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Proceedings ArticleDOI

An Examination of the Effect of Boundary Layer Ingestion on Turboelectric Distributed Propulsion Systems

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TLDR
In this article, the effect of the boundary layer on the design of a turboelectric distributed propulsion (TeDP) system with a range of design pressure ratios was examined, and the impact of ingesting the boundary layers on off-design performance was examined.
Abstract
A Turboelectric Distributed Propulsion (TeDP) system differs from other propulsion systems by the use of electrical power to transmit power from the turbine to the fan. Electrical power can be efficiently transmitted over longer distances and with complex topologies. Also the use of power inverters allows the generator and motors speeds to be independent of one another. This decoupling allows the aircraft designer to place the core engines and the fans in locations most advantageous for each. The result can be very different installation environments for the different devices. Thus the installation effects on this system can be quite different than conventional turbofans where the fan and core both see the same installed environments. This paper examines a propulsion system consisting of two superconducting generators, each driven by a turboshaft engine located so that their inlets ingest freestream air, superconducting electrical transmission lines, and an array of superconducting motor driven fan positioned across the upper/rear fuselage area of a hybrid wing body aircraft in a continuous nacelle that ingests all of the upper fuselage boundary layer. The effect of ingesting the boundary layer on the design of the system with a range of design pressure ratios is examined. Also the impact of ingesting the boundary layer on off-design performance is examined. The results show that when examining different design fan pressure ratios it is important to recalculate of the boundary layer mass-average Pt and MN up the height for each inlet height during convergence of the design point for each fan design pressure ratio examined. Correct estimation of off-design performance is dependent on the height of the column of air measured from the aircraft surface immediately prior to any external diffusion that will flow through the fan propulsors. The mass-averaged Pt and MN calculated for this column of air determine the Pt and MN seen by the propulsor inlet. Since the height of this column will change as the amount of air passing through the fans change as the propulsion system is throttled, and since the mass-average Pt and MN varies by height, this capture height must be recalculated as the airflow through the propulsor is varied as the off-design performance point is converged.

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Citations
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Proceedings ArticleDOI

A Review of Distributed Electric Propulsion Concepts for Air Vehicle Technology

TL;DR: The emergence of distributed electric propulsion (DEP) concepts for aircraft systems has enabled new capabilities in the overall efficiency, capabilities, and robustness of future air vehicles and provides flexible operational capabilities far beyond those of current systems.

Turboelectric Distributed Propulsion in a Hybrid Wing Body Aircraft

TL;DR: The N3-X, a 300 passenger hybrid wing body (HWB) aircraft with turboelectric distributed propulsion (TeDP), has been analyzed to see if it can meet the 70% fuel burn reduction goal of the NASA Subsonic Fixed Wing project for N+3 generation aircraft as discussed by the authors.
Journal ArticleDOI

Boundary Layer Ingestion Benefit of the D8 Transport Aircraft

TL;DR: In this article, the authors present the experimental assessment of the aerodynamic benefit of boundary layer ingestion for an advanced design civil transport aircraft, the D8 "double bubble", carried out from 2010 to 2013.
Journal ArticleDOI

Comparison of candidate architectures for future distributed propulsion aircraft

TL;DR: The findings of this paper conclude that a purely ac synchronous network performs best in terms of mass and efficiency, but similar levels of functionality and controllability to an architecture with electrical decoupling via dc cannot readily be achieved.
References
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Proceedings ArticleDOI

Performance of a Boundary Layer Ingesting (BLI) propulsion system

TL;DR: In this article, an assessment of the performance of an embedded propulsion system in the presence of distortion associated with boundary layer ingestion is presented, and it is shown that boundary layers ingestion can provide decreases in fuel burn of several per cent.

Turboelectric Distributed Propulsion Engine Cycle Analysis for Hybrid-Wing-Body Aircraft

TL;DR: In this paper, a propulsion system which transmits power from the turbine to the fan electrically rather than mechanically was presented, and the performance of the fan inlet was evaluated.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

Weights and Efficiencies of Electric Components of a Turboelectric Aircraft Propulsion System

TL;DR: In this article, the benefits of using a lower fan pressure ratio and of boundary layer ingestion, offset by the electric system weight and inefficiency penalties from the added components, gives a net fuel burn reduction of about 9%, before iterating and resizing.