The Composite Cycle Engine (CCE) enhances the conventional Joule/Brayton cycle by replacing the high-pressure compressor with a high-quality piston-based gas generator that enables extremely high compression, combustion, and expansion of the working fluid before entering the classic Joule burner. This piston-based topping cycle unlocks much more efficient fuel utilization. This paper studies a CCE concept featuring a system of free double piston (FDP) units for a potential long-range (LR) application in 2045, benchmarked against an advanced turbofan engine representative of the same time frame. In-house-developed simulation tools for the piston system and the overall power plant, as well as aircraft non-linear trade factor analysis, are used for different levels of conceptual assessment. First, the cooling demand inside the FDP system is determined. An engine cycle parametric study is then performed for the design point top-of-climb (ToC). Off-design performance is further studied, demonstrating a 9.3% improvement in thrust-specific fuel consumption (TSFC) in cruise relative to the baseline engine. After incorporating the engine weight and nacelle geometry effects, the engine reaches a total mission fuel burn reduction of around 14.7% compared to the baseline engine. The concept evaluation shows the fuel burn potential of the CCE in the future LR aviation sector and lays the foundation for further climate impact analysis.
Lin et al. (Fri,) studied this question.
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