The Boom SST engine problem

By Bjorn Fehrm

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Introduction

November 28, 2016, ©. Leeham Co: We covered Boom Technology’s and Virgin Atlantic’s plans to offer supersonic business class passenger traffic over the Atlantic in recent articles. In the first article, we focused on the problem areas that Boom technology must master.

The most difficult area is to find a suitable engine for the aircraft. Engines for long-range supersonic flight are quite different animals than the normal subsonic airliner engine. We will go through why the engines are different and give an example of how such an engine could look.

airplane-1

Figure 1. Boom Technologies Boom Mach 2.2 airliner with 45 seaters. Source: Boom.

By creating a concrete example of an SST engine for an aircraft the class of the Boom SST, it will be possible to understand if Boom’s claim that suitable cores are available holds water, and how realistic is it to make an SST engine from these.

Summary:

  • An SST engine is very different from a modern engine for a long-range airliner.
  • A high-performing long-range engine for a normal airliner has a high bypass and pressure ratio.
  • A high-perfoming long-range SST engine for a supersonic airliner has a low bypass and pressure ratio.
  • Intakes and exhausts on subsonic engine nacelles are simple.
  • Intakes and exhausts on supersonic engine nacelles are not simple.
  • Considering all these factors, we will design an engine system for the Boom SST to get a deeper understanding of the challenges involved.

Discussion

The supersonic flight problem

The transport of passengers in high supersonic speed is quite different from the normal cruise at around Mach 0.8. Concorde cruised at 2.0 and demonstrated to the world the kind of technologies that would be needed.

One of the areas which is very different to a normal airliner is the engine and its enclosure, the nacelle. A jet engine get its thrust by giving the air that it has swallowed a higher speed out the back (the air overspeed as we call it). Thrust is the sum of the mass of air being ejected times its overspeed.

At a normal airliner speed of M0.8, the aircraft flies around 300m/s faster than the surrounding air (M0.8 equals ~300m/s at FL300 or higher). As the engine’s compressor needs to work with air at an axial speed of ~M0.5 and the air entering the combustor should go even slower (ca M0.3), the incoming air is slowed down in the nacelle intake.

As air is slowed down, the air pressure increases, for a subsonic airliner to approximately 1.5 times higher than at the nacelle inlet. As air pressure increases, the air temperature increases; for the normal airliner with 30°C.

A supersonic airliner flies at M2.0-2.2 (Concorde at M2.0, Boom at M2.2). Here, the air needs to brake from 600-660m/s to around 150m/s at the engine inlet. Should this slowing of the air happen without losses, we would have a pressure rise of 10.7 times. Unfortunately, we also have an air temperature increase of 170°C.

Materials for making compressor parts/casings can withstand around 700°C. For a normal airliner engine, the -56° outside air temperature at FL360 (11,800m) and higher and the 30°C rise before the compressor leaves 726°C for the compressor temp. increase and therefore air compression. This allows compression ratios of 110 times if we assume the compressor works with the common 90% (isentropic) efficiency.

The most advanced long-range engines today use a maximum compression of 58 times (GE GEnx-1B75), so there is plenty of margin before we hit a compressor temperature limit at cruise.

This is not the case for the SST engines. In fact, the compressor temperature and pressure at the nacelle intake influences the whole design of the engine. We must keep compression levels down in the engine to make things work.

Boom SST engine

Boom Technology stated that it identified existing engine cores that could work for their SST engine. This engine core should be combined with a new low pressure system, i.e., fan/low pressure compressor/turbine to be paired with the core’s high pressure compressor/combustor/turbine.

The problem is that we can only allow the new combined system to raise the pressure by 23 times, otherwise we exceed the material limit of 700°C at the end of the compressor.  We only find 23 times Overall Pressure Ratio (OPR) in supersonic fighter engines for the same reason as for the SST.

The Eurofighter Typhoon has an engine, the EJ200 (Figure 2), which has a suitable compression ratio of 26 in total; four are in the triple fan section. It also has a core that could be suitable for our SST engine. The core’s high pressure compressor has a pressure ratio of 6.5.

ej200

Figure 2. Eurofighter EJ200 turbofan with afterburner and advanced nozzle. Source: Rolls-Royce.

