Turbojet
Turbojet
Turbojet
2 EARLY DESIGNS
smaller diameter, although longer, engine. By replacing
the propeller used on piston engines with a high speed jet
of exhaust higher aircraft speeds were attainable.
One of the last applications for a turbojet engine was the
Concorde which used the Olympus 593 engine. At the
time of its design the turbojet was still seen as the optimum for cruising at twice the speed of sound despite the
advantage of turbofans for lower speeds. For the Concorde less fuel was required to produce a given thrust for
a mile at Mach 2.0 than a modern high-bypass turbofan
such as General Electric CF6 at its Mach 0.86 optimum
speed.
Turbojet engines had a signicant impact on commercial
aviation. Aside from giving faster ight speeds turbojets had greater reliability than piston engines, with some
models demonstrating dispatch reliability rating in excess
of 99.9%. Pre-jet commercial aircraft were designed
with as many as 4 engines in part because of concerns
over in-ight failures. Overseas ight paths were plotted
to keep planes within an hour of a landing eld, lengthening ights. The increase in reliability that came with the
turbojet enabled three and two-engine designs, and more
direct long-distance ights.[5]
Albert Fon's German patent for jet engines (January 1928). The
third illustration is a turbojet
2 Early designs
Heinkel He 178, the worlds rst aircraft to y purely on turbojet
power, using an HeS 3 engine
3.3
Combustion chamber
3
cooling. Bleeding air o decreases the overall eciency
of the engine, but the usefulness of the compressed air
outweighs the loss in eciency.
Compressor types used in turbojets were typically axial
or centrifugal.
3
3.1
Design
Air intake
3.2
3.4 Turbine
Compressor
Hot gases leaving the combustor expand through the turbine. Typical materials for turbines include inconel and
The compressor is driven by the turbine. It rotates at high Nimonic.[9] The turbine vanes and blades have internal
speed, adding energy to the airow and at the same time cooling passages. Air from the compressor is passed
squeezing (compressing) it into a smaller space. Com- through these to keep the metal temperature within limits.
pressing the air increases its pressure and temperature. In the rst stage the turbine is largely an impulse turbine
The smaller the compressor the faster it turns. At the (similar to a pelton wheel) and rotates because of the imlarge end of the range the GE-90-115 fan rotates at about pact of the hot gas stream. Later stages are convergent
2,500 RPM while a small helicopter engine compressor ducts that accelerate the gas. Energy is transferred into
rotates at about 50,000 RPM.
the shaft through momentum exchange in the opposite
In most turbojet-powered aircraft, bleed air is extracted from the compressor section at various stages
to perform a variety of jobs including air conditioning/pressurization, engine inlet anti-icing and turbine
way to energy transfer in the compressor. The power developed by the turbine drives the compressor as well as
accessories, like fuel, oil, and hydraulic pumps that are
driven by the accessory gearbox.
7 NOTES
3.5
Nozzle
the airframe. The speed Vj can be calculated thermodynamically based on adiabatic expansion.[13]
6 See also
3.6.1
Afterburner
7 Notes
4
Net thrust
FN = m
air (Vj V )
References
Springer, Edwin H. (2001). Constructing A Turbocharger Turbojet Engine. Turbojet Technologies.
External links
Erich Warsitz, the worlds rst jet pilot: includes
rare videos (Heinkel He 178) and audio commentaries]
NASA Turbojet Engine Description: includes a
software model]
10
10
10.1
10.2
Images
10.3
Content license