Topic 5
AIRCRAFT GTE: FUNCTIONAL PRINCIPLE,
SCHEMES AND PARAMETERS
                    С.М. Юнусов       1
   The main parts of GTE
                                                               The air inlet section is used for supplying air to
                                                              the engine and for partial conversion of the
                                                              kinetic energy of air flow into the potential
                                                              energy of compressed air upstream the
                                                              compressor.
                                                              The compressor serves to supply mechanical
                                                              energy to the airflow and convert it to potential
                                                              energy of compressed air.
 In the combustion chamber, the chemical energy of the fuel is converted into thermal energy and is
supplied to air flow, i.e., the working medium temperature rise is provided (the working medium should be
construed as air gas flow passing through the engine).
The turbine is used to drive the compressor and fan, due to the fact that the potential energy of the
compressed and heated gas is converted into mechanical work of the shaft.
The nozzle is used to convert the thermal and potential energy of the working medium into kinetic energy
of the jet flowing from the engine.
Gas Turbine Schematic and Station Numbers
ARP-775A (Aerospace Recommended Practice)   Free stream conditions are labeled 0 and
                                            the entrance to the inlet is station 1. The
                                            exit of the inlet, which is the beginning of
                                            the compressor, is labeled station 2. The
                                            compressor exit and burner entrance is
                                            station 3 while the burner exit and turbine
                                            entrance is station 4. The exit of the turbine
                                            is station 5 and the flow conditions
                                            upstream of the afterburner occur at
                                            station 6. Station 7 is at the entrance to the
                                            nozzle and station 8 is at the nozzle throat.
                                            Some nozzles have an additional section
                                            downstream of the throat which would be
                                            station 9.
Schematic diagram of a turbojet (dual axial
compressor and turbine)
Schematic diagram of a high-bypass-ratio turbofan
Station numbering for gas turbine engines
Air-breathing engine cycles p =const (Brayton cycle )
                             0-2-3 – adiabatic (isentropic)
                              compression performed within a free jet
                              upstream the engine at the expense of
                              dynamic pressure (dynamic compression)
                              and in the compressor (mechanical
                              compression).
                             3-4 - isobaric heat supply in the
                              combustion chamber
                             4-5-8 - adiabatic (isentropic) expansion in
                              the gas turbine and jet nozzle.
                             8-0 – isobaric heat transfer from the hot
                              jet flowing from engine to the
                              environment.
Air-breathing engine cycles in T-S
            Entropy
Entropy
In thermodynamics, in addition to state functions - internal energy u and enthalpy i, another state
function, specific entropy s, plays an important role. Entropy is a physical quantity whose change is a
sign of the presence of an exchange of energy in the form of heat. For a long time, a change in
temperature was considered a sign of the presence of heat transfer. However, it is not. For example,
when water boils, a large amount of heat is supplied to it, but the temperature remains constant. The
following example, when liquids solidify, heat is removed, but this does not lead to a decrease in
temperature until all the liquid turns into crystals. In these examples, heat transfer does not result in a
change in temperature. When gas is compressed in a cylinder, the temperature of the gas rises, although
heat can even be removed through the walls if they are cold. In this example, the change in temperature
is not caused by heat transfer, but by mechanical work.
     THE MAIN FEATURE OF ENTROPY AS A THERMODYNAMIC QUANTITY IS THAT IT MANDATORY
                             CHANGES IN THE PRESENCE OF HEAT TRANSFER.
The main difficulty in understanding entropy as a thermodynamic quantity is that entropy cannot be
measured with instruments like pressure or temperature.
However, it is possible to calculate the change in entropy from the change in parameters that can be
measured, i.e. temperature, volume, pressure. Therefore, entropy is a function of the state of the
thermodynamic system. The relationship between the amount of heat and the change in entropy is the
same as the relationship between the amount of work and the change in volume - dl=Pdv
Entropy
T
                                             P
                  dq=TdS                                    dL=PdV
                     T
                                                                   P
                              S
                                                                            V
             dS
                                                           dV
Therefore, entropy is a function of the state of the thermodynamic system. The relationship between the amount
of heat and the change in entropy is the same as the relationship between the amount of work and the change in
volume - dl=Pdv.
 The graphic representation of the equation T=f(S) is the so-called entropy diagram (or thermal diagram).
