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Propulsion

About: Propulsion is a research topic. Over the lifetime, 24977 publications have been published within this topic receiving 200311 citations.


Papers
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Proceedings ArticleDOI
01 Mar 2010
TL;DR: In this paper, three distinct parallel hybrid-electric propulsion systems were analyzed and compared using a constrained static optimization formulation based upon traditional aircraft design equations, each system combined an internal combustion engine sized for cruise speed with an electric motor sized for endurance speed.
Abstract: : Currently fielded electric-powered small unmanned aircraft systems (UAS) lack the endurance desired by warfighters, while their internal combustion engine driven counterparts generate mission compromising acoustic and thermal signatures Parallel hybrid-electric propulsion systems would meet the military's needs by combining the advantages of hydrocarbon and electric power systems Three distinct parallel hybrid-electric system designs, each with three unique battery discharging profiles, were analyzed and compared using a constrained static optimization formulation based upon traditional aircraft design equations Each system combined an internal combustion engine sized for cruise speed with an electric motor sized for endurance speed The nine variations were compared using a typical intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance (ISR) mission profile The analysis determined the most suitable design for the baseline ISR mission and provided recommended missions for the remaining designs

55 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, a 1D thermodynamic cycle analysis is coupled to a Reynolds-averaged Navier-Stokes simulation to model the aft propulsor at a cruise condition and the effects variation in propulsion design on overall performance.
Abstract: Airframe–propulsion integration concepts that use boundary-layer ingestion (BLI) have the potential to reduce aircraft fuel burn. One concept that has been recently explored is NASA’s STARC-ABL aircraft configuration, which offers the potential for fuel burn reduction by using a turboelectric propulsion system with an aft-mounted electrically driven BLI propulsor. So far, attempts to quantify this potential fuel burn reduction have not considered the full coupling between the aerodynamic and propulsive performance. To address the need for a more careful quantification of the aeropropulsive benefit of the STARC-ABL concept, we run a series of design optimisations based on a fully coupled aeropropulsive model. A 1D thermodynamic cycle analysis is coupled to a Reynolds-averaged Navier–Stokes simulation to model the aft propulsor at a cruise condition and the effects variation in propulsor design on overall performance. A series of design optimisation studies are performed to minimise the required cruise power, assuming different relative sizes of the BLI propulsor. The design variables consist of the fan pressure ratio, static pressure at the fan face, and 311 variables that control the shape of both the nacelle and the fuselage. The power required by the BLI propulsor is compared with a podded configuration. The results show that the BLI configuration offers 6–9% reduction in required power at cruise, depending on assumptions made about the efficiency of power transmission system between the under-wing engines and the aft propulsor. Additionally, the results indicate that the power transmission efficiency directly affects the relative size of the under-wing engines and the aft propulsor. This design optimisation, based on computational fluid dynamics, is shown to be essential to evaluate current BLI concepts and provides a powerful tool for the design of future concepts.

55 citations

01 Dec 2000
TL;DR: The work performed by General Electric Aircraft Engines (GEAE) and Alliant Engine Company (AEC) on NASA Contract NAS3-27720 AoI 14.3 is described in this paper.
Abstract: This report describes the work performed by General Electric Aircraft Engines (GEAE) and Allison Engine Company (AEC) on NASA Contract NAS3-27720 AoI 14.3. The objective of this contract was to generate quality jet noise acoustic data for separate-flow nozzle models and to design and verify new jet-noise-reduction concepts over a range of simulated engine cycles and flight conditions. Five baseline axisymmetric separate-flow nozzle models having bypass ratios of five and eight with internal and external plugs and 11 different mixing-enhancer model nozzles (including chevrons, vortex-generator doublets, and a tongue mixer) were designed and tested in model scale. Using available core and fan nozzle hardware in various combinations, 28 GEAE/AEC separate-flow nozzle/mixing-enhancer configurations were acoustically evaluated in the NASA Glenn Research Center Aeroacoustic and Propulsion Laboratory. This report describes model nozzle features, facility and data acquisition/reduction procedures, the test matrix, and measured acoustic data analyses. A number of tested core and fan mixing enhancer devices and combinations of devices gave significant jet noise reduction relative to separate-flow baseline nozzles. Inward-flip and alternating-flip core chevrons combined with a straight-chevron fan nozzle exceeded the NASA stretch goal of 3 EPNdB jet noise reduction at typical sideline certification conditions.

55 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, two energy-saving devices for 317k VLCC have been developed from a propulsion standpoint via computational tools, and two ESD candidates were designed via computational tool.

55 citations


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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers in the topic in previous years
YearPapers
20231,085
20222,061
2021739
20201,050
20191,194
20181,187