Propfan

NASA / GE unducted fan

A propfan or open rotor engine is a type of aircraft engine related in concept to both the turboprop and turbofan, but distinct from both. The design is intended to offer the speed and performance of a turbofan, with the fuel economy of a turboprop. A propfan is typically designed with a large number of short, highly twisted blades, similar to a turbofan's bypass compressor (the fan itself). For this reason, the propfan has been variously described as an "unducted fan" or an "ultra-high-bypass (UHB) turbofan".

Definition

The European Aviation Safety Agency (EASA) defines it as "A turbine engine featuring contra-rotating fan stages not enclosed within a casing." The engine uses a gas turbine to drive an unshrouded (open) contra-rotating propeller like a turboprop, but the design of the propeller itself is more tightly coupled to the turbine design and the two are certified as a single unit.[1]

United Technologies describe it as "a small diameter, highly loaded multiple bladed variable pitch propulsor having swept blades with thin advanced airfoil sections, integrated with a nacelle contoured to retard the airflow through the blades thereby reducing compressibility losses and designed to operate with a turbine engine and using a single stage reduction gear resulting in high performance."[2]

Development

One of the earliest propfans was the 4,710 lbf (21,000 N) Metrovick F.5, which featured twin contra-rotating fans at the rear of the engine and which was first run in 1946.[3]

The propfan concept was first revealed by Carl Rohrbach and Bruce Metzger of the Hamilton Standard Division of United Technologies in 1975[4] and was patented by Rohrbach and Robert Cornell of Hamilton Standard in 1979.[2] Later work by General Electric on similar propulsors was done under the name unducted fan, which was a modified turbofan engine, with the fan placed outside the engine nacelle on the same axis as the compressor blades.

The Hamilton Standard Division of United Technologies developed the propfan concept in the early 1970s. Numerous design variations of the propfan were tested by Hamilton Standard, in conjunction with NASA in this decade.[5][6] This testing led to the Propfan Test Assessment (PTA) program, where Lockheed-Georgia proposed modifying a Gulfstream II to act as in-flight testbed for the propfan concept and McDonnell Douglas proposed modifying a DC-9 for the same purpose.[7] NASA chose the Lockheed proposal, where the aircraft had a nacelle added to the left wing, containing a 6000 hp Allison 570 turboprop engine (derived from the XT701 turboshaft developed for the Boeing Vertol XCH-62 program), powering a 9-foot diameter Hamilton Standard SR-7 propfan. The aircraft, so configured, first flew in March 1987. After an extensive test program, the modifications were removed from the aircraft.[8][9]

General Electric's GE36 Unducted Fan was a variation on the original propfan concept, and appears similar to a pusher configuration piston engine. GE's UDF had a novel direct-drive arrangement, where the reduction gearbox was replaced by a low-speed seven-stage free turbine. One set of turbine rotors drove the forward set of propellers, while the rear set was driven by the other set of rotors which rotated in the opposite direction. The turbine had 14 blade rows with seven stages. Each stage was a pair of contra-rotating rows.[10] Boeing intended to offer GE's pusher UDF engine on the 7J7 platform, and McDonnell Douglas was going to do likewise on their MD-94X airliner. The GE36 was first flight tested mounted on the #3 engine station of a Boeing 727-100 in 1986.[11]

McDonnell Douglas developed a proof-of-concept aircraft by modifying its company-owned MD-80. They removed the JT8D turbofan engine from the left side of the fuselage and replaced it with the GE36. A number of test flights were conducted, initially out of Mojave, California, which proved the airworthiness, aerodynamic characteristics, and noise signature of the design. Following the initial tests, a first-class cabin was installed inside the aft fuselage and airline executives were offered the opportunity to experience the UDF-powered aircraft first-hand. The test and marketing flights of the GE-outfitted demonstrator aircraft concluded in 1988, exhibiting a 30% reduction in fuel consumption over turbo-fan powered MD-80, full Stage III noise compliance, and low levels of interior noise/vibration. Due to jet fuel price drops and shifting marketing priorities, Douglas shelved the program the following year.

In the 1980s, Allison collaborated with Pratt & Whitney on demonstrating the 578-DX propfan. Unlike the competing GE36 UDF, the 578-DX was fairly conventional, having a reduction gearbox between the LP turbine and the propfan blades. The 578-DX was successfully flight tested on a McDonnell Douglas MD-80.

