US (see Tizard Mission). Their most famous design, the Nene
would also power the USSR's
jet aircraft after a technology exchange. American designs would not come fully
into their own until the 1960s.
[edit] Types
There are a large number of different types of jet
engines, all of which achieve propulsion from a high speed exhaust jet.
Type
|
Description
|
Advantages
|
Disadvantages
|
Squirts water out the back of a boat
|
Can run in shallow water, powerful,
less harmful to wildlife
|
Can be less efficient than a
propeller, more vulnerable to debris
|
|
Most primitive airbreathing jet
engine. Essentially a supercharged
piston engine with a jet exhaust.
|
Higher exhaust velocity than a
propeller, offering better thrust at high speed
|
Heavy, inefficient and underpowered
|
|
Generic term for simple turbine
engine
|
Simplicity of design, efficient at supersonic
speeds (~M2)
|
Basic design, misses many
improvements in efficiency and power for subsonic flight, relatively noisy.
|
|
Most common form of jet engine in
use today. Used in airliners like the Boeing 747 and military jets, where an
afterburner is often added for supersonic flight. First stage compressor
greatly enlarged to provide bypass airflow around engine core.
|
Quieter due to greater mass flow and
lower total exhaust speed, more efficient for a useful range of subsonic
airspeeds for same reason, cooler exhaust temperature
|
Greater complexity (additional
ducting, usually multiple shafts), large diameter engine, need to contain
heavy blades. More subject to FOD
and ice damage. Top speed is limited due to the potential for shockwaves to
damage engine.
|
|
Carries all propellants and oxidents
onboard, emits jet for propulsion
|
Very few moving parts, Mach 0 to
Mach 25+, efficient at very high speed (> Mach 10.0 or so), thrust/weight
ratio over 100, no complex air inlet, high compression ratio, very high speed
(hypersonic)
exhaust, good cost/thrust ratio, fairly easy to test, works in a
vacuum-indeed works best exoatmospheric which is kinder on vehicle structure
at high speed.
|
Needs lots of propellant- very low specific impulse
— typically 100-450 seconds. Extreme thermal stresses of combustion chamber
can make reuse harder. Typically requires carrying oxidiser onboard which
increases risks. Extraordinarily noisy.
|
|
Intake air is compressed entirely by
speed of oncoming air and duct shape (divergent)
|
Very few moving parts, Mach 0.8 to
Mach 5+, efficient at high speed (> Mach 2.0 or so), lightest of all
airbreathing jets (thrust/weight ratio up to 30 at optimum speed)
|
Must have a high initial speed to
function, inefficient at slow speeds due to poor compression ratio, difficult
to arrange shaft power for accessories, usually limited to a small range of
speeds, intake flow must be slowed to subsonic speeds, noisy, fairly
difficult to test, finicky to keep lit.
|
|
Turboprop (Turboshaft
similar)
|
Strictly not a jet at all — a gas
turbine engine is used as powerplant to drive propeller shaft (or Rotor in
the case of a Helicopter)
|
High efficiency at lower subsonic
airspeeds (300 knots plus), high shaft power to weight
|
Limited top speed (aeroplanes),
somewhat noisy, complex transmission
|
Propfan/Unducted
Fan
|
Turboprop engine drives one or more
propellers. Similar to a turbofan without the fan cowling.
|
Higher fuel efficiency, potentially
less noisy than turbofans, could lead to higher-speed commercial aircraft,
popular in the 1980s during fuel shortages
|
Development of propfan engines has
been very limited, typically more noisy than turbofans, complexity
|
Air is compressed and combusted
intermittently instead of continuously. Some designs use valves.
|
Very simple design, commonly used on
model aircraft
|
Noisy, inefficient (low compression
ratio), works poorly on a large scale, valves on valved designs wear out
quickly
|
|
Similar to a pulsejet, but
combustion occurs as a detonation
instead of a deflagration,
may or may not need valves
|
Maximum theoretical engine
efficiency
|
Extremely noisy, parts subject to
extreme mechanical fatigue, hard to start detonation, not practical for
current use
|
|
Essentially a ramjet where intake
air is compressed and burnt with the exhaust from a rocket
|
Mach 0 to Mach 4.5+ (can also run
exoatmospheric), good efficiency at Mach 2 to 4
|
Similar efficiency to rockets at low
speed or exoatmospheric, inlet difficulties, a relatively undeveloped and
unexplored type, cooling difficulties, very noisy, thrust/weight ratio is
similar to ramjets.
|
|
Similar to a ramjet without a
diffuser; airflow through the entire engine remains supersonic
|
Few mechanical parts, can operate at
very high Mach
numbers (Mach 8 to 15) with good efficiencies[2]
|
Still in development stages, must
have a very high initial speed to function (Mach >6), cooling
difficulties, very poor thrust/weight ratio (~2), extreme aerodynamic
complexity, airframe difficulties, testing difficulties/expense
|
|
Very close to existing designs,
operates in very high altitude, wide range of altitude and airspeed
|
Airspeed limited to same range as
turbojet engine, carrying oxidizer like LOX can be dangerous. Much heavier than simple
rockets.
|
||
Precooled
jets / LACE
|
Intake air is chilled to very low
temperatures at inlet before passing through a ramjet or turbojet engine. Can
be combined with a rocket engine for orbital insertion.
|
Easily tested on ground. Very high
thrust/weight ratios are possible (~14) together with good fuel efficiency
over a wide range of airspeeds, mach 0-5.5+; this combination of efficiencies
may permit launching to orbit, single stage, or very rapid intercontinental
travel.
|
[edit] Type comparison
Comparative suitability for (left to right) turboshaft, low
bypass and turbojet
to fly at 10 km attitude in various speeds. Horizontal axis - speed, m/s.
