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Turboelectric Distributed Propulsion in a Hybrid Wing Body Aircraft

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TLDR
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.
Abstract
The performance of 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. The TeDP system utilizes superconducting electric generators, motors and transmission lines to allow the power producing and thrust producing portions of the system to be widely separated. It also allows a small number of large turboshaft engines to drive any number of propulsors. On the N3-X these new degrees of freedom were used to (1) place two large turboshaft engines driving generators in freestream conditions to maximize thermal efficiency and (2) to embed a broad continuous array of 15 motor driven propulsors on the upper surface of the aircraft near the trailing edge. That location maximizes the amount of the boundary layer ingested and thus maximizes propulsive efficiency. The Boeing B777-200LR flying 7500 nm (13890 km) with a cruise speed of Mach 0.84 and an 118100 lb payload was selected as the reference aircraft and mission for this study. In order to distinguish between improvements due to technology and aircraft configuration changes from those due to the propulsion configuration changes, an intermediate configuration was included in this study. In this configuration a pylon mounted, ultra high bypass (UHB) geared turbofan engine with identical propulsion technology was integrated into the same hybrid wing body airframe. That aircraft achieved a 52% reduction in mission fuel burn relative to the reference aircraft. The N3-X was able to achieve a reduction of 70% and 72% (depending on the cooling system) relative to the reference aircraft. The additional 18% - 20% reduction in the mission fuel burn can therefore be attributed to the additional degrees of freedom in the propulsion system configuration afforded by the TeDP system that eliminates nacelle and pylon drag, maximizes boundary layer ingestion (BLI) to reduce inlet drag on the propulsion system, and reduces the wake drag of the vehicle.

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References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Design of the Blended Wing Body Subsonic Transport

TL;DR: The Boeing Blended-Wing Body (BWB) airplane concept represents a potential breakthrough in subsonic transport efficiency as discussed by the authors, and work began on this concept via a study to demonstrate feasibility and begin development of this new class of airplane.
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.
Journal ArticleDOI

Hybrid Wing Body Aircraft System Noise Assessment with Propulsion Airframe Aeroacoustic Experiments

TL;DR: The best configuration for reduction of jet noise used state-of-the-art technology chevrons with a pylon above the engine in the crown position, which resulted in jet source noise reduction, favorable azimuthal directivity, and noise source relocation upstream.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

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

TL;DR: 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.
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