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How Gas Turbine Engines Work
by Marshall Brain    

When you go to an airport and see the commercial jets there, you can't help but notice the huge engines that power them. Most commercial jets are powered by turbofan engines, and turbofans are one example of a general class of engines called Gas Turbine engines. You may have never heard of gas turbine engines, but they are used in all kinds of unexpected places. For example, many of the helicopters you see, a lot of smaller power plants and even the M-1 Tank use gas turbines. In this edition of How Stuff Works we will look at gas turbine engines to see what makes them tick and learn why they are becoming a popular engine choice today. There's also a great set of links at the bottom of the page if you want to learn more.

A Little Background
There are many different kinds of turbines:

A gas turbine is an extension on the same concept. In a gas turbine a pressurized gas spins the turbine. In all modern gas turbine engines the engine produces its own pressurized gas, and it does this by burning something like propane, natural gas, kerosene or jet fuel. The heat that comes from burning the fuel expands air, and the high-speed rush of this hot air spins the turbine.

Advantages and Disadvantages of Gas Turbine Engines
So why does the M-1 tank use a 1,500 horsepower gas turbine engine instead of a diesel engine? It turns out that there are two big advantages:

  1. Gas turbine engines have a great power-to-weight ratio compared to reciprocating engines. That is, the amount of power you get out of the engine compared to the weight of the engine itself is very good.
  2. Gas turbine engines are also smaller than their reciprocating counterparts of the same power.
The main disadvantage of gas turbines is that, compared to a reciprocating engine of the same size, they are expensive. Because they spin at such high speeds and because of the high operating temperatures, designing and manufacturing gas turbines is a tough problem from both the engineering and materials standpoint. Gas turbines also tend to use more fuel when they are idling and they prefer a constant load rather than a fluctuating load. That makes gas turbines great for things like trans-continental jet aircraft and power plants, but explains why you don't have one under the hood of your car.

How Gas Turbine Engines Work
Gas turbine engines are, theoretically, extremely simple. They have 3 parts:

The following figure shows the general layout of an axial-flow gas turbine - the sort of engine you would find driving the rotor of a helicopter, for example:

In this engine air is sucked in from the right by the compressor. The compressor is basically a cone-shaped cylinder with small fan blades attached in rows (8 rows of blades are represented here). Assuming the light blue represents air at normal air pressure, then as the air is forced through the compression stage its pressure rises significantly. In some engines the pressure of the air can rise by a factor of 30. The high-pressure air produced by the compressor is shown in dark blue.

This high-pressure air then enters the combustion area, where a ring of fuel injectors injects a steady stream of fuel. The fuel is generally kerosene, jet fuel, propane, or natural gas. If you think about how easy it is to blow a candle out, then you can see the design problem in the combustion area - entering this area is high-pressure air moving at hundreds of miles per hour. You want to keep a flame burning continuously in that environment. The piece that solves this problem is called a "flame holder", or sometimes a "can". The can is a hollow, perforated piece of heavy metal (shown here is half of the can in cross-section):

The injectors are at the right. Compressed air enters through the perforations. Exhaust gases exit at the left. You can see in the previous figure that a second set of cylinders wraps around the inside and the outside of this perforated can, guiding the compressed intake air into the perforations.

At the left of the engine is the turbine section. In this figure there are two sets of turbines. The first set directly drives the compressor. The turbines, the shaft and the compressor all turn as a single unit:

At the far left is a final turbine stage, shown here with a single set of vanes. It drives the output shaft. This final turbine stage and the output shaft are a completely stand-alone, freewheeling unit. They spin freely without any connection to the rest of the engine. And that is the amazing part about a gas turbine engine - there is enough energy in the hot gases blowing through the blades of that final output turbine to generate 1,500 horsepower and drive a 63 ton M-1 Tank! A gas turbine engine really is that simple.

In the case of the turbine used in a tank or a power plant, there really is nothing to do with the exhaust gases but vent them through an exhaust pipe, as shown. Sometimes the exhaust will run through some sort of heat exchanger either to extract the heat for some other purpose or to preheat air before it enters the combustion chamber.

The discussion here is obviously simplified a bit. For example, we have not discussed the areas of bearings, oiling systems, internal support structures of the engine, stator vanes and so on. All of these areas become major engineering problems because of the tremendous temperatures, pressures and spin rates inside the engine. But the basic principles described here govern all gas turbine engines and help you to understand the basic layout and operation of the engine.