Vertical axis carries only logical meaning.
Efficiency
as a function of speed of different Jet types. Although efficiency plummets
with speed, greater distances are covered, it turns out that efficiency per
unit distance (per km or mile) is roughly independent of speed for Jet engines
as a group; however airframes become inefficient at supersonic speeds
Dependence of the energy efficiency (η) from the exhaust speed/airplane
speed ratio (c/v)
The motion impulse of the engine is equal to the
air mass multiplied by the speed at which the engine emits this mass:
I = m c
where m is the air mass per second and c is the
exhaust speed. In other words, the plane will fly faster if the engine emits
the air mass with a higher speed or if it emits more air per second with the
same speed. However, when the plane flies with certain velocity v, the air
moves towards it, creating the opposing ram drag at the air intake:
m v
Most types of jet engine have an air intake, which
provides the bulk of the gas exiting the exhaust. Conventional rocket motors,
however, do not have an air intake, the oxidizer and fuel both being carried
within the airframe. Therefore, rocket motors do not have ram drag; the gross
thrust of the nozzle is the net thrust of the engine. Consequently, the thrust
characteristics of a rocket motor are completely different from that of an air
breathing jet engine.
The air breathing engine is only useful if the
velocity of the gas from the engine, c, is greater than the airplane velocity,
v. The net engine thrust is the same as if the gas were emitted with the
velocity c-v. So the pushing moment is actually equal to
S = m (c-v)
The turboprop has
a wide rotating fan that takes and accelerates the large mass of air but only
till the limited speed of any propeller driven airplane. When the plane speed
exceeds this limit, propellers no longer provide any thrust (c-v < 0).
The turbojets and other similar engines accelerate much smaller
mass of the air and burned fuel, but they emit it at the much higher speeds
possible with a de Laval nozzle. This is why they are suitable for
supersonic and higher speeds.
From the other side, the propulsive efficiency
(essentially energy efficiency) is highest when the engine
emits an exhaust jet at a speed that is the same as the airplane velocity. The
exact formula, given in the literature,[3] is
The low bypass turbofans have the mixed exhaust of the two air
flows, running at different speeds (c1 and c2). The pushing moment of such
engine is
S = m1 (c1 - v) + m2 (c2 - v)
where m1 and m2 are the air masses, being blown
from the both exhausts. Such engines are effective at lower speeds, than the
pure jets, but at higher speeds than the turboshafts and propellers in general.
For instance, at the 10 km attitude, turboshafts are most effective at about
0.4 mach, low bypass turbofans become more effective at about 0.75 mach and
true jets become more effective as mixed exaust engines when the speed
approaches 1 mach - the speed of sound.
Rocket engines are best suited for high speeds and
altitudes. At any given throttle, the thrust and efficiency of a rocket motor
improves slightly with increasing altitude (because the back-pressure falls
thus increasing net thrust at the nozzle exit plane), whereas with a turbojet
(or turbofan) the falling density of the air entering the intake (and the hot
gases leaving the nozzle) causes the net thrust to decrease with increasing
altitude. Rocket engines are more efficient than even scramjets above roughly
Mach 15.[4]
[edit] Turbojet engines
A turbojet engine, in its simplest form is simply a gas turbine with a
nozzle attached
Main article: Turbojet
A turbojet engine is a type of internal combustion engine often used to
propel aircraft.
Air is drawn into the rotating compressor via the intake and is compressed,
through successive stages, to a higher pressure before entering the combustion
chamber. Fuel is
mixed with the compressed air and ignited by flame in the eddy of a flame
holder. This combustion process significantly raises the temperature of
the gas. Hot combustion products leaving the combustor expand through the turbine, where
power is extracted to drive the compressor. Although this expansion process
reduces both the gas temperature and pressure at exit from the turbine, both
parameters are usually still well above ambient conditions. The gas stream
exiting the turbine expands to ambient pressure via the propelling nozzle,
producing a high velocity jet in the exhaust plume. If the jet velocity exceeds
the aircraft flight velocity, there is a net forward thrust upon the
airframe.
Under normal circumstances, the pumping action of
the compressor prevents any backflow, thus facilitating the continuous-flow
process of the engine. Indeed, the entire process is similar to a four-stroke
cycle, but with induction, compression, ignition, expansion and exhaust
taking place simultaneously, but in different sections of the engine. The efficiency of a jet engine is strongly
dependent upon the overall pressure ratio (combustor entry pressure/intake
delivery pressure) and the turbine inlet temperature of the cycle.
It is also perhaps instructive to compare turbojet
engines with propeller engines. Turbojet engines take a relatively small mass of air and
accelerate it by a large amount, whereas a propeller
takes a large mass of air and accelerates it by a small amount. The high-speed
exhaust of a turbojet engine makes it efficient at high speeds (especially supersonic
speeds) and high altitudes. On slower aircraft and those required to fly short
stages, a gas
turbine-powered propeller engine, commonly known as a turboprop, is
more common and much more efficient. Very small aircraft generally use
conventional piston engines to drive a propeller but small
turboprops are getting smaller as engineering technology improves.
The turbojet described above is a single-spool
design, in which a single shaft connects the turbine to the compressor. Higher
overall pressure ratio designs often have two concentric
shafts, to improve compressor stability during engine throttle movements. The
outer high pressure (HP) shaft connects the HP compressor to the HP turbine.
This HP Spool, with the combustor, forms the core or gas generator of the
engine. The inner shaft connects the low pressure (LP) compressor to the LP
Turbine to create the LP Spool. Both spools are free to operate at their
optimum shaft speed. (Concorde used this type).
