Junkers Jumo 004, the first production turbojet in operational use. Note the starter pull-start handle housed in the center of the intake nose bullet.Diagram of a typical gas turbine jet engineFrank WhittleHans von Ohain
Theturbojet is anairbreathing jet engine which is typically used in aircraft. It consists of agas turbine with apropelling nozzle. The gas turbine has an air inlet which includes inlet guide vanes, a compressor, a combustion chamber, and aturbine (that drives the compressor). The compressed air from the compressor is heated by burning fuel in the combustion chamber and then allowed to expand through the turbine. The turbine exhaust is then expanded in the propelling nozzle where it is accelerated to high speed to provide thrust.[1] Two engineers,Frank Whittle in theUnited Kingdom andHans von Ohain inGermany, developed the concept independently into practical engines during the late 1930s.
Turbojets have poor efficiency at low vehicle speeds, which limits their usefulness in vehicles other than aircraft. Turbojet engines have been used in isolated cases to power vehicles other than aircraft, typically for attempts onland speed records. Where vehicles are "turbine-powered", this is more commonly by use of aturboshaft engine, a development of the gas turbine engine where an additional turbine is used to drive a rotating output shaft. These are common in helicopters and hovercraft.
Turbojets were widely used for early supersonicfighters, up to and including manythird generation fighters, with theMiG-25 being the latest turbojet-powered fighter developed. As most fighters spend little time traveling supersonically,fourth-generation fighters (as well as some late third-generation fighters like theF-111 andHawker Siddeley Harrier) and subsequent designs are powered by the more efficientlow-bypass turbofans and useafterburners to raise exhaust speed for bursts of supersonic travel. Turbojets were used on theConcorde and the longer-range versions of theTu-144 which were required to spend a long period travelling supersonically. Turbojets are still common in medium rangecruise missiles, due to their high exhaust speed, small frontal area, and relative simplicity.
Heinkel He 178, the world's first aircraft to fly purely on turbojet power, using anHeS 3 engine
The first patent for using a gas turbine to power an aircraft was filed in 1921 by FrenchmanMaxime Guillaume.[2] His engine was to be an axial-flow turbojet, but was never constructed, as it would have required considerable advances over the state of the art in compressors.[3]
In 1928, BritishRAF College Cranwell cadet[4]Frank Whittle formally submitted his ideas for a turbojet to his superiors. In October 1929 he developed his ideas further.[5] On 16 January 1930 in England, Whittle submitted his first patent (granted in 1932).[6] The patent showed a two-stageaxial compressor feeding a single-sidedcentrifugal compressor. Practical axial compressors were made possible by ideas fromA.A. Griffith in a seminal paper in 1926 ("An Aerodynamic Theory of Turbine Design"). Whittle later concentrated on the simpler centrifugal compressor only, for a variety of practical reasons. A Whittle engine was the first turbojet to run, thePower Jets WU, on 12 April 1937. It was liquid-fuelled. Whittle's team experienced near-panic during the first start attempts when the engine accelerated out of control to a relatively high speed despite the fuel supply being cut off. It was subsequently found that fuel had leaked into the combustion chamber during pre-start motoring checks and accumulated in pools, so the engine would not stop accelerating until all the leaked fuel had burned off. Whittle was unable to interest the government in his invention, and development continued at a slow pace.