Other variations
Large jetliners use what are known as turbofan engines, which are nothing more than gas turbines combined with a large fan at the front of the engine. Here's the basic (highly simplified) layout of a turbofan engine:

Jet Engine Thrust

The goal of a Turbofan engine is to produce thrust to drive the airplane forward. Thrust is generally measured in pounds of thrust in the United States (the metric system uses newtons, where 4.45 newtons is 1 pound of thrust). A "pound of thrust" is equal to a force able to accelerate one pound of material 32 feet per second per second (where 32 feet per second per second happens to be equivalent to the acceleration provided by gravity). Therefore, if you have a jet engine capable of producing one pound of thrust, it could hold one pound of material suspended in the air if the jet were pointed straight down. Likewise, a jet engine producing 5,000 pounds of thrust could hold 5,000 pounds of material suspended in the air. Similarly, if a rocket engine produced 5,000 pounds of thrust applied to a 5,000 pound object floating in space, the 5,000 pound object would accelerate at a rate of 32 feet per second per second.

Thrust is generated under Newton's principle that "every action has an equal and opposite reaction". For example, imagine that you are floating in space and you weigh 100 pounds on earth. In your hand you have a baseball weighing one pound on earth. If you throw the baseball away from you at a speed of 32 feet per second (21 MPH), your body will move in the opposite direction (it will react) at a speed of 0.32 feet per second. If you were to continuously throw baseballs in that way at a rate of one per second, your baseballs would be generating one pound of continuous thrust. Keep in mind that to generate that 1 pound of thrust for an hour you would need to be holding 3,600 pounds of baseballs at the beginning of the hour. If you wanted to do better, the thing to do is to throw the baseballs harder. By "throwing" them (with of a gun, say) at 3,200 feet per second, you would generate 100 pounds of thrust instead.

In a turbofan engine, the baseballs that the engine is throwing out are air molocules. The air molecules are already there, so the airplane does not have to carry them around at least. An individual air molocule does not weigh very much, but the engine is throwing a lot of them and it is throwing them at very high speed. Thrust is coming from two components in the turbofan:

  • The first component is the gas turbine itself. Generally a nozzle is formed at the exhaust end of the gas turbine (not shown in this figure) to generate a high-speed jet of exhaust gas. A typical speed for air molecules exiting the engine is 1,300 MPH.
  • The second component is the bypass air generated by the fan. This bypass air moves at a slower speed than the exhaust from the turbine, but the fan moves a lot of air.
You can see that the core of a turbofan is a normal gas turbine engine like the one described in the previous section. The difference is that the final turbine stage drives a shaft that makes it's way back to the front of the engine to power the fan (shown in red in this picture). This multiple concentric shaft approach, by the way, is extremely common in gas turbines. In many larger turbofans, in fact, there may be two completely separate compression stages driven by separate turbines, along with the fan turbine as shown above. All three shafts ride within one another concentrically.

The purpose of the fan is to dramatically increase the amount of air moving through the engine, and therefore increase the engine's thrust. When you look into the engine of a commercial jet at the airport, what you see is this fan at the front of the engine. It is huge (on the order of 10 feet in diameter on big jets), so it can move a lot of air. The air that the fan moves is called "bypass air" (shown in purple above) because it bypasses the turbine portion of the engine and moves straight through to the back of the nacelle at high speed to provide thrust.

A turboprop engine is similar to a turbofan, but instead of a fan there is a conventional propeller at the front of the engine. The output shaft connects to a gearbox to reduce the speed, and the output of the gearbox turns the propeller.

Learning more
As you can see, gas turbine engines are quite common. They are also quite complicated, and they stretch the limits of both fluid dynamics and materials sciences. If you want to learn more, one worthwhile place to go would be the library of a university with a good engineering department. Books on the subject tend to be expensive, but two well-know texts include: Aircraft Gas Turbine Engine Technology and Elements of Gas Turbine Propulsion.

The links below will also help you learn more on the web. There is a surprising amount of activity in the home-built gas turbine arena, and you can find other people interested in the same topic by participating in newsgroups or mailing lists on the subject.

Links
There is a good bit of material on the web concerning gas turbines and jet engines. There is also an active group of people working with home-built and model gas turbines. The following links will help you learn more:

Understanding Gas Turbine and Jet Engines:

Alternative forms of transportation: Building and Using Small Gas Turbines: The Boston Museum of Science also has a cutaway of a helicopter's gas turbine engine that is quite educational to look at...



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