[edit] Turbofan engines
Main article: Turbofan
Most modern jet engines are actually turbofans,
where the low pressure compressor acts as a fan, supplying supercharged air to
not only the engine core, but to a bypass duct. The bypass airflow either
passes to a separate 'cold nozzle' or mixes with low pressure turbine exhaust
gases, before expanding through a 'mixed flow nozzle'.
Forty years ago there was little difference
between civil and military jet engines, apart from the use of afterburning
in some (supersonic) applications.
Civil turbofans today have a low specific thrust
(net thrust divided by airflow) to keep jet noise to a minimum and to improve
fuel efficiency. Consequently the bypass
ratio (bypass flow divided by core flow) is relatively high (ratios from
4:1 up to 8:1 are common). Only a single fan stage is required, because a low
specific thrust implies a low fan pressure ratio.
Today's military turbofans, however, have a
relatively high specific thrust, to maximize the thrust for a given frontal
area, jet noise being of less concern in military uses relative to civil uses.
Multistage fans are normally needed to reach the relatively high fan pressure
ratio needed for high specific thrust. Although high turbine inlet temperatures
are often employed, the bypass ratio tends to be low, usually significantly
less than 2.0.
An approximate equation for calculating the net
thrust of a jet engine, be it a turbojet or a mixed turbofan, is:
where:
intake mass flow
rate
fully expanded jet velocity
(in the exhaust plume)
aircraft flight velocity
While the term represents the
gross thrust of the nozzle, the term represents the ram
drag of the intake.
[edit] Major components
Basic components of a jet engine (Axial flow design)
The major components of a jet engine are similar
across the major different types of engines, although not all engine types have
all components. The major parts include:
- Cold Section:
- Air intake (Inlet) — The standard reference
frame for a jet engine is the aircraft itself. For subsonic
aircraft, the air intake to a jet engine presents no special
difficulties, and consists essentially of an opening which is designed to
minimise drag, as with any other aircraft component. However, the air
reaching the compressor of a normal jet engine must be travelling below
the speed of sound, even for supersonic aircraft, to sustain the flow
mechanics of the compressor and turbine blades. At supersonic flight
speeds, shockwaves form in the intake system and reduce the recovered
pressure at inlet to the compressor. So some supersonic intakes use
devices, such as a cone or ramp, to increase pressure recovery, by making
more efficient use of the shock wave system.
- Compressor or Fan
— The compressor is made up of stages. Each stage consists of vanes which
rotate, and stators which remain stationary. As air is drawn deeper
through the compressor, its heat and pressure increases. Energy is
derived from the turbine (see below), passed along the shaft.
- Common:
- Shaft — The shaft connects the turbine to
the compressor, and runs most of the length of the engine. There
may be as many as three concentric shafts, rotating at independent
speeds, with as many sets of turbines and compressors. Other services,
like a bleed of cool air, may also run down the shaft.
- Hot section:
- Combustor or Can or Flameholders
or Combustion Chamber — This is a chamber where fuel is
continuously burned in the compressed air.
- Turbine — The turbine acts like a windmill,
gaining energy from the hot gases leaving the combustor. This
energy is used to drive the compressor (or props, or bypass fans)
via the shaft, or even (for a gas turbine-powered
helicopter) converted entirely to rotational energy for use elsewhere.
Relatively cool air, bled from the compressor, may be used to cool the
turbine blades and vanes, to prevent them from melting.
- Afterburner or reheat (chiefly UK) —
(mainly military) Produces extra thrust by burning extra fuel, usually
inefficiently, to significantly raise Nozzle Entry Temperature at the exhaust.
Owing to a larger volume flow (i.e. lower density) at exit from the
afterburner, an increased nozzle flow area is required, to maintain
satisfactory engine matching, when the afterburner is alight.
- Exhaust or Nozzle
— Hot gases leaving the engine exhaust to atmospheric pressure via a
nozzle, the objective being to produce a high velocity jet. In most
cases, the nozzle is convergent and of fixed flow area.
- Supersonic nozzle — If the Nozzle Pressure Ratio
(Nozzle Entry Pressure/Ambient Pressure) is very high, to maximize thrust
it may be worthwhile, despite the additional weight, to fit a convergent-divergent
(de Laval) nozzle. As the name suggests, initially this type
of nozzle is convergent, but beyond the throat (smallest flow area), the
flow area starts to increase to form the divergent portion. The expansion
to atmospheric pressure and supersonic gas velocity continues downstream
of the throat, whereas in a convergent nozzle the expansion beyond sonic
velocity occurs externally, in the exhaust plume. The former process is
more efficient than the latter.
The various components named above have constraints on how they are put together to generate the most efficiency or performance. The performance and efficiency of an engine can never be taken in isolation; for example fuel/distance efficiency of a supersonic jet engine maximises at about mach 2, whereas the drag for the vehicle carrying it is increasing as a square law and has much extra drag in the transonic region. The highest fuel efficiency for the overall vehicle is thus typically at Mach ~0.85.
For the engine optimisation for its intended use,
important here is air intake design, overall size, number of compressor stages
(sets of blades), fuel type, number of exhaust stages, metallurgy of
components, amount of bypass air used, where the bypass air is introduced, and
many other factors. For instance, let us consider design of the air intake.
[edit] Air intakes
See also: Inlet cone
[edit] Subsonic inlets
Pitot intake operating modes
Pitot intakes are the dominant type for subsonic
applications. A subsonic pitot inlet is little more than a tube with an
aerodynamic fairing around it.
