I was idly thinking about turboprops the other day, when that ducked fan (I think that ought to be the new word for them) question came up. Given the the figure of merit for them does not seem to exceed 0.6, yet a marine propeller can be 0.8, why on earth do people bother with ducked fans rather than propellers? OK there are practical considerations, obviously an unducted prop has to operate in chilly rarefied air and is in danger of exceeding the speed of sound at the tip, even for reasonably subsonic aircraft speeds. A ducked fan can have a shaped inlet to decelerate the intake air before it accelerates again in the thrust stage.
And then I went and did a google search and found that the above statement may be wrong. Sadly the best papers are on NTRS and dtic.mil which now appears to be inaccessible.
here's a nice graph contradicting the above, unfortunately it is CFD not real. t/h is the tip clearance
But in real tests my point remains
figure 7 in particular., here it is
That's a bit off topic.
So having got that out of my rapidly disappearing hair, I agree that they are getting ready for a breakthrough in battery technology, but given that the efficiency of the hot part of a gas turbine is probably quite poor, particularly when cruising at lower speeds, ahha, maybe that's it. An aircraft needs a lot of thrust to take off and climb, but for optimum cruising efficiency you'd actually prefer to fly more slowly than M 0.92, but for a conventional jet there is no point in doing so since the engine efficiency drops off, so what you gain aerodynamically you lose in the engine. Other engine types, such as diesels, are quite happy to operate at part load.
I have thought of another way of achieving the same thing - switch an engine off when cruising. You'd need some way of blanking off the intake etc of the redundant engine, but that is not beyond the wit of man.
Cheers
Greg Locock
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