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Future civil small core compressors

Lead Research Organisation: University of Cambridge
Department Name: Engineering

Abstract

Due to the expected aerodynamic and operational efficiency improvements of future airliners, as well as novel system-level propulsion concepts such as a hybrid-electric architecture, future aero core gas turbine engines are likely to be much smaller than todays. Historically, small gas turbines have had a much lower pressure ratio and a much lower efficiency than large gas turbines. The aim of this research is to understand why this was historically the case, and whether small gas turbines can be achieved with the same pressure ratio and efficiency as large gas turbines. Much of the improvements will come from the core compressor which must deliver a high pressure ratio and a high efficiency despite the small size.
As an axial compressor becomes small, mechanical and aerodynamic constraints make their behaviour different from large compressors, thereby inhibiting direct technology transfer and leading small compressors into a design space of their own which is yet poorly understood. This project aims to understand the behaviour of small compressors and their loss sources computationally and experimentally. The experimental part will involve developing a new test facility which allows testing of compressors to be undertaken much more quickly and at full Mach number. This will involve analysing existing compressor testing processes and working out where the cost and time resides. This information will then be used to design a new test capability which allows testing to be achieved more quickly and at lower cost. This will allow a large volume of testing to be feasibly conducted, greatly advancing our understanding of the small compressor design space.

Planned Impact

1. Impact on the UK Aero-Propulsion and Power Generation Industry
The UK Propulsion and Power sector is undergoing disruptive change. Electrification is allowing a new generation of Urban Air Vehicles to be developed, with over 70 active programmes planning a first flight by 2024. In the middle of the aircraft market, companies like Airbus and Rolls-Royce, are developing boundary layer ingestion propulsion systems. At high speed, Reaction Engines Ltd are developing complex new air breathing engines. In the aero gas turbine sector Rolls-Royce is developing UltraFan, its first new architecture since the 1970s. In the turbocharger markets UK companies such as Cummins and Napier are developing advanced turbochargers for use in compounded engines with electrical drive trains. In the power generation sector, Mitsubishi Heavy Industries and Siemens are developing new gas turbines which have the capability for rapid start up to enable increased supply from renewables. In the domestic turbomachinery market, Dyson are developing a whole new range of miniature high speed compressors. All of these challenges require a new generation of engineers to be trained. These engineers will need a combination of the traditional Aero-thermal skills, and new Data Science and Systems Integration skills. The Centre has been specifically designed to meet this challenge.

Over the next 20 years, Rolls-Royce estimates that the global market opportunities in the gas turbine-related aftercare services will be worth over US$700 billion. Gas turbines will have 'Digital Twins' which are continually updated using engine health data. To ensure that the UK leads this field it is important that a new generation of engineer is trained in both the underpinning Aero-thermal knowledge and in new Data Science techniques. The Centre will provide this training by linking the University and Industry Partners with the Alan Turing Institute, and with industrial data labs such as R2 Data Labs at Rolls-Royce and the 'MindSphere' centres at Siemens.

2. Impact on UK Propulsion and Power Research Landscape
The three partner institutions (Cambridge, Oxford and Loughborough) are closely linked to the broader UK Propulsion and Power community. This is through collaborations with universities such as Imperial, Cranfield, Southampton, Bath, Surrey and Sussex. This will allow the research knowledge developed in the Centre to benefit the whole of the UK Propulsion and Power research community.

The Centre will also have impact on the Data Science research community through links with the CDT in Data Centric Engineering (DCE) at Imperial College and with the Alan Turning Institute. This will allow cross-fertilization of ideas related to data science and the use of advanced data analytics in the Propulsion and Power sectors.

3. Impact of training a new generation of engineering students
The cohort-based training programme of the current CDT in Gas Turbine Aerodynamics has proved highly successful. The Centre's independent Advisory Group has noted that the multi-institution, multi-disciplinary nature of the Centre is unique within the global gas turbine training community, and the feedback from cohorts of current students has been extremely positive (92% satisfaction rating in the 2015 PRES survey). The new CDT in Future Propulsion and Power will combine the core underlying Aero-thermal knowledge of the previous CDT with the Data Science and Systems Integration skills required to meet the challenges of the next generation. This will provide the UK with a unique cohort of at least 90 students trained both to understand the real aero-thermal problems and to have the Data Science and Systems Integration skills necessary to solve the challenges of the future.

People

ORCID iD

Tianhou Wang (Student)

Publications

10 25 50

Studentship Projects

Project Reference Relationship Related To Start End Student Name
EP/S023003/1 30/09/2019 30/03/2029
2447162 Studentship EP/S023003/1 30/09/2020 29/09/2024 Tianhou Wang