At zero airspeed (i.e., rest), air approaches the
intake from a multitude of directions: from directly ahead, radially, or even
from behind the plane of the intake lip.
At low airspeeds, the streamtube approaching the
lip is larger in cross-section than the lip flow area, whereas at the intake
design flight Mach number the two flow areas are equal. At high flight speeds
the streamtube is smaller, with excess air spilling over the lip.
Beginning around 0.85 Mach, shock waves can occur
as the air accelerates through the intake throat.
Careful radiusing of the lip region is required to
optimize intake pressure recovery (and distortion) throughout the flight
envelope.
[edit] Supersonic inlets
Supersonic intakes exploit shock waves to
decelerate the airflow to a subsonic condition at compressor entry.
There are basically two forms of shock waves:
1) Normal shock waves lie perpendicular to the
direction of the flow. These form sharp fronts and shock the flow to subsonic
speeds. Microscopically the air molecules smash into the subsonic crowd of
molecules like alpha rays. Normal shock waves tend to cause a large drop
in stagnation pressure. Basically, the higher the
supersonic entry Mach number to a normal shock wave, the lower the subsonic
exit Mach number and the stronger the shock (i.e. the greater the loss in
stagnation pressure across the shock wave).
2) Conical (3-dimensional) and oblique shock waves
(2D) are angled rearwards, like the bow wave on a ship or boat, and radiate
from a flow disturbance such as a cone or a ramp. For a given inlet Mach
number, they are weaker than the equivalent normal shock wave and, although the
flow slows down, it remains supersonic throughout. Conical and oblique shock
waves turn the flow, which continues in the new direction, until another flow
disturbance is encountered downstream.
Note: Comments made regarding 3 dimensional
conical shock waves, generally also apply to 2D oblique shock waves.
A sharp-lipped version of the pitot intake,
described above for subsonic applications, performs quite well at moderate
supersonic flight speeds. A detached normal shock wave forms just ahead of the
intake lip and 'shocks' the flow down to a subsonic velocity. However, as
flight speed increases, the shock wave becomes stronger, causing a larger
percentage decrease in stagnation pressure (i.e. poorer pressure recovery). An
early US supersonic fighter, the F-100
Super Sabre, used such an intake.
An unswept lip generate a shock wave, which is reflected multiple times in
the inlet. The more reflections before the flow gets subsonic, the better
pressure recovery
More advanced supersonic intakes, excluding
pitots:
a) exploit a combination of conical shock wave/s
and a normal shock wave to improve pressure recovery at high supersonic flight
speeds. Conical shock wave/s are used to reduce the supersonic Mach number at
entry to the normal shock wave, thereby reducing the resultant overall shock
losses.
b) have a design shock-on-lip flight Mach number,
where the conical/oblique shock wave/s intercept the cowl lip, thus enabling
the streamtube capture area to equal the intake lip area. However, below the
shock-on-lip flight Mach number, the shock wave angle/s are less oblique,
causing the streamline approaching the lip to be deflected by the presence of
the cone/ramp. Consequently, the intake capture area is less than the intake
lip area, which reduces the intake airflow. Depending on the airflow
characteristics of the engine, it may be desirable to lower the ramp angle or
move the cone rearwards to refocus the shockwaves onto the cowl lip to maximise
intake airflow.
c) are designed to have a normal shock in the ducting
downstream of intake lip, so that the flow at compressor/fan entry is always
subsonic. However, if the engine is throttled back, there is a reduction in the
corrected airflow of the LP compressor/fan, but (at supersonic conditions) the
corrected airflow at the intake lip remains constant, because it is determined
by the flight Mach number and intake incidence/yaw. This discontinuity is
overcome by the normal shock moving to a lower cross-sectional area in the
ducting, to decrease the Mach number at entry to the shockwave. This weakens
the shockwave, improving the overall intake pressure recovery. So, the absolute
airflow stays constant, whilst the corrected airflow at compressor entry falls
(because of a higher entry pressure). Excess intake airflow may also be dumped
overboard or into the exhaust system, to prevent the conical/oblique shock
waves being disturbed by the normal shock being forced too far forward by
engine throttling.
Many second generation supersonic fighter aircraft
featured an inlet
cone, which was used to form the conical shock wave. This type of inlet
cone is clearly seen at the very front of the English Electric Lightning and MiG-21 aircraft,
for example.
The same approach can be used for air intakes
mounted at the side of the fuselage, where a half cone serves the same purpose
with a semicircular air intake, as seen on the F-104
Starfighter and BAC TSR-2.
Some intakes are biconic; that is
they feature two conical surfaces: the first cone is supplemented by a second,
less oblique, conical surface, which generates an extra conical shockwave,
radiating from the junction between the two cones. A biconic intake is usually
more efficient than the equivalent conical intake, because the entry Mach
number to the normal shock is reduced by the presence of the second conical
shock wave.
A very sophisticated conical intake was featured
on the SR-71's Pratt & Whitney J58s that could move a conical spike
fore and aft within the engine nacelle, preventing the shockwave formed on the
spike from entering the engine and stalling the engine, while keeping it close
enough to give good compression. Movable cones are uncommon.
A more sophisticated design than cones is to angle
the intake so that one of its edges forms a ramp. An oblique shockwave will
form at the start of the ramp. The Century
Series of US jets featured several variants of this approach, usually with
the ramp at the outer vertical edge of the intake, which was then angled back
inward towards the fuselage. Typical examples include the Republic F-105 Thunderchief and F-4 Phantom.
