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Off-design analysis of the inverted Brayton cycle engine

Mustafa Karabacak (Department of Aeronautical Engineering, Necmettin Erbakan University, Konya, Turkey)
Onder Turan (Department of Aeronautics and Astronautics, Eskisehir Teknik Universitesi, Eskisehir, Turkey and Advisory Board Member of Information Technology Research and Application Center, Istanbul Commerce University, Istanbul, Turkey)

Aircraft Engineering and Aerospace Technology

ISSN: 0002-2667

Article publication date: 16 July 2024

Issue publication date: 27 August 2024

62

Abstract

Purpose

The purpose of this study is to perform an off-design analysis of the inverted Brayton cycle engine.

Design/methodology/approach

The off-design analysis equations of the inverted Brayton cycle engine were first derived in this study and the control parameters of the inverted Brayton cycle engine were first determined and investigated.

Findings

It is observed that by controlling the total temperature decrease in cooling section, it is possible to adapt the engine for low specific fuel consumption working conditions or high thrust working conditions. Specific fuel consumption is reduced by 27.1 % by stopping cooling in the cooling section and thrust is increased by 27.6 % by working with full load of the cooling section (500 K temperature decrease in cooling section). It is observed that thrust depending on the flight Mach number increases with an increase in flight Mach number and reaches a peak value at 5.21 flight Mach number and reduces by 80.8 % at 6 flight Mach number relative to the peak value. The specific fuel consumption increases rapidly as the Mach number increases, and the specific fuel consumption is 49.0 g/[kN.s] at Mach 1, reaches 70.4 g/[kN.s] at Mach 5 and increases to 412 g/[kN.s] at Mach 6. The specific fuel consumption increases from 68.1 to 73.0 g/(kN.s) and the thrust decreases from 16.5 to 13.3 kN as the total preburner exit temperature increases from 1,500 to 2,000 K. Specific fuel consumption decreases from 83.1 to 64.8 g/(kN.s) and thrust increases from 4.60 to 11.08 kN depending on afterburner exit total temperature increase from 1,800 to 2,500 K.

Research limitations/implications

The cooling section reduces total temperature of the gas flow to lower values to increase the compressor total pressure ratio. The compressor increases the total pressure of the gas flow to the optimum total pressure ratios to increase the nozzle exit Mach number and gain more thrust. The afterburner increases the total temperature of the gas flow to increase the sound speed in the nozzle exit to increase thrust. The nozzle expands the gas flow to reduce the static pressure of the gas flow to near the optimum value, atmosphere pressure, to increase thrust and reduce specific fuel consumption.

Practical implications

Hypersonic and supersonic air vehicles can use the current engine model for the its own propulsion systems.

Social implications

After first heavier than air flight, aero engines was designed for only used for aero vehicle. Internal combustion engines were used for propelled propeller aircraft at the first term of aircraft. However, propeller-propelled aircrafts are not sufficient to increase aircraft velocity to supersonic Mach numbers due to the shock losses of propeller, so the supersonic era was only introduced by revolution in propulsion systems with new concept. A jet engine was developed to be candidate for supersonic flight.

Originality/value

Off-design analysis equations of an inverted Brayton cycle engine were first derived in this study. Furthermore, the control parameters of the inverted Brayton cycle engine were first determined and investigated in this paper.

Keywords

Citation

Karabacak, M. and Turan, O. (2024), "Off-design analysis of the inverted Brayton cycle engine", Aircraft Engineering and Aerospace Technology, Vol. 96 No. 7, pp. 954-963. https://doi.org/10.1108/AEAT-02-2024-0032

Publisher

:

Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2024, Emerald Publishing Limited

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