F05D2200/14

Gas turbine engine
11168611 · 2021-11-09 · ·

A gas turbine engine generates noise during use, and one particularly important flight condition for noise generation is take-off. A gas turbine engine has high efficiency together with low noise, in particular the noise emanating from the front of the fan. The contribution of the fan noise emanating from the front of the engine to the Effective Perceived Noise Level (EPNL) at a take-off lateral reference point, defined as the point on a line parallel to and 450 m from the runway centre line where the EPNL is a maximum during take-off, is in the range of from 0 EPNdB and 12 EPNdB lower than the contribution of the fan noise emanating from the rear of the engine to the EPNL at the take-off lateral reference point.

OVERALL ENGINE EFFICIENCY RATING FOR TURBOMACHINE ENGINES

A turbomachine engine can include a fan assembly, a vane assembly, a core engine, a gearbox, and an overall engine efficiency rating. The fan assembly can include a plurality of fan blades. The vane assembly can include a plurality of vanes, and the vanes can, in some instances, be disposed aft of the fan blades. The core engine can include a low-pressure turbine. The gearbox includes an input and an output. The input of the gearbox is coupled to the low-pressure turbine of the core engine and comprises a first rotational speed, the output of the gearbox is coupled to the fan assembly and has a second rotational speed, and a gear ratio of the first rotational speed to the second rotational speed is within a range of 2.0-4.0. The overall engine efficiency rating is greater than or equal to 0.35GR.sup.1.5 and less than or equal to 0.7GR.sup.1.5.

Adaptive boosting algorithm-based turbofan engine direct data-driven control method

The present invention belongs to the technical field of control of aero-engines, and proposes an adaptive boosting algorithm-based turbofan engine direct data-driven control method. First, a turbofan engine controller is designed based on the Least Squares Support Vector Machine (LSSVM) algorithm, and further, the weight of a training sample is changed by an adaptive boosting algorithm so as to construct a turbofan engine direct data-driven controller combining a plurality of basic learners into strong learners. Compared with the previous solution only adopting LS SVM, the present invention enhances the control precision, improves the generalization ability of the algorithm, and effectively solves the problem of sparsity of samples by the adaptive boosting method. By the adaptive boosting algorithm-based turbofan engine direct data-driven control method designed by the present invention.

GAS TURBINE ENGINE WITH THIRD STREAM
20230323837 · 2023-10-12 ·

A gas turbine is provided, the gas turbine engine including a turbomachine having an inlet splitter defining in part an inlet to a working gas flowpath and a fan duct splitter defining in part an inlet to a fan duct flowpath. The gas turbine engine also includes a primary fan driven by the turbomachine defining a primary fan tip radius R1, a primary fan hub radius R2, and a primary fan specific thrust rating TP; and a secondary fan downstream of the primary fan and driven by the turbomachine, the secondary fan defining a secondary fan tip radius R3, a secondary fan hub radius R4, and a secondary fan specific thrust rating TS; wherein the gas turbine engine defines an Effective Bypass Area, and wherein a ratio of R1 to R3 equals

[00001] R 1 R 3 = ( EFP ) ( 1 - RqR ( Sec . - Fan ) 2 ) ( 1 - RqR Prim . - Fan 2 ) ( T P T S ) ( EBA ) .

HIGH POWER EPICYCLIC GEARBOX AND OPERATION THEREOF
20230296056 · 2023-09-21 · ·

A gas turbine engine for an aircraft including: an engine core including a turbine, a compressor, and a core shaft connecting the turbine to the compressor; a fan located upstream of the engine core, the fan including a plurality of fan blades; a gearbox that can receive an input from the core shaft, and can output drive to a fan shaft via an output of the gearbox so as to drive the fan at a lower rotational speed than the core shaft; and a fan shaft mounting structure arranged to mount the fan shaft within the engine, the fan shaft mounting structure including at least two supporting bearings connected to the fan shaft.

Turbomachinery and method for designing turbomachinery
11753989 · 2023-09-12 · ·

A turbomachinery includes a casing, a rotor shaft rotatably attached to the casing, a first blade row fixed to either one of the rotor shaft or the casing, and a second blade row fixed to either one of the rotor shaft or the casing and arranged adjacent to the upstream side or downstream side of the first blade row, wherein the turbomachinery sets the number of first blades and the number of second blades in a manner that the interblade phase angle difference of the second blade row is ±180°.

OVERALL ENGINE EFFICIENCY RATING FOR TURBOMACHINE ENGINES

A turbomachine engine can include a fan assembly, a vane assembly, a core engine, a gearbox, and an overall engine efficiency rating. The fan assembly can include a plurality of fan blades. The vane assembly can include a plurality of vanes, and the vanes can, in some instances, be disposed aft of the fan blades. The core engine can include a low-pressure turbine. The gearbox includes an input and an output. The input of the gearbox is coupled to the low-pressure turbine of the core engine and comprises a first rotational speed, the output of the gearbox is coupled to the fan assembly and has a second rotational speed, and a gear ratio of the first rotational speed to the second rotational speed is within a range of 3.2-4.0. The overall engine efficiency rating is within a range of 0.57-8.0.

Gas turbine engine transfer efficiency
11560853 · 2023-01-24 · ·

A gas turbine engine for an aircraft includes an engine core including a first, lower pressure, turbine, a first compressor, and a first core shaft connecting the first turbine to the first compressor; and a second, higher pressure, turbine, a second compressor, and a second core shaft connecting the second turbine to the second compressor, and a fan located upstream of the engine core and including a plurality of fan blades extending from a hub. A turbine to fan tip temperature change ratio of a low pressure turbine temperature change to a fan tip temperature rise is in the range from 1.46 to 2.0.

SHAFT BEARING POSITIONING IN A GAS TURBINE ENGINE

A gas turbine engine for an aircraft includes an engine core including a turbine, a compressor, and a core shaft connecting the turbine to the compressor, a fan located upstream of the engine core, and a gearbox. The turbine is the lowest pressure turbine of the engine, and has a turbine length that is the distance between the root of the most upstream blade of the turbine at its leading edge and the root of the most downstream blade of the lowest pressure turbine at its trailing edge. The engine core further includes three bearings arranged to support the core shaft. The three bearings include a forward bearing and two rearward bearings, with a minor span being defined as the axial distance between the two rearward bearings. A ratio of the minor span to a turbine length is equal to or less than 1.05.

Probe placement optimization in gas turbine engines

A method of optimizing probe placement in a turbomachine is disclosed which includes establishing a design matrix A of size m×(2N+1) utilized in developing flow properties around an annulus of a turbomachine, where m represents the number of datapoints at different circumferential locations around the annulus, and N represents dominant wavelets generated by upstream and downstream stators and blade row interactions formed around an annulus, wherein m is greater or equal to 2N+1, and optimizing probe positioning by iteratively modifying probe positions placed around the annulus and for each iteration determining a condition number of the design matrix A for each set of probe positions until a predetermined threshold is achieved for the condition number representing an optimal probe layout.