Concorde intake operating modes
Later this evolved so that the ramp was at the top
horizontal edge rather than the outer vertical edge, with a pronounced angle
downwards and rearwards. This design simplified the construction of intakes and
allowed use of variable ramps to control airflow into the engine. Most designs
since the early 1960s now feature this style of intake, for example the F-14 Tomcat,
Panavia
Tornado and Concorde.
From another point of view, like in a supersonic
nozzle the corrected (or non-dimensional) flow has to be the
same at the intake lip, at the intake throat and at the turbine. One of this
three can be fixed. For inlets the throat is made variable and some air is
bypassed around the turbine and directly fed into the afterburner. Unlike in a
nozzle the inlet is either unstable or inefficient, because a normal shock wave
in the throat will suddenly move to the lip, thereby increasing the pressure at
the lip, leading to drag and reducing the pressure recovery, leading to turbine
surge and the loss of one SR-71.
[edit] Compressors
Compressor stage GE J79
Axial compressors rely on spinning blades that
have aerofoil sections, similar to aeroplane wings. As with aeroplane wings in
some conditions the blades can stall. If this happens, the airflow around the
stalled compressor can reverse direction violently. Each design of a compressor
has an associated operating map of airflow versus rotational speed for
characteristics peculiar to that type (see compressor
map).
At a given throttle condition, the compressor
operates somewhere along the steady state running line. Unfortunately, this
operating line is displaced during transients. Many compressors are fitted with
anti-stall systems in the form of bleed bands or variable geometry stators to
decrease the likelihood of surge. Another method is to split the compressor
into two or more units, operating on separate concentric shafts.
Another design consideration is the average stage
loading. This can be kept at a sensible level either by increasing the number
of compression stages (more weight/cost) or the mean blade speed (more
blade/disc stress).
Although large flow compressors are usually
all-axial, the rear stages on smaller units are too small to be robust.
Consequently, these stages are often replaced by a single centrifugal unit.
Very small flow compressors often employ two centrifugal compressors, connected
in series. Although in isolation centrifugal compressors are capable of running
at quite high pressure ratios (e.g. 10:1), impeller stress considerations (i.e.
T3, NH implications) limit the pressure ratio that can be employed in high
overall pressure ratio engine cycles.
Increasing overall pressure ratio implies raising
the high pressure compressor exit temperature (i.e. T3). This implies a higher
high pressure shaft speed, to maintain the datum blade tip Mach number on the
rear compressor stage. Stress considerations, however, may limit the shaft
speed increase, causing the original compressor to throttle-back
aerodynamically to a lower pressure ratio than datum.
Combustion chamber GE J79
[edit] Combustors
Great care must be taken to keep the flame burning
in a moderately fast moving airstream, at all throttle conditions, as
efficiently as possible. Since the turbine cannot withstand stoichiometric
temperatures, resulting from the optimum combustion process, some of the
compressor air is used to quench the exit temperature of the combustor to an
acceptable level. Air used for combustion is considered to be primary airflow,
while excess air used for cooling is called secondary airflow. Combustor
configurations include can, annular, and can-annular.
[edit] Turbines
Turbine Stage GE J79
Because a turbine expands from high to low
pressure, there is no such thing as turbine surge or stall. The turbine needs
fewer stages than the compressor, mainly because the higher inlet temperature
reduces the deltaT/T (and thereby the pressure ratio) of the expansion process.
The blades have more curvature and the gas stream velocities are higher.
Designers must, however, prevent the turbine
blades and vanes from melting in a very high temperature and stress
environment. Consequently bleed air extracted from the compression system is
often used to cool the turbine blades/vanes internally. Other solutions are improved
materials and/or special insulating coatings. The discs must be specially
shaped to withstand the huge stresses imposed by the rotating blades. They take
the form of impulse, reaction, or combination impulse-reaction shapes. Improved
materials help to keep disc weight down.
[edit] Turbopumps
Main article: Turbopump
Turbopumps are centrifugal pumps which are spun by
gas turbines and are used to raise the propellant pressure above the pressure
in the combustion chamber so that it can be injected and burnt. Turbopumps are
very commonly used with rockets, but ramjets and turbojets also have been known
to use them.
[edit] Nozzles
Afterburner GE J79
The primary object of a nozzle is to expand the
exhaust stream to atmospheric pressure, thereby producing a high velocity jet,
relative to the vehicle. If the fully expanded jet has a higher impulse than
the moving aircraft, there will be a forward thrust on the airframe.
Simple convergent nozzles are used on many jet
engines. If the nozzle pressure ratio is above the critical value (about 1.8:1)
a convergent nozzle will choke, resulting in some of the expansion to
atmospheric pressure taking place downstream of the throat (i.e. smallest flow
area), in the jet wake. Although much of the gross thrust produced will still
be from the jet momentum, additional (pressure) thrust will come from the
imbalance between the throat static pressure and atmospheric pressure.
Many military combat engines incorporate an
afterburner (or reheat) in the engine exhaust system. When the system is lit,
the nozzle throat area must be increased, to accommodate the extra exhaust
volume flow, so that the turbomachinery is unaware that the afterburner is lit.
A variable throat area is achieved by moving a series of overlapping petals,
which approximate the circular nozzle cross-section.
At high nozzle pressure ratios, much of the
expansion will take place downstream of a convergent nozzle, which is somewhat
inefficient. Consequently, some jet engines incorporate a convergent-divergent
nozzle, to allow most of the expansion to take place within the nozzle to
maximise thrust. However, unlike the con-di nozzle used on a conventional
rocket motor, when such a device is used on a jet engine it has to be a complex
variable geometry device, to cope with the wide variation in nozzle pressure
ratio encountered in flight and engine throttling. This further increases the
weight and cost of such an installation.
