The aviation industry is facing stringent requirements to reduce its environmental footprint. But technological innovation and development – from concept to certified product – can take decades.
In fact, the aircraft of 2050 is now under study within the framework of R&T programs and faces a long schedule of ground and flying demonstrations before they can be approved to safely carry passengers.
Safran Aircraft Engines' Open Rotor demonstrator, developed through the European Clean Sky R&D initiative, is part of Safran Aircraft Engines' plans to develop a propulsion system that will meet the needs of aircraft manufacturers in 2030. The Open Rotor configuration aims at meeting several technological challenges such as a new propulsion mode, an innovative aerodynamic configuration, and unprecedented manufacturing processes.
“The speed of configuration is an important criterion. The integration of the Excel file into the system configuration allows us to not only set up and control the test from the spreadsheet, but also to perform a test while preparing the configuration of the next test on a separate station, and still track each configuration for each test.”
Test engineer, Safran Aircraft Engines
The innovative architecture of the Open Rotor concept engine is unique. Built around a Safran Aircraft Engines' M88 Rafale engine, chosen for its compactness, the Open Rotor has two counter-rotating fans with 12 and 10 composite blades respectively. The front propeller is 4 meters in diameter, and the rear one slightly smaller to avoid interaction with vortices generated by the tips of front propeller blades. Unlike a classic engine, they are unshrouded, not only reducing the overall weight but also increasing the drawn airflow providing a bypass ratio (ratio between cold and hot airflows) exceeding 30:1. The increase of engine airflow results in higher propulsion efficiency, improving fuel consumption, and consequently cutting CO2 emissions. The Open Rotor engine could eventually reduce fuel consumption and emissions by 30% compared to today’s turbofan engines.
Clean Sky encompasses six so-called Integrated Technology Demonstrators (ITDs). Leading the SAGE (Sustainable And Green Engine) ITD of Clean Sky, Safran Aircraft Engines, together with its industry partners, aimed to deliver and ground test a full-scale Open Rotor engine. Now, following eight years of development, Safran Aircraft Engines has successfully performed its first ground test of the Open Rotor demonstrator at its brand-new, purpose-built, open-air test bench in Istres, southern France.