Abstract:
The continuous growth of air transport has raised concerns about global
aircraft fuel consumption, emissions and noise. Industry’s efforts have identified
that to reduce future emissions and the impact of aircraft operations on the
environment will require contribution from: a) New technologies with better
efficiency b) Improved asset management and c) Greener manufacturing and
recycling processes. This research falls under asset management and involves
aircraft trajectory optimisation. Most aircraft trajectory optimisation studies
concentrate on optimising fuel burn, emissions and noise. Fuel burn is the
dominant contributor to operating costs. During the course of this work, no work
was found to better understand from an operator’s perspective how the optimal
solutions for minimising fuel burn and protecting the environment will impact on
engine useful life and the engine operating costs. Also no work was found to
understand how engine component degradation will impact on the optimised
solutions for fuel burn and engine life.
The contribution to knowledge from this research is a) the assessment of the
impact of airport severity factors on engine life consumption and aircraft
performance and b) the assessment and quantification of the change in engine
life usage when optimising for flight mission fuel burn and the change in flight
mission fuel burn when optimising for engine life usage; in both cases the
effects of engine component degradation are considered and assessed.
The trade-offs between mission fuel burn and engine life optimised
trajectories are presented here for a clean (new) engine for three routes
(London–Madrid, London–Ankara and London–Abu Dhabi). The engine life
calculated was the HPT blade life and HPT disc life due to creep, fatigue and
oxidation failure modes independent of each other. Mission fuel burn and
engine life trajectory optimisation assessments were conducted to incorporate
the effects of degradation after 3000, 4500 and 5250cycles of operation. Further
assessments were made linking aircraft performance to airport severity factors
for the clean engine, after 3000cycles and after 5250cycles. A techno-economic
environmental risk assessment approach was used.
The results indicate that airports at higher altitudes e.g. Cairo, suffer more
severity due to higher operating temperatures, but benefit from less climb fuel
burn and lower operating costs. The severity and fuel burn for take-off at
airports with higher ambient temperatures was found to be more due to the
higher operating temperatures required. The operating cost at these airports
was thus higher. The fuel burn optimised trajectories were found to be achieved
at higher operating temperatures with reduced blade life (due to creep, fatigue
and oxidation). In particular, for London–Madrid, the blade creep and blade
oxidation lives were found to reduce by -3.4% and -2.1% respectively. The
blade oxidation life optimised trajectories showed increase in fuel burn of +3.6%
and +4.9% for London–Madrid and London–Ankara respectively. The blade
creep life optimised trajectories for London–Abu Dhabi were found to benefit
from less fuel burn during climb. The disc creep life optimised trajectories
showed benefit in fuel burn for London–Ankara and London–Abu Dhabi.
The conclusions from the study are:
High OAT and high altitude airports such as Abu Dhabi require higher
operating temperatures which have severe consequences on the engine
component life, fuel burn and emissions.
Fuel burn optimised trajectories have a negative effect on the blade life
due to creep, fatigue and oxidation due to higher maximum operating
temperatures. However, the reduction in fuel burn outweighs the drop in
life, thus benefitting to the operating costs.
Optimising for blade creep