Variable Exhaust Nozzle, on the GE F404-400 low-bypass turbofan installed
on a Boeing F-18
The simpler of the two is the ejector nozzle,
which creates an effective nozzle through a secondary airflow and spring-loaded
petals. At subsonic speeds, the airflow constricts the exhaust to a convergent
shape. As the aircraft speeds up, the two nozzles dilate, which allows the
exhaust to form a convergent-divergent shape, speeding the exhaust gasses past
Mach 1. More complex engines can actually use a tertiary airflow to reduce exit
area at very low speeds. Advantages of the ejector nozzle are relative
simplicity and reliability. Disadvantages are average performance (compared to
the other nozzle type) and relatively high drag due to the secondary airflow.
Notable aircraft to have utilized this type of nozzle include the SR-71, Concorde, F-111, and Saab Viggen
For higher performance, it is necessary to use an iris
nozzle. This type uses overlapping, hydraulically adjustable
"petals". Although more complex than the ejector nozzle, it has
significantly higher performance and smoother airflow. As such, it is employed
primarily on high-performance fighters such as the F-14, F-15, F-16, though is also
used in high-speed bombers such as the B-1B. Some modern iris
nozzle additionally have the ability to change the angle of the thrust (see thrust
vectoring).
Iris vectored thrust nozzle
Rocket motors also employ convergent-divergent
nozzles, but these are usually of fixed geometry, to minimize weight. Because
of the much higher nozzle pressure ratios experienced, rocket motor con-di
nozzles have a much greater area ratio (exit/throat) than those fitted to jet
engines.
At the other extreme, some high bypass
ratio civil turbofans
use an extremely low area ratio (less than 1.01 area ratio),
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.
[edit] Cooling systems
All jet engines require high temperature gas for
good efficiency, typically achieved by combusting hydrocarbon or hydrogen fuel.
Combustion temperatures can be as high as 3500K (5000F), above the melting
point of most materials.
Cooling systems are employed to keep the
temperature of the solid parts below the failure temperature.
[edit] Air systems
A complex air system is built into most turbine
based jet engines, primarily to cool the turbine blades, vanes and discs.
Air, bled from the compressor exit, passes around
combustor and is injected into the rim of the rotating turbine disc. The
cooling air then passes through complex passages within the turbine blades.
After removing heat from the blade material, the air (now fairly hot) is
vented, via cooling holes, into the main gas stream. Cooling air for the
turbine vanes undergoes a similar process.
Cooling the leading edge of the blade can be
difficult, because the pressure of the cooling air just inside the cooling hole
may not be much different from that of the oncoming gas stream. One solution is
to incorporate a cover plate on the disc. This acts as a centrifugal compressor
to pressurize the cooling air before it enters the blade. Another solution is
to use an ultra-efficient turbine rim seal to pressurize the area where the
cooling air passes across to the rotating disc.
Seals are used to prevent oil leakage, control air
for cooling and prevent stray air flows into turbine cavities.
A series of (e.g. labyrinth) seals allow a small
flow of bleed air to wash the turbine disc to extract heat and, at the same
time, pressurize the turbine rim seal, to prevent hot gases entering the inner
part of the engine. Other types of seals are hydraulic, brush, carbon etc.
Small quantities of compressor bleed air are also
used to cool the shaft, turbine shrouds, etc. Some air is also used to keep the
temperature of the combustion chamber walls below critical. This is done using
primary and secondary airholes which allow a thin layer of air to cover the
inner walls of the chamber preventing excessive heating.
Exit temperature is dependent on the turbine upper
temperature limit depending on the material. Reducing the temperature will also
prevent thermal fatigue and hence failure. Accessories may also need their own
cooling systems using air from the compressor or outside air.
Air from compressor stages is also used for heating
of the fan, airframe anti-icing and for cabin heat. Which stage is bled from
depends on the atmospheric conditions at that altitude.
[edit] Rocket engines
Main article: Rocket engine
Rocket engines have extreme cooling requirements,
due to the simultaneous combination of both high pressures (typically 20-200
bar) and high temperatures (typically ~3500 K) found in the combustion chamber.
Rocket engines often use liquid coolant, typically
the propellant is passed around the hot parts of the engine (regenerative cooling); but other techniques
such as radiative cooling or dump cooling can be
used.
In addition, the chamber is normally designed so
that the injectors provide for cooler gas at the circumference (curtain
cooling) or cool liquid: film cooling however these techniques
reduce performance somewhat due to incompletely burnt propellant being ejected,
but are nevertherless used by many engines.
[edit] Fuel system
Apart from providing fuel to the engine, the fuel
system is also used to control propeller speeds, compressor airflow and cool
lubrication oil. Fuel is usually introduced by an atomized spray, the amount of
which is controlled automatically depending on the rate of airflow.
So the sequence of events for increasing thrust
is, the throttle opens and fuel spray pressure is increased, increasing the
amount of fuel being burned. This means that exhaust gases are hotter and so
are ejected at higher acceleration, which means they exert higher forces and
therefore increase the engine thrust directly. It also increases the energy
extracted by the turbine which drives the compressor even faster and so there
is an increase in air flowing into the engine as well.
Obviously, it is the rate of the mass of
the airflow that matters since it is the change in momentum (mass x velocity)
that produces the force. However, density varies with altitude and hence inflow
of mass will also vary with altitude, temperature etc. which means that
throttle values will vary according to all these parameters without changing
them manually.
This is why fuel flow is controlled automatically.
Usually there are 2 systems, one to control the pressure and the other to
control the flow. The inputs are usually from pressure and temperature probes
from the intake and at various points through the engine. Also throttle inputs,
engine speed etc. are required. These affect the high pressure fuel pump.