  Entropy
  By definition, entropy is a state function whose differential is equal to
                                             dq
                                      ds 
                                             T
  Using equation 1 of the law of thermodynamics and the equation of state, entropy can be converted to
  the following form:
                                                           dq  du  dL
                                   dT    dv                du  cv dT , dL  pdv
                         ds  cv      R                                             cv dT  pdv      dT pdv
                                   T     v                 dq  cv dT  pdv  ds                 cv   
                                                                                          T           T   T
                                                                        p R
                                                            pv  RT     
                                                                        T v
Then it is obvious that s  s T , p  , we can also show that s  s  p, v  and s  s T , p 
   Entropy
For an elementary reversible process:
                                          The entropy increment can be expressed in terms of one
       dq  Tds                           pair of thermodynamic parameters:
                                                           T2      v2
This expression is called equation 2 of          s  cv ln  R ln
the law of thermodynamics for                              T1      v1
reversible processes. It follows from
this expression, since T>0, then the                        T2      p2
signs of dq and ds coincide. If heat is          s  c p ln  R ln
supplied, then dq>0, and therefore                          T1      p1
ds>0. If heat is removed, then dq<0
                                                           v2      p2
and ds<0. If dq=0, then ds=0.                    s  cv ln  R ln
                                                           v1      p1
Ideal cycle p = const
                    The ideal ABE cycle depicted in circuit 0-2-3-4-5-8-0 is a closed air cycle of
                    unchanged chemical composition with a constant heat capacity, independent
                    of temperature. The cycle is the main cycle of the ABE. The area bounded by
                    the contour 0-2-3-4-5-8-0 depicts, on a certain scale, the useful work of an
                    ideal cycle. This useful work can be obtained in the form of an increment in
                    the kinetic energy of 1 kg of air inside the engine (turbojet engine), or
                    partially or completely in the form of mechanical energy removed through
                    the turbine shaft to the consumer (propeller or fan). Thus, the useful work of
                    the cycle is equal to:
                                                              с82  V 2
                                                    Lc  Lm            ,
                                                                  2
                        where is c8 the gas velocity at the exit from the engine nozzle, V is the
                        aircraft flight speed. In the cycle, the processes of compression and heating
                        of the working fluid occur, which are
                                                                                  p3
                        characterized by the degree of compression          
                                                                                  p0
                                                               T4
                        and the degree of heating         
                                                               T0
                        The thermal efficiency of a cycle is determined by the following
                        expression:                               1
                                                        t  1      ,
                                                                    k 1
                                                                    k
Real ABE cycle
                     The actual thermodynamic cycle essentially differs from the ideal cycle p =
                     const , since it consists of actual irreversible processes accompanied by various
                     losses and thermochemical
                     reactions. An actual cycle having compression ratios  and heating ratios  equal
                     to ideal cycle.
                 The actual cycle consists of:
                  0-2-3 polytropic process of compression, with friction-generated heat additive
                   (dynamic compression 0-2) and the mechanic compression process (2-3)/
                  3-4 – polytropic heat additive within the combustion chamber, with a pressure
                   drop due to various losses. As a result of the chemical reaction of air-fuel
                   mixture combustion, the chemical composition and the volume of the working
                   medium is changed (at the expense of fuel supply) and the heat capacity of
                   gas is increased.
                  4-5-8 – polytropic expansion process which consists of the expansion process
                   within the turbine and that within the jet nozzle, with friction-generated heat
                   additive.
                  8-0 – isobaric process of heat rejection.
Real ABE cycle
Thus, the actual cycle of ABE is a polytropic cycle with variable chemical composition and variable heat capacity
of the working medium (air + gas). Unlike the ideal cycle, an actual cycle is an “open” loop, since the engine-
generated out-flowing gases cease to take part in the work intermittently performed and do not get to the ABE
intake.
The presence of friction in all the processes occurring in ABE reduces the effective work of the cycle, which
ultimately reduces the ABE-generated thrust and makes its fuel-saving indices worse. To prove this assertion,
suffice it to compare the two cycles in terms of supplied (q ) and rejected (q ) heat.
                                                           I               II
Since the heating-up interval within the combustion chamber decreases as a result of compressor friction-
generated heating, then , since . The temperature rise of out-flowing gases from the jet nozzle in the actual cycle,
i.e., , attests to the fact that the rejected heat volume has increased, i.e.,
. Consequently, the effective work of the actual cycle is less than that of the ideal cycle, i.e.,
If we deduct the summarized work spent on compression from the summarized expansion work, we will
obtain the effective work of actual cycle of ABE:
Real ABE cycle
   At the same time, the summarized gas expansion work in actual cycle is equal to:
 The summarized air compression work:
Then, by substituting (2) and (3) into (1), the effective work of the cycle will be equal to:
If , then
Thrust of air-breathing, direct-reaction engine
                                                                                  f8
                                                                                                   
                      Rgross    Ggas c8  GairV   f 8  p8  p0    X fric    p  p0  df 
                                                                                 f0              
                      Rnet  Ggas c8  GairV   f8  p8  p0 
                               How can increase engine thrust?
Change in thrust from external conditions
Main data and specific parameters of aircraft GTE
Specific parameters of indirect-reaction GTE
                                                   3600 g fuel
                                        C fuel                  , kg / ( N  h) 
                                                       Rs
                                                      G fuel
                                        g fuel 
                                                   Gair  3600
                                                   3600  g fuel Gair       3600 g fuel
                                        C fuel                         
                                                    Gair C8  V               Rs
Thanks !