Aviation Engines, Propulsion & Auxiliary Power Units
GE Aviation

GE Aviation

Source: GE Aviation


GE'S TAPS COMBUSTOR SHOWING PROMISING RESULTS
Friday, November 21, 2014
GE Aviation

GE Aviation

Source: GE Aviation


CINCINNATI, Ohio - General Electric's GE9X TAPS III combustor is a unique third-generation combustion system that pre-mixes air and fuel prior to combustion for leaner burn and fewer emissions than conventional combustion systems. The TAPS combustion was introduced on the GEnx engine for the Boeing 787 Dreamliner and the 747-8 aircraft and was enhanced for the TAPS II combustor in CFM International's LEAP engine for narrowbody aircraft.

GE engineers successfully matched the combustion system to the GE9X's 27:1 pressure ratio, which is the highest pressure ratio of any GE engine. The GE9X team utilized new technologies and materials that require less cooling air while allowing more air into the mixer. The additional air in the mixer helps reduce emissions by creating a leaner burn, which will enable the GE9X to have a 30% margin to CAEP/8 standards for NOx.

Component testing of the TAPS III combustor began in 2012. This September, a full annular rig combustor test successfully demonstrated the material capabilities of the CMC combustor liners, which will be the first continuous CMC combustor liners in a commercial jet engine. The liners were tested at dynamic loading levels well beyond what it will experience in service. Additional full annular rig testing, including GEnx- and GE9X-scale combustors, will be conducted during the next two years.

Other future combustor tests include a GE9X combustor sector rig that will run in GE's new $100 million, 20,000 square foot combustion test cell under construction in Evendale, Ohio. With a 200-foot-tall stainless steel exhaust stack, the test cell is scheduled to be completed next year, with three parallel test stands for single-cup and sector testing. The test cell will be a one-of-a-kind facility with the capability to push test conditions beyond the GE9X cycle.

GE will spend more than $300 million on technology maturation testing for the new GE9X engine in 2014. This year's testing included additional high-pressure compressor testing in Massa, Italy, to demonstrate additional specific fuel consumption improvement, and the universal propulsion simulator (UPS) fan performance and acoustic tests at Boeing's Seattle, Washington, UPS test cell. By year end, GE Aviation will start ground testing of a GEnx engine incorporating CMCs in both the high-pressure turbine and combustor areas as part of the GE9X technology maturation program.

Source: GE Aviation
 

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