In Germany,Hans von Ohain patented a similar engine in 1935. His design, an axial-flow engine, as opposed to Whittle's centrifugal flow engine, was eventually adopted by most manufacturers by the 1950s.[7][8]
On 27 August 1939 theHeinkel He 178, powered by von Ohain's design, became the world's first aircraft to fly using the thrust from a turbojet engine. It was flown by test pilotErich Warsitz.[9] TheGloster E.28/39, (also referred to as the "Gloster Whittle", "Gloster Pioneer", or "Gloster G.40") made the first British jet-engined flight in 1941. It was designed to test the Whittle jet engine in flight, and led to the development of the Gloster Meteor.[10]
The first two operational turbojet aircraft, theMesserschmitt Me 262 and then theGloster Meteor, entered service in 1944, towards the end ofWorld War II, the Me 262 in April and the Gloster Meteor in July. Only about 15 Meteor saw WW2 action but up to 1400 Me 262s were produced, with 300 entering combat, delivering the first ground attacks and air combat victories of jet planes.[11][12][13]
Air is drawn into the rotating compressor via the intake and is compressed to a higher pressure before entering the combustion chamber.Fuel is mixed with the compressed air and burns in the combustor. The combustion products leave the combustor and expand through theturbine wherepower is extracted to drive the compressor. The turbine exit gases still contain considerable energy that is converted in the propelling nozzle to a high speed jet.
The first turbojets, used either acentrifugal compressor (as in theHeinkel HeS 3), or anaxial compressor (as in theJunkers Jumo 004) which gave a smaller diameter, although longer, engine. By replacing the propeller used on piston engines with a high speed jet of exhaust, higher aircraft speeds were attainable.
One of the last applications for a turbojet engine wasConcorde which used theOlympus 593 engine. However, joint studies by Rolls-Royce and Snecma for a second generation SST engine using the 593 core were done more than three years before Concorde entered service. They evaluated bypass engines with bypass ratios between 0.1 and 1.0 to give improved take-off and cruising performance.[14] Nevertheless, the 593 met all the requirements of the Concorde programme.[15] Estimates made in 1964 for the Concorde design at Mach 2.2 showed the penalty in range for the supersonic airliner, in terms of miles per gallon, compared to subsonic airliners at Mach 0.85 (Boeing 707, DC-8) was relatively small. This is because the large increase in drag is largely compensated by an increase in powerplant efficiency (the engine efficiency is increased by the ram pressure rise which adds to the compressor pressure rise, the higher aircraft speed approaches the exhaust jet speed increasing propulsive efficiency).[16]
Turbojet engines had a significant impact oncommercial aviation. Aside from giving faster flight speeds turbojets had greater reliability than piston engines, with some models demonstrating dispatch reliability rating in excess of 99.9%. Pre-jet commercial aircraft were designed with as many as four engines in part because of concerns over in-flight failures. Overseas flight paths were plotted to keep planes within an hour of a landing field, lengthening flights. The increase in reliability that came with the turbojet enabled three- and two-engine designs, and more direct long-distance flights.[17]
High-temperature alloys were areverse salient, a key technology that dragged progress on jet engines. Non-UK jet engines built in the 1930s and 1940s had to be overhauled every 10 or 20 hours due tocreep failure and other types of damage to blades. British engines, however, utilisedNimonic alloys which allowed extended use without overhaul, engines such as theRolls-Royce Welland andRolls-Royce Derwent,[18] and by 1949 thede Havilland Goblin, beingtype tested for 500 hours without maintenance.[19] It was not until the 1950s thatsuperalloy technology allowed other countries to produce economically practical engines.[20]
Early German turbojets had severe limitations on the amount of running they could do due to the lack of suitable high temperature materials for the turbines. British engines such as theRolls-Royce Welland used better materials giving improved durability. The Welland wastype-certified for 80 hours initially, later extended to 150 hours between overhauls, as a result of an extended 500-hour run being achieved in tests.[21]
J85-GE-17A turbojet engine from General Electric (1970)
General Electric in the United States was in a good position to enter the jet engine business due to its experience with the high-temperature materials used in their turbosuperchargers during World War II.[22]
Water injection was a common method used to increase thrust, usually during takeoff, in early turbojets that were thrust-limited by their allowable turbine entry temperature. The water increased thrust at the temperature limit, but prevented complete combustion, often leaving a very visible smoke trail.
Allowable turbine entry temperatures have increased steadily over time both with the introduction of superior alloys and coatings, and with the introduction and progressive effectiveness of blade cooling designs. On early engines, the turbine temperature limit had to be monitored, and avoided, by the pilot, typically during starting and at maximum thrust settings. Automatic temperature limiting was introduced to reduce pilot workload and reduce the likelihood of turbine damage due to over-temperature.