However none of the above projects came to fruition, mainly because of excessive cabin noise (compared to turbofans) and low fuel prices.[12] For General Electric, the GE36 UDF was meant to replace the CFM International CFM56 high-bypass turbofan which was initially noncompetitive against the rival IAE V2500, however when the V2500 ran into technical problems then sales of the CFM56 took off. General Electric was not interested in having the GE36 cannibalize the CFM56, and while "the UDF could be made reliable by earlier standards, turbofans were getting much, much better than that". However, General Electric used the UDF’s blade technology directly into the GE90, the most powerful jet engine ever produced, for the Boeing 777.[13]

Progress D27 Propfans fitted to an Antonov An-70

The Progress D-27 propfan, developed in the Soviet Union, was designed with the propfan blades at the front of the engine in a tractor configuration. Two rear-mounted D-27 propfans propelled the Ukrainian Antonov An-180, which was scheduled for a 1995 entry into service. Another propfan application was the Russian Yakovlev Yak-46. During the 1990s, Antonov also developed the An-70, powered by four Progress D-27s in a tractor configuration; the Russian Air Force placed an order for 164 aircraft in 2003, which was subsequently canceled. However, the An-70 remains available for further investment and production.

With increasing prices for jet fuel and the emphasis on engine/airframe efficiency to reduce emissions, there is renewed interest in the propfan concept for jetliners that might come into service beyond the Boeing 787 and Airbus A350XWB. For instance, Airbus has patented aircraft designs with twin rear-mounted contra-rotating propfans.[14]

In 2012 GE expected that propfans could meet noise regulations by 2030, when new narrowbody generations from Boeing and Airbus become available. Airlines consistently ask for low noise, and then maximum fuel efficiency.[15]

Safran open rotor mockup in 2017

The European Commission launched in 2008 an Open Rotor demonstration led by Safran within the Clean Sky program with 65 million euros funding over eight years : a demonstrator was assembled in 2015, and ground tested in May 2017 on its open-air test rig in Istres, aiming to reduce fuel consumption and associated CO2 emissions by 30% compared with current CFM56 turbofans.[16]

Limitations and solutions

Propeller blade tip speed limit

Turboprops have an optimum speed below about 450 mph (700 km/h),[17] because all propellers lose efficiency at high speed, due to an effect known as wave drag that occurs just below supersonic speeds. This powerful form of drag has a sudden onset, and led to the concept of a sound barrier when it was first encountered in the 1940s. In the case of a propeller, this effect can happen any time the propeller is spun fast enough that the blade tips approach the speed of sound, even if the aircraft is motionless on the ground.

The most effective way to counteract this problem (to some degree) is by adding more blades to the propeller, allowing it to deliver more power at a lower rotational speed. This is why many World War II fighter designs started with two or three-blade propellers and by the end of the war were using up to five blades as the engines were upgraded and new propellers were needed to more efficiently convert that power. The major downside to this approach is that adding blades makes the propeller harder to balance and maintain and the additional blades cause minor performance penalties (due to drag and efficiency issues). But even with these sorts of measures at some point the forward speed of the plane combined with the rotational speed of the propeller will once again result in wave drag problems. For most aircraft this will occur at speeds over about 450 mph (700 km/h).

Swept propeller

A method of decreasing wave drag was discovered by German researchers in 1935sweeping the wing backwards. Today, almost all aircraft designed to fly much above 450 mph (700 km/h) use a swept wing. In the 1970s, Hamilton Standard started researching propellers with similar sweep. Since the inside of the propeller is moving slower than the outside, the blade is progressively more swept toward the outside, leading to a curved shape similar to a scimitar - a practice that was first used as far back as 1909, in the Chauvière two-bladed wood propeller used on the Blériot XI.

Jet aircraft fuel economy

Jet aircraft fly faster than conventional propeller-driven aircraft. However, they use more fuel, so that for the same fuel consumption a propeller installation produces more thrust. As fuel costs become an increasingly important aspect of commercial aviation, engine designers continue to seek ways to improve aero engine efficiency.

The propfan concept was developed to deliver 35% better fuel efficiency than contemporary turbofans. In static and air tests on a modified Douglas DC-9, propfans reached a 30% improvement over the OEM turbofans. This efficiency came at a price, as one of the major problems with the propfan is noise, particularly in an era where aircraft are required to comply with increasingly strict aircraft noise regulations.

