Turbo Jet Engine
Turbo Jet Engine
Turbo Jet Engine
Objective:
a) We are to study the jet propulsion
b) Rocket propulsion
c) Turbo jet engine
d) Parts of jet engine
e) Working of jet engine
f) Thermodynamics of jet engine
g) Merits and de-merit
h) Applications of jet engine
Theory:
- Propulsion:
propulsion system has a source of mechanical power (some type of engine or motor,
muscles), and some means of using this power to generate force, such as wheel and axles,
propellers, a propulsive nozzle, wings, fins or legs.
Other components such as clutches, gearboxes and so forth may be needed to connect the
power source to the force generating component.
Air Propulsion
Ground Propulsion
Magnetic Propulsion
Marine Propulsion
Air propulsion:
An aircraft propulsion system generally consists of an aircraft engine
and some means to generate thrust, such as a propeller or a propulsive nozzle.
An aircraft propulsion system must achieve two things. First, the thrust from the propulsion
system must balance the drag of the airplane when the airplane is cruising. And second, the
thrust from the propulsion system must exceed the drag of the airplane for the airplane to
accelerate. In fact, the greater the difference between the thrust and the drag, called the excess
thrust, the faster the airplane will accelerate.
Some aircraft, like airliners and cargo planes, spend most of their life in a cruise condition.
For these airplanes, excess thrust is not as important as high engine efficiency and low fuel
usage. Since thrust depends on both the amount of gas moved and the velocity, we can
generate high thrust by accelerating a large mass of gas by a small amount, or by accelerating
a small mass of gas by a large amount. Because of the aerodynamic efficiency of propellers
and fans, it is more fuel efficient to accelerate a large mass by a small amount. That is why
we find high bypass fans and turboprops on cargo planes and airliners.
- Jet Propulsion
Jet Propulsion:
Jet propulsion is thrust produced by passing a jet of matter (typically
air or water) in the opposite direction to the direction of motion. By conservation of
momentum, the moving body is propelled in the opposite direction to the jet.
A number of animals, including cephalopods, sea hares, arthropods, and fish have convergent
evolved jet propulsion mechanisms. This is most commonly used in the jet engine, but is also
the means of propulsion utilized by NASA to power various space craft.
Rocket propulsion:
Rocket propulsion is thrust produced by passing a jet of matter (typically air or water) in the
opposite direction to the direction of motion. By conservation of momentum, the moving
body is propelled in the opposite direction to the rocket.
Our main focus is on turbo jet engine so we will discuss it in more detail in here. But first we
will discuss jet engine.
Jet Engine:
A jet engine is a reaction engine discharging a fast moving jet that generates
thrust by jet propulsion in accordance with Newton's laws of motion. This broad definition of
jet engines includes turbojets, turbofans, rockets, ramjets, and pulse jets. In general, jet
engines are combustion engines but non-combusting forms also exist.
In common parlance, the term jet engine loosely refers to an internal combustion air
breathing jet engine (a duct engine). These typically consist of an engine with a rotary
(rotating) air compressor powered by a turbine ("Brayton cycle"), with the leftover power
providing thrust via a propelling nozzle. Jet aircraft use these types of engines for long-
distance travel. Early jet aircraft used turbojet engines which were relatively inefficient for
subsonic flight. Modern subsonic jet aircraft usually use high-bypass turbofan engines. These
Compared to turbofans, turbojets are quite inefficient if flown below about Mach 2 and are
very noisy. Turbojet efficiency only comes into play at supersonic Mach numbers and high
altitudes where small frontal area is optimal, and large fan blades are inefficient. Few aircraft
cruise in this expensive regime, so most modern aircraft use turbofans instead for fuel
economy and low altitude performance. However, turbojets are still common in medium
range cruise missiles, due to their high exhaust speed, small frontal area, and relative
simplicity.
1. Air Intake:
Preceding the compressor is the air intake (or inlet). It is designed to be
as efficient as possible at recovering the ram pressure of the air stream tube
approaching the intake. The air leaving the intake then enters the compressor. The
stators (stationary blades) guide the airflow of the compressed gases.
In most turbojet-powered aircraft, bleed air is extracted from the compressor section at
various stages to perform a variety of jobs including air conditioning/pressurization, engine
inlet anti-icing and turbine cooling. Bleeding air off decreases the overall efficiency of the
engine, but the usefulness of the compressed air outweighs the loss in efficiency.
Several types of compressors are used in turbojets and gas turbines in general: axial,
centrifugal, axial-centrifugal, double-centrifugal, etc.
