Sat Mar 10, 2018 8:29 pm
Engine design is also highly effected by required cruise this profile which is a function of aircraft weight, wing area, wing aspect ratio, fraction of wing laminar flow, and aircraft wet area.
Engines are optimized for a mission. Usually one launch customer will distort the design to be most cost effective for them. All engines are designed for growth. With the MAX, the -8 and -9 drove the process with the -7 getting what it could. For the NEO, Pratt focused on the A321 and everything else got what they got.
Engines lose durability (increase cost per takeoff) at higher thrust. Optimizing for a longer mission increases cost for shorter as engine weight grows as well as wetted area (drag) in the attempt to minimize cruise fuel burn.
The MAX is variable cycle. The worst wear happens at end of climb. By means of a very hot valve, CFM (it's GE technology) cuts cruise turbine cooling which really helps cruise fuel burn (the air powers the turbine instead of cooling it).
Pratt broke the optimization by the GTF. By increasing turbine Mach # (think RPM if you want), climb above 10,000 feet was dramatically improved.
There is a lot more fuel burn during takeoff and climb than cruise. So optimizing for those conditions really helps the whole mission. Improving the cruise by variable cycle is even better. Pratt was going to have a variable fan nozzle on the PW1500G and PW1100G. But by exceeding promises, they cut out that weight. The concept for 1.5+ hour missions has merit and will return. In particular, I think 3D printing the parts out of titanium today shifts the cost advantage significantly from the manufacturing estimates when Pratt made the decision.
This brings up one final point, the optimal engine changes every year as new technology is developing. Every launched engine is a snapshot of the technology level about 8 years prior to entry into service. PIPs try to bring in new technology, but a new engine designed around a new technology gets about twice the benefit of a retrofitted engine.
Some technology, such as variable turbine cooling, multiple turbine cooling systems, variable fan nozzles, compressor Mach #, and turbine style (shrouded, unshrouded, large blade aspect ratio) must be designed in at the start. The PW1100G is doing a very unusual step of switching casings and thus part commonality for increased low turbine efficiency and I see improvements in low compressor feed into the high compressor. Thus allowing non-retrofittable technology perfected to a high enough TRL only about 6 years ago to be retrofitted.
The GE9x is insane at it's new technology. Thanks to electric actuators, much of the technology known since Whittle (I love reading through his patents) can now be implimented. For example, more turbine cooling valves, more precise oil cooling, variable turbine cooling (much more refined than the LEAP), shorter combustors, higher Mach # compressor (requires more compressor vane actuators that need electric motor precision as pneumatics and hydraulics stick so much more), and today's sensors enabled by long ago FADAC computers that take in digital data.
Much of this generation of engines improvements are on the maintenance side. Pratt and GE underpromised as it will take time to perfect as it did with 787 maintenance. But as with 787 maintenance, once it is done right, another cost advantage over prior generation engines.
Lightsaber