Aircraft with propfans

See also

Comparable engines

Related lists

References

  1. Notice of Proposed Amendment Open rotor engine and installation (PDF), European Aviation Safety Agency, 2015
  2. 1 2 US 4171183, Robert W. Cornell, Carl Rohrbach, "Multi-bladed, high speed prop-fan", published 16 Oct 1979, assigned to United Technologies Corporation
  3. https://www.flightglobal.com/pdfarchive/view/1947/1947%20-%200022.html
  4. Rohrback, C. and Metzger, F.B., 'The Prop-Fan, a New Look at Propulsors', AIAA paper 75-1208, presented at the AIAA/SAE 11th Propulsion Conference, Anaheim California, September 1975.
  5. Rohrbach, Carl, 'A Report on the Aerodynamic Design and Wind Tunnel Test of a Prop-fan Model', AIAA paper 76-667, presented at the AIAA/SAE 12th Propulsion Conference, Palo Alto California, July 1976.
  6. Jeracki, Robert J., Mikkelson, Daniel C. and Blaha, Bernard J., 'Wind Tunnel Performance of Four Energy Efficient Propellers Designed for Mach 0.8 Cruise', SAE Paper 790573, presented at the SAE Business Aircraft Meeting and Exposition, Wichita Kansas, April 1979.
  7. NASA-CR-166138. Retrieved 28 June 2011
  8. 'Propfan Test Assessment (PTA)' NASA-CR-185138. Retrieved 28 June 2011
  9. 'Propfan Test Assessment (PTA): Flight Test Report' NASA-CR-182278. Retrieved 28 June 2011
  10. https://ntrs.nasa.gov/archive/nasa/casi.ntrs.nasa.gov/19900000732.pdf
  11. 'The Power of Persuasion' Flight International. May 23, 1987. Retrieved 28 June 2011.
  12. Flight International (2007-07-12). "Whatever happened to propfans?". Retrieved 2007-07-14.
  13. "The Short, Happy Life of the Prop-fan". airspacemag.com. Retrieved 9 April 2018.
  14. US application 2009020643, Airbus & Christophe Cros, "Aircraft having reduced environmental impact", published 2009-01-22
  15. Croft, John. "Open rotor noise not a barrier to entry: GE" Flight International, 5 July 2012. Retrieved: 21 July 2012.
  16. "Safran celebrates successful start of Open Rotor demonstrator tests on new open-air test rig in southern France" (Press release). Safran. October 3, 2017.
  17. Spakovszky, Zoltan (2009). "Unified Propulsion Lecture 1". Unified Engineering Lecture Notes. MIT. Retrieved 2009-04-03.

General resources

  • Prop fan propulsion concepts: Technology Review, Design Methodology, State-of-the-art designs and future outlook. Raymond Scott Ciszek. University of Virginia Department of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering. Senior Thesis Project. March 25, 2002

  • "Green sky thinking - carbon credits and the propfan comeback?", Flight International, June 12, 2007.
  • The "easyJet ecoJet" to cut CO2 emissions by 50% by 2015
  • The Short, Happy Life of the Prop-fan Air & Space Magazine, September 1, 2005
  • “open rotor” jet engine
  • "Metrovick F.5 - Open-Fan Thrust Augmenter" a 1947 Flight article on an early propfan
  • S. Arif Khalid, David Lurie, Andrew Breeze-Stringfellow; Trevor Wood, Kishore Ramakrishnan, Umesh Paliath; John Wojno, Bangalore Janardan, Trevor Goerig; Anthony Opalski; Jack Barrett (May 2013). "FAA CLEEN Program Open Rotor Aeroacoustic Technology Non-Proprietary Report" (PDF). Federal Aviation Administration. General Electric. Retrieved 8 July 2018.
  • Bowles, Mark (2010). "Advanced Turboprops and Laminar Flow". The Apollo of Aeronautics: NASA's Aircraft Energy Efficiency Program, 1973-1987 (PDF). NASA-SP. 2009-574. Washington, D.C.: National Aeronautics and Space Administration. pp. 122–136. ISBN 9780160842955. OCLC 465190382. Retrieved 25 September 2018. Lay summary.
  • Mark D. Bowles and Virginia P. Dawson (1998). "Chapter 14: The Advanced Turboprop Project: Radical Innovation in a Conservative Environment". In Mack, Pamela. From Engineering Science to Big Science: The NACA and NASA Collier Trophy Research Project Winners. NASA-SP. 4219. pp. 321–343. ISBN 0-16-049640-3. OCLC 757401658. Archived from the original on 15 October 2016. Retrieved 25 September 2018. Lay summary.
  • Hector Aguilar, Leon de Haan, Jerry Knuyt & Lisa Nieuwendijk (December 2017). "Propfan, an alternative for turbofan engines: Tackling the technical design characteristics of a propfan" (PDF). AviationFacts.eu. Aviation Academy at the Amsterdam University of Applied Sciences (AUAS). Retrieved 9 October 2018.
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