An animation of an axial compressor. The stationary blades are the stators.Schematic diagram showing the operation of a centrifugal flow turbojet engine. The compressor is driven by the turbine stage and throws the air outwards, requiring it to be redirected parallel to the axis of thrust.Schematic diagram showing the operation of an axial flow turbojet engine. Here, the compressor is again driven by the turbine, but the air flow remains parallel to the axis of thrust.Schematic diagram of a Turbine Based Combined Cycle (TBCC) engine integration. 1) Air intake for low flight speeds 2) Air intake for high flight speeds 3) Turbojet 4) Statoreactor 5) Stator reactor nozzle 6) Turbojet nozzle.
An intake, or tube, is needed in front of the compressor to help direct the incoming airsmoothly into the rotating compressor blades. Older engines had stationary vanes in front of the moving blades. These vanes also helped to direct the air onto the blades. The air flowing into a turbojet engine is always subsonic, regardless of the speed of the aircraft itself.
The intake has to supply air to the engine with an acceptably small variation in pressure (known as distortion) and having lost as little energy as possible on the way (known as pressure recovery). The ram pressure rise in the intake is the inlet's contribution to the propulsion system'soverall pressure ratio andthermal efficiency.
The intake gains prominence at high speeds when it generates more compression than the compressor stage. Well-known examples are the Concorde andLockheed SR-71 Blackbird propulsion systems where the intake and engine contributions to the total compression were 63%/8%[23] at Mach 2 and 54%/17%[24] at Mach 3+. Intakes have ranged from "zero-length"[25] on thePratt & Whitney TF33turbofan installation in theLockheed C-141 Starlifter, to the twin 65 feet (20 m) long, intakes on theNorth American XB-70 Valkyrie, each feeding three engines with an intake airflow of about 800 pounds per second (360 kg/s).
The turbine rotates the compressor at high speed, adding energy to the airflow while squeezing (compressing) it into a smaller space. Compressing the air increases itspressure and temperature. The smaller the compressor, the faster it turns. The (large)GE90-115B fan rotates at about 2,500 RPM, while a small helicopter engine compressor rotates around 50,000 RPM.
Turbojets supplybleed air from the compressor to the aircraft for the operation of various sub-systems. Examples include theenvironmental control system,anti-icing, and fuel tank pressurization. The engine itself needs air at various pressures and flow rates to keep it running. This air comes from the compressor, and without it, the turbines would overheat, the lubricating oil would leak from the bearing cavities, the rotor thrust bearings would skid or be overloaded, and ice would form on the nose cone. The air from the compressor, called secondary air, is used for turbine cooling, bearing cavity sealing, anti-icing, and ensuring that the rotor axial load on its thrust bearing will not wear it out prematurely. Supplying bleed air to the aircraft decreases the efficiency of the engine because it has been compressed, but then does not contribute to producing thrust.
Compressor types used in turbojets were typically axial or centrifugal. Early turbojet compressors had low pressure ratios up to about 5:1. Aerodynamic improvements including splitting the compressor into two separately rotating parts, incorporating variable blade angles for entry guide vanes and stators, and bleeding air from the compressor enabled later turbojets to have overall pressure ratios of 15:1 or more. After leaving the compressor, the air enters the combustion chamber.
The burning process in thecombustor is significantly different from that in apiston engine. In a piston engine, the burning gases are confined to a small volume, and as the fuel burns, the pressure increases. In a turbojet, the air and fuel mixture burn in the combustor and pass through to the turbine in a continuous flowing process with no pressure build-up. Instead, a small pressure loss occurs in the combustor.
The fuel-air mixture can only burn in slow-moving air, so an area of reverse flow is maintained by the fuel nozzles for the approximately stoichiometric burning in the primary zone. Further compressed air is introduced which completes the combustion process and reduces the temperature of the combustion products to a level which the turbine can accept. Less than 25% of the air is typically used for combustion, as an overall lean mixture is required to keep within the turbine temperature limits.