[edit] Fuel control unit
(FCU)
This element is something like a mechanical
computer. It determines the output of the fuel pump by a system of valves which
can change the pressure used to cause the pump stroke, thereby varying the
amount of flow.
Take the possibility of increased altitude where
there will be reduced air intake pressure. In this case, the chamber within the
FCU will expand which causes the spill valve to bleed more fuel. This causes
the pump to deliver less fuel until the opposing chamber pressure is equivalent
to the air pressure and the spill valve goes back to its position.
When the throttle is opened, it releases i.e.
lessens the pressure which lets the throttle valve fall. The pressure is
transmitted (because of a back-pressure valve i.e. no air gaps in fuel flow)
which closes the FCU spill valves (as they are commonly called) which then
increases the pressure and causes a higher flow rate.
The engine speed governor is used to prevent the
engine from over-speeding. It has the capability of disregarding the FCU
control. It does this by use of a diaphragm which senses the engine speed in
terms of the centrifugal pressure caused by the rotating rotor of the pump. At
a critical value, this diaphragm causes another spill valve to open and bleed
away the fuel flow.
There are other ways of controlling fuel flow for
example with the dash-pot throttle lever. The throttle has a gear which meshes
with the control valve (like a rack and pinion) causing it to slide along a
cylinder which has ports at various positions. Moving the throttle and hence
sliding the valve along the cylinder, opens and closes these ports as designed.
There are actually 2 valves viz. the throttle and the control valve. The
control valve is used to control pressure on one side of the throttle valve
such that it gives the right opposition to the throttle control pressure. It
does this by controlling the fuel outlet from within the cylinder.
So for example, if the throttle valve is moved up
to let more fuel in, it will mean that the throttle valve has moved into a
position which allows more fuel to flow through and on the other side, the
required pressure ports are opened to keep the pressure balance so that the
throttle lever stays where it is.
At initial acceleration, more fuel is required and
the unit is adapted to allow more fuel to flow by opening other ports at a
particular throttle position. Changes in pressure of outside air i.e. altitude,
speed of aircraft etc are sensed by an air capsule.
[edit] Fuel pump
Fuel pumps are used to raise the fuel pressure
above the pressure in the combustion chamber so that the fuel can be injected.
Fuel pumps are usually driven by the main shaft, via gearing.
Turbopumps are very commonly used with liquid-fuelled
rockets and rely on the expansion of an onboard gas through a turbine.
Ramjet turbopumps use ram air expanding through a
turbine.
[edit] Engine starting
system
The fuel system as explained above, is one of the
2 systems required for starting the engine. The other is the actual ignition of
the air/fuel mixture in the chamber. Usually, an auxiliary power unit is used
to start the engines. It has a starter motor which has a high torque
transmitted to the compressor unit. When the optimum speed is reached, i.e. the
flow of gas through the turbine is sufficient, the turbines take over. There
are a number of different starting methods such as electric, hydraulic,
pneumatic etc.
The electric starter works with gears and
clutch plate linking the motor and the engine. The clutch is used to disengage
when optimum speed is achieved. This is usually done automatically. The
electric supply is used to start the motor as well as for ignition. The voltage
is usually built up slowly as starter gains speed.
Some military aircraft need to be started quicker
than the electric method permits and hence they use other methods such as a
turbine starter. This is an impulse turbine impacted by burning gases from a
cartridge. It is geared to rotate the engine and also connected to an automatic
disconnect system. The cartridge is set alight electrically and used to turn
the turbine.
Another turbine starter system is almost exactly
like a little engine. Again the turbine is connected to the engine via gears.
However, the turbine is turned by burning gases - usually the fuel is isopropyl
nitrate stored in a tank and sprayed into a combustion chamber. Again, it
is ignited with a spark plug. Everything is electrically controlled, such as
speed etc.
Most Commercial aircraft and large Military
Transport airplanes usually use what is called an auxiliary power unit or APU. It is
normally a small gas turbine. Thus, one could say that using such an APU is
using a small jet engine to start a larger one. High pressure air from the
compressor section of the APU is bled off through a system of pipes to the
engines where it is directed into the starting system. This "bleed
air" is directed into a mechanism to start the engine turning and begin
pulling in air. When the rotating speed of the engine is sufficient to pull in
enough air to support combustion, fuel is introduced and ignited. Once the
engine ignites and reaches idle speed, the bleed air is shut off.
The APUs on aircraft such as the Boeing 737
and Airbus
A320 can be seen at the extreme rear of the aircraft. This is the typical
location for an APU on most commercial airliners although some may be within
the wing root (Boeing 727) or the aft fuselage (DC-9/MD80) as examples and
some military transports carry their APU's in one of the main landing gear pods
(C-141).
The APUs also provide enough power to keep the
cabin lights, pressure and other systems on while the engines are off. The
valves used to control the airflow are usually electrically controlled. They
automatically close at a pre-determined speed. As part of the starting sequence
on some engines fuel is combined with the supplied air and burned instead of
using just air. This usually produces more power per unit weight.
Usually an APU is started by its own electric
starter motor which is switched off at the proper speed automatically. When the
main engine starts up and reaches the right conditions, this auxiliary unit is
then switched off and disengages slowly.
Hydraulic pumps can also be used to start some
engines through gears. The pumps are electrically controlled on the ground.
A variation of this is the APU installed in a
Boeing F-18; it is started by a hydraulic motor, which itself receives energy
stored in an accumulator. This accumulator is recharged after the right engine
is started and develops hydraulic pressure, or by a hand pump in the right hand
main landing gear well.
