Air Cycle Refrigeration Systems Gas Turbine Cycles
Air Cycle Refrigeration Systems Gas Turbine Cycles
Air Cycle Refrigeration Systems Gas Turbine Cycles
Lecture-2
Jet Propulsion
The deviation of an
actual
gas-turbine
cycle from the ideal
Brayton cycle as a
result
of
irreversibilities
Regeneration
Regeneration involves the installation of a heat
exchanger (recuperator) through which the
turbine exhaust gases pass. The compressed air is
then heated in the exhaust gas heat exchanger,
before the flow enters the combustor.
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Intercooling
Intercooling also involves the use of a heat
exchanger. An intercooler is a heat exchanger
that
cools
compressor
gas
during
the
compression process. For instance, if the
compressor consists of a high and a low pressure
unit, the intercooler could be mounted between
them to cool the flow and decrease the work
necessary for compression in the high pressure
compressor. The cooling fluid could be
atmospheric air or water (e.g., sea water in the
case of a marine gas turbine). It can be shown
that the output of a gas turbine is increased with a
well-designed intercooler.
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Reheat
Reheating occurs in the turbine and is a way to
increase
turbine
work
without
changing
compressor work or melting the materials from
which the turbine is constructed. If a gas turbine
has a high pressure and a low pressure turbine at
the back end of the machine, a reheater (usually
another combustor) can be used to "reheat" the
flow between the two turbines. This can increase
efficiency by 1-3%. Reheat in a jet engine is
accomplished by adding an afterburner at the
turbine exhaust, thereby increasing thrust, at the
expense of a greatly increased fuel consumption
rate.
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A Gas-Turbine Engine
A gas-turbine engine with two-stage compression with intercooling,
two-stage expansion with reheating, and regeneration
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Summary
The actual gas cycles are rather complex. The
approximations used to simplify the analysis are
known as the air-standard assumptions. Under
these assumptions, all the processes are
assumed to be internally reversible; the working
fluid is assumed to be air, which behaves as an
ideal gas; and the combustion and exhaust
processes are replaced by heat-addition and
heat-rejection processes, respectively.
The air-standard assumptions are called coldair-standard assumptions if, in addition, air is
assumed to have constant specific heats at
room temperature.
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Summary
The ideal cycle for modern gas-turbine
engines is the Brayton cycle, which is
made up of four internally reversible
processes:
isentropic
compression,
constant
pressure
heat
addition,
isentropic expansion, and constant
pressure heat rejection.
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Summary
Under
cold-air-standard
assumptions,
Brayton cycle thermal efficiency is
the
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8-43
Summary
The deviation of the actual compressor and the turbine
from the idealized isentropic ones can be accurately
accounted for by utilizing their adiabatic efficiencies,
defined as
and
8-44
Summary
In gas-turbine engines, the temperature of the
exhaust gas leaving the turbine is often
considerably higher than the temperature of the
air leaving the compressor. Therefore, the highpressure air leaving the compressor can be
heated by transferring heat to it from the hot
exhaust gases in a counter-flow heat exchanger,
which is also known as a regenerator.
The extent to which a regenerator approaches an
ideal regenerator is called the effectiveness e
and is defined as
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Summary
Under cold-air-standard assumptions, the
thermal efficiency of an ideal Brayton
cycle
with
regeneration
becomes
Summary
The thermal efficiency of the Brayton cycle can
also be increased by utilizing multistage
compression with intercooling, regeneration, and
multistage expansion with reheating. The work
input to the compressor is minimized when equal
pressure ratios are maintained across each
stage. This procedure also maximizes the turbine
work output.
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8-48
Summary
Gas-turbine engines are widely used to power
aircraft because they are light and compact
and have a high power-to-weight ratio. The
ideal jet-propulsion cycle differs from the
simple ideal Brayton cycle in that the gases are
partially expanded in the turbine. The gases
that exit the turbine at a relatively high pressure
are subsequently accelerated in a nozzle to
provide the thrust needed to propel the aircraft.
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8-49
Summary
The net thrust developed by the turbojet
engine is
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References
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Web Resources
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