Hot gases leaving the combustor expand through the turbine. Typical materials for turbines includeinconel andNimonic.[26] The hottest turbine vanes and blades in an engine have internal cooling passages. Air from the compressor is passed through these to keep the metal temperature within limits. The remaining stages do not need cooling.
In the first stage, the turbine is largely an impulse turbine (similar to apelton wheel) and rotates because of the impact of the hot gas stream. Later stages are convergent ducts that accelerate the gas. Energy is transferred into the shaft through momentum exchange in the opposite way to energy transfer in the compressor. The power developed by the turbine drives the compressor and accessories, like fuel, oil, and hydraulic pumps that are driven by the accessory gearbox.
After the turbine, the gases expand through the exhaust nozzle producing a high velocity jet. In a convergent nozzle, the ducting narrows progressively to a throat. The nozzle pressure ratio on a turbojet is high enough at higher thrust settings to cause the nozzle to choke.
If, however, a convergent-divergentde Laval nozzle is fitted, the divergent (increasing flow area) section allows the gases to reach supersonic velocity within the divergent section. Additional thrust is generated by the higher resulting exhaust velocity.
Liquid injection was tested on thePower Jets W.1 in 1941 initially usingammonia before changing to water and then water-methanol. A system to trial the technique in theGloster E.28/39 was devised but never fitted.[27]
An afterburner or "reheat jetpipe" is a combustion chamber added to reheat the turbine exhaust gases. The fuel consumption is very high, typically four times that of the main engine. Afterburners are used almost exclusively onsupersonic aircraft, most being military aircraft. Two supersonic airliners, Concorde and theTu-144, also used afterburners as doesScaled Composites White Knight, a carrier aircraft for the experimentalSpaceShipOnesuborbital spacecraft, andBoom XB-1, an experimental supersonic aircraft.
If the speed of the jet is equal tosonic velocity the nozzle is said to be "choked". If the nozzle is choked, the pressure at the nozzle exit plane is greater than atmospheric pressure, and extra terms must be added to the above equation to account for the pressure thrust.[31]
The rate of flow of fuel entering the engine is very small compared with the rate of flow of air.[29] If the contribution of fuel to the nozzle gross thrust is ignored, the net thrust is:
The speed of the jet must exceed the true airspeed of the aircraftif there is to be a net forward thrust on the airframe. The speed can be calculated thermodynamically based onadiabatic expansion.[32]
The operation of a turbojet is modelled approximately by theBrayton cycle.
The efficiency of a gas turbine is increased by raising the overall pressure ratio, requiring higher-temperature compressor materials, and raising the turbine entry temperature, requiring better turbine materials and/or improved vane/blade cooling. It is also increased by reducing the losses as the flow progresses from the intake to the propelling nozzle. These losses are quantified by compressor and turbine efficiencies and ducting pressure losses. When used in a turbojet application, where the output from the gas turbine is used in a propelling nozzle, raising the turbine temperature increases the jet velocity. At normal subsonic speeds this reduces the propulsive efficiency, giving an overall loss, as reflected by the higher fuel consumption, or SFC.[33] However, for supersonic aircraft this can be beneficial, and is part of the reason why the Concorde employed turbojets.Turbojet systems are complex systems therefore to secure optimal function of such system, there is a call for the newer models being developed to advance its control systems to implement the newest knowledge from the areas of automation, so increase its safety and effectiveness.[34]
^SAMI 2010 • 8th IEEE International Symposium on Applied Machine Intelligence and Informatics • 28–30 January 2010 • Herl'any, Slovakia (Advanced methods of turbojet engines' control), R. Andoga, L. Főző, L. Madarász and J. Judičák
Technical University of Košice, Department of Cybernetics and Artificial Intelligence, Košice, Slovakia ** Technical University of Košice, Department of Environmental Studies and Information Engineering, Košice,))