TSFC
TSFC
Data for some concrete aerospace engines and their craft ................................................................................. 1
Data on rocket-engine types and comparison with large turbofans ................................................................... 1
Data on some large airliner engines ................................................................................................................... 2
Data on other aircraft engines and manufacturers .......................................................................................... 3
In this Appendix common to Aircraft propulsion and Space propulsion, data for thrust, weight, and specific fuel
consumption, are presented for some different types of engines (Table 1), with some values of specific impulse
and exit speed (Table 2), a plot of Mach number and specific impulse characteristic of different engine types
(Fig. 1), and detailed characteristics of some modern turbofan engines, used in large airplanes (Table 3).
2500..3000
250..300
103..107
7000
2..100
1
Liquid
monopropellant
Liquid
bipropellant
Electrothermal
(electric arc)
Electrodynamic
2000..3000
200..300
10-1..102
3000
2..100
3000..5000
300..450
10-1..107
9000
2..100
5000..15 000
1000..1500
10-2..101
<10-3
500..5000
<10-4
Electrostatic
20 000..200 000
2000..50 000
10-3..101
>100 000
<10-4
ionic thruster
Hall effect
10 000..50 000
2000..5000
10-3..101
>100 000
ionic thruster
Electrospray
~10 000
~1000
10-9..10-3
?
ionic thruster
*
Only exact for adapted nozzle, i.e. when pe=p0 in F =m p ve + Ae ( pe p0 ) , but approximate in any case.
**
For turbofan engines this is not the real exit speed, which is <300 m/s, but the equivalent or effective exit
speed, ve = F m p , corresponding to the specific thrust per unit of propellant flow-rate, which with the
approximation of neglecting the small pressure term explained above, coincides with the real exhaust speed in
rocket engines.
Fig. 1. Specific impulse, Isp F ( m f g ) =1(gcsp), of different engines types (csp is TSFC). (Wiki).
Engine
Parameter
Thrust Fmax [kN]
(FcruiseFmax/4) /
Bypass ratio,
Pressure ratio,
Fan pressure ratio,
Dry weight, We [kg]
Length [m]
Fan diameter [m]
Fan-compressor stg.
Turbine (HP-LP) stg.
Fmax/Weng
mf, takeoff [kg/s]
mf, cruise [kg/s]
Pprop, takeoff [W]=Fv
Pprop, cruise [W]=Fv
mair, takeoff [kg/s]
mair cruise [kg/s]
Tmax [K]
EGTmax [K]
Spool speeds [rpm]
GP7200
A380 4x
350
75
8.7
41
6700
4.7
3.2
5.2
1350
1800
N1=4 000
N2=10 000
Machcruise
0.80
0.83
*
TSFC [(g/s)/kN]
16
Unit price
*
TSFC at cruise; take-off values are some 10 % lower.
0.80
15.4
N1=3 000
N2=7 500?
N3=12 500
0.83
15.5
1250
N1=3 000
N2=13 000
15.6
10 million
turbine, single-stage IP turbine, and five-stage LP turbine (the HPC-HPT-shaft is contra-rotating). The burner is
annular with 20 injectors. The Trent 900 engines used on the Airbus A380 are designed to fit into a Boeing
747-400F freighter for transport. The Trent 1000 engine is being developed for the Boeing 787 Dreamliner.
More advanced but same size and three-shaft architecture, Trent XWB, 400 kN, will power the A350 (2x) by
end 2014.
RR Olympus 593 powered Concorde (two engines),which was the only commercial supersonic airliner (M=2).
air =190
It was a pure turbojet with afterburner, with a take-off thrust of FTO=180 kN, and air flow rate of m
kg/s; at cruise, Fcruise=50 kN, pressure ratio of 23=11, and TSFC=34 (g/s)/kN.
Pratt & Whitney
GP7200, four units used in A380, from Engine Alliance (PW & GE), based on PW4000 and GE90. Two spools.
Hollow-titanium 24 swept wide-chord hollow titanium fan blades, with 8.7:1 by-pass ratio; five-stage lowpressure axial compressor; nine-stage high-pressure axial compressor, low-emissions single annular combustor,
two-stage high pressure turbine, six-stage low-pressure turbine, boltless architecture, single crystal blades, split
blade cooling and thermal barrier coatings.
PW4000 (2 units in A330, for 250..350 pax; 4 units in B747-400, for >400 pax), bypass ratio 5:1, fan diameter
Df=2.5 m, pressure ratio fan=1.7, total=32, 4 m long engine, take-off thrust 300 kN (90 kN at 12 km altitude),
LP-shaft at 4000 rpm with 4 turbine-stages, HP-shaft at 10 000 rpm with 2 turbine-stages. Only 12% of total
thrust is due to primary exhaust. Overall engine efficiency is =0.35.
PW1000G family (from 2015) is intended for regional airline turboprops, with F=50..200 kN, bypass =12, fan
diameter Df=2.1 m, with a gear stage to slow fan spinning, decreasing noise by 30 %.
Old Pratt & Whitney JT8D engine (used in B727, DC-9, MD-80, B737...), had a mass of 1500 kg, FTO=100 kN,
air =150 kg/s, total=16, TSFC=21 (g/s)/kN. There were nine
bypass ratio =0.96, fan diameter Df=1.25 m, m
combustion chambers positioned in a can-annular arrangement, each with three air inlet hole sizes: the smallest
was for cooling, the medium for burning, and the large for forming an air blanket.
CFM International
CFM International is a joint venture between GE Aviation USA and Snecma (France), formed in 1974 to build
and support the CFM56 series of jet engines. The names of CFM International and the CFM56 product line are
derived from the two parent companies commercial engine designations: GE's CF6 and Snecma's M56. Up to
2011, more than 23 000 engines were produced. GE is responsible for the high pressure compressor, combustor
and high pressure turbine, while Snecma is responsible for the fan, low pressure turbine, the gearbox, and the
exhaust.
The CFM56 successor, the CFM Leap engine (2x for the new A320neo) has 150 kN, BPR=11:1, OPR=40:1,
Dfan=2 m, compressor stages (fan/LPC/HPC) of 1:3:10, turbine stages (HPT/LPT) 2:7.
Aerospace engine data