[edit] Ignition
Usually there are 2 igniter plugs in different
positions in the combustion system. A high voltage spark is used to ignite the
gases. The voltage is stored up from a low voltage supply provided by the
starter system. It builds up to the right value and is then released as a high
energy spark. Depending on various conditions, the igniter continues to provide
sparks to prevent combustion from failing if the flame inside goes out. Of
course, in the event that the flame does go out, there must be provision to
relight. There is a limit of altitude and air speed at which an engine can
obtain a satisfactory relight.
For example, the General Electric F404-400 uses
one ignitor for the combustor and one for the afterburner; the ignition system
for the A/B incorporates an ultraviolet flame sensor to activate the ignitor.
It should be noted that most modern ignition
systems provide enough energy to be a lethal hazard should a person be in
contact with the electrical lead when the system is activated, so team
communication is vital when working on these systems.
[edit] Lubrication system
A lubrication system serves to ensure lubrication
of the bearings and to maintain sufficiently cool temperatures, mostly by
eliminating friction.
The lubrication system as a whole should be able
to prevent foreign material from entering the plane, and reaching the bearings,
gears, and other moving parts. The lubricant must be able to flow easily at
relatively low temperatures and not disintegrate or break down at very high
temperatures.
Usually the lubrication system has subsystems that
deal individually with the pressure of an engine, scavenging, and a breather.
The pressure system components are an oil tank and
de-aerator, main oil pump, main oil filter/filter bypass valve,
pressure regulating valve (PRV), oil cooler/by pass valve and
tubing/jets.
Usually the flow is from the tank to the pump inlet and PRV, pumped to main oil filter or its bypass valve and oil cooler, then through some more filters to jets in the bearings.
Usually the flow is from the tank to the pump inlet and PRV, pumped to main oil filter or its bypass valve and oil cooler, then through some more filters to jets in the bearings.
Using the PRV method of control, means that the
pressure of the feed oil must be below a critical value (usually controlled by
other valves which can leak out excess oil back to tank if it exceeds the
critical value). The valve opens at a certain pressure and oil is kept moving
at a constant rate into the bearing chamber.
If the engine speed increases, the pressure within
the bearing chamber also increases, which means the pressure difference between
the lubricant feed and the chamber reduces which could reduce slow rate of oil
when it is needed even more. As a result, some PRVs can adjust their spring
force values using this pressure change in the bearing chamber proportionally
to keep the lubricant flow constant.
[edit] Advanced designs
[edit] J-58 combined
ramjet/turbojet
The SR-71's Pratt & Whitney J58 engines were rather
unusual. They could convert in flight from being largely a turbojet to being
largely a compressor-assisted ramjet. At high speeds (above Mach 2.4), the
engine used variable geometry vanes to direct excess air through 6 bypass pipes
from downstream of the fourth compressor stage into the afterburner.[5] 80% of the
SR-71's thrust at high speed was generated in this way, giving much higher
thrust, improving specific impulse by 10-15%, and permitting
continuous operation at Mach 3.2. The name coined for this configuration is turbo-ramjet.
[edit] Pre-cooled
turbojets
An idea originated by Robert P. Carmichael in 1955
[6] is
that hydrogen fuelled engines could theoretically have much higher performance
than hydrocarbon fuelled engines if a heat exchanger is used to cool the
incoming air. The low temperature allows lighter materials to be used, a higher
mass-flow through the engines, and provides lower temperatures which permits
combustors to inject more fuel without overheating the engine.
This idea leads to plausible designs like SABRE, that might
permit single-stage-to-orbit,[7] and ATREX, that might
permit jet engines to be used up to hypersonic speeds and high altitudes for
boosters for launch vehicles.
[edit] Nuclear-powered
ramjet
Project
Pluto was a nuclear-powered ramjet, intended for use in a cruise
missile. Rather than combusting fuel as in regular jet engines, air was
heated using a high-temperature, unshielded nuclear reactor. This raised the specific
impulse of the engine by stupendous amounts, and the ramjet was predicted
to be able to fly for months at supersonic speeds (Mach 3 at tree-top height).
However, there was no obvious way to stop it once it had taken off, which is a
great disadvantage. Unfortunately, because the reactor was unshielded, it was
dangerous to be in or around the flight path of the vehicle (although the
exhaust itself wasn't radioactive).
[edit] Scramjets
Main article: Scramjet
Scramjets are an evolution of the ramjet that are
able to operate at much higher speeds than ramjets (or any other kind of
airbreathing engine) are capable of reaching. They share a similar structure
with ramjets, being a specially-shaped tube that compresses air with no moving
parts through ram-air compression. Scramjets, however, operate with supersonic
airflow through the entire engine. Thus, scramjets do not have the diffuser
required by ramjets to slow the incoming airflow to subsonic speeds.
Scramjets start working at speeds of at least Mach
4, and have a maximum useful speed of approximately Mach 17[8]. Due to
aerodynamic heating at these high speeds, cooling poses a challenge to
engineers.
[edit] Afterburners and
Thrust Reversers
A basic discussion of these important devices is
in the turbojet
article. Wikipedia also has a more extensive discussion of each (see below for
links).
[edit] Trivia
- A Scrapheap
Challenge team once made a big truck's turbocharger
into a crude but working turbojet engine.
- The J-58 engines were believed to be
capable of about Mach 4.5, but the SR-71 airframe they were installed in
would have gotten too hot if it exceeded Mach 3.2.
- In the severe winter of 1946-1947 in the UK,
there were instances of jet engines (blowing forwards) mounted on railway
trucks being used for snow clearance.
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