Inlet

The Typhoon has the same multi-chock inlet type that the SST need to fly efficiently at M2.0, giving the intake system a pressure gain around 10 (and a temp. increase of 170°C). The overall pressure ratio (OPR) of the engine is adapted to this flight situation.

The Typhoon and the Boom SST need an advanced inlet for the nacelle to gain the incoming air’s latent pressure ratio of over 10 at M2.0. Figure 3 shows what happens if we use a conventional pitot intake like on present airliner engines.

 

variable-ramp-inlet-losses

Figure 3. Intake losses for multi chock inlets like F15/Concorde/Typhoon and std. pitot intake like F16 or jet airliners. Source: Cumpsty “Jet Propulsion”.

Like the F16, we would lose pressure but not temperature as energy from losses converts into increased temperature of the air. A pressure loss of 20% at M2.0 compared to a variable multi-chock inlet (like the F15) is not acceptable. Hence, our SST nacelle must have a variable multi-chock inlet, like the F15/Concorde, Figure 4.

variable-ramp-inlet

Figure 4. A variable ramp multi-chock inlet like the Concorde/F15 inlet. Source: Cumpsty “Jet propulsion”.

Mixer and nozzle

The EJ200 engine in Figure 3 also has something else which is needed on a SST engine: an advanced Convergent-Divergent outlet nozzle. At an aircraft speed of 600m/s, we need to accelerate the air leaving the engine at a speed higher than 600m/s, otherwise we will not get any thrust.

The air inside the engine has a speed of around 150m/s and we need to accelerate the air to at least 700m/s to get any overspeed value in our overspeed*mass_of_air thrust equation. A conventional fixed Convergent nozzle is a compromise between efficient speed increase of the air and low weight/complexity.

A Convergent-Divergent nozzle works much better, to the level that it’s necessary for a SST application. To accelerate all the air, both core and by pass stream, we need to mix the air before the Convergent-Divergent nozzle in a mixer. For the EJ200, the mixer also doubles as an afterburner, something that the Boom SST engine will not use.

SST engine design and data

In the next article, we will dig deeper into the SST engine. We will examine the data for the EJ200 core and see if it could be used for our SST engine. If so, what changes would need to be done?

We will also consider an alternative engine core, the GE414, and see if this would suit our needs better.

6 Comments on “The Boom SST engine problem

  1. Merci !

    Overall OPR of the Inlet + Turbojet of the Concorde is said to be higher the Genx If i recall well !

    • Hi Crise,

      yes it was. The intake gain you something like 10 times pressure raise if your multi-chock system is well designed and controlled and the engine can keep a pressure ratio of around 6-8 at cruise before the T3 temp gets over the structural limits of alloys like Inconel/Udiment/Hays/Rene etc. A Boom SST engine wrestles with the same limitations and would have a total ambient to P3 pressure ratio in the same order. In addition it has the limitation that it should use an existing core. We will see in later articles what we reach.

  2. Thank you very much Leeham team and Bjorn for digging into what’s needed in engines to make SSTs work. We have the airframe design we want to use and a breakthrough 38-degree reclining seat comfort (no back seat impacts) to fit London to Sydney trips non-stop. At Mach 2 (1320 mph) it’s just an 8 hr trip to great beaches, big fun, and 100 seat/jet big airline profits. Our breakthrough design fits about a 100,000 lb TOW jet, and payback can be fast to the airline. At $2500/ticket each way that’s $180 million income a year/jet. We were going to mold a big airplane, but opted to standardize on lightweight slippery SSTs instead. Our lift L/D will be high and weight and noise way down, so Concord’s 593 at SFC 1.195 would be spectacular, but we can live with say an SFC 1.4 at cruise, even higher if necessary. If a company will do that engine for us, we have the needed airframe design tied up and 14 months patent pending with 20 claims (3 independent and 17 dependent). We have airframe funding coming, and foresee hundreds of jets a year possible. Who wants that engine order? GE, PW; call Burk at 1.541.788.1385 or Lloyd at 1.207.721.949 and let’s talk. We think both of you have engines that will work well and be plug and play like the 593. Let’s not delay, let’s just do it.

  3. A quick question. From the research that has been provided. There is projected to be a Mach Speed cap over land, is this driven by noise abatement concerns?

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