Early turbojet compressors had overall pressure ratios as low as 5:1 (as do a lot of simple
auxiliary power units and small propulsion turbojets today). Aerodynamic improvements,
plus splitting the compression system into two separate units and/or incorporating variable
compressor geometry, enabled later turbojets
to have overall pressure ratios of 15:1 or
more. For comparison, modern civil turbofan
engines have overall pressure ratios of 44:1
or more.
3. Combustion Chamber:
The burning process in the combustor is significantly different from
that in a piston engine. In a piston engine the burning gases are confined to a small volume
and, as the fuel burns, the pressure increases dramatically. In a turbojet the air and fuel
mixture passes unconfined through the combustion chamber. As the mixture burns its
temperature increases dramatically, but the pressure actually decreases a few percent.
4. Turbine:
Hot gases leaving the combustor are allowed to expand through the turbine.
Turbines are usually made up of metals such as Inconel or Nimonic to resist the high
temperature, and frequently have built-in cooling channels.
In the first stage the turbine is largely an impulse turbine (similar to a peloton wheel) and
rotates because of the impact of the hot gas stream. Later stages are convergent ducts that
accelerate the gas rearward and gain energy from that process. Pressure drops, and energy is
transferred into the shaft. The turbine's rotational energy is used primarily to drive the
compressor. Some shaft power is extracted to drive accessories, like fuel, oil, and hydraulic
pumps. Because of its significantly higher entry temperature, the turbine pressure ratio is
much lower than that of the compressor. In a turbojet almost two-thirds of all the power
generated by burning fuel is used by the compressor to compress the air for the engine.
If, however, a convergent-divergent de Laval nozzle is fitted, the divergent (increasing flow
area) section allows the gases to reach supersonic velocity within the nozzle itself. This is
slightly more efficient on thrust than using a convergent nozzle. There is, however, the added
weight and complexity since the convergent-divergent nozzle must be fully variable in its
shape to cope with changes in gas flow caused by engine throttling.
6. Thrust augmentation:
Thrust can be increased by injecting additional fluids. It is then called wet thrust.
Early and no afterburning engines use water injection to temporarily increase thrust. Water is
injected at the compressor air inlet or the diffuser to cool the compressing air which permits
an increase in pressure for a higher burning. A 10-30% additional thrust can be gained.
Examples being the Pratt & Whitney J-57 and derivatives still in use today.
7. After burner:
An afterburner or "reheat jet pipe" is a device added to the rear of the jet
engine. It provides a means of spraying fuel directly into the hot exhaust, where it ignites and
boosts available thrust significantly; a drawback is its very high fuel consumption rate.
Afterburners are used almost exclusively on supersonic aircraft – most of these are military
aircraft. The two supersonic civilian transports, Concorde and the TU-144, also used
afterburners but these two have now been retired from service. Scaled Composites White
Knight, a carrier aircraft for the experimental Spaceship One suborbital spacecraft, also uses
an afterburner.
A jet engine operates on the application of Sir Isaac Newton's third law of physics: for every
action there is an equal and opposite reaction. This is called thrust. This law is demonstrated
in simple terms by releasing an inflated balloon and watching the escaping air propel the
balloon in the opposite direction. In the basic turbojet engine, air enters the front intake and is
compressed, then forced into combustion chambers where fuel is sprayed into it and the
mixture is ignited. Gases which form expand rapidly and are exhausted through the rear of
the combustion chambers. These gases exert equal force in all directions, providing forward
thrust as they escape to the rear. As the gases leave the engine, they pass through a fan-like
set of blades (turbine) which rotates the turbine shaft. This shaft, in turn, rotates the
compressor, thereby bringing in a fresh supply of air through the intake. Engine thrust may be
increased by the addition of an afterburner section in which extra fuel is sprayed into the
exhausting gases which burn to give the added thrust. At approximately 400 mph, one pound
of thrust equals one horsepower, but at higher speeds this ratio increases and a pound of
thrust is greater than one horsepower. At speeds of less than 400 mph, this ratio decreases.
Turbo shaft engines are very similar to turboprops, differing in that nearly all energy in the
exhaust is extracted to spin the rotating shaft, which is used to power machinery rather than a
propeller, they therefore generate little to no jet thrust and are often used to power
helicopters.
Ramjets are the most basic type of ram powered jet engines. They consist of
three sections; an inlet to compress incoming air, a combustor to inject and combust fuel, and
a nozzle to expel the hot gases and produce thrust. Ramjets require a relatively high speed to
Merits:
De-merits:
1. Cost
2. Longer startup than reciprocating engines
3. Less responsive to changes in power demand compared to
reciprocating engines.
4. They are very noisy due to high engine works.
5. Dangerous to operate due to high temperature.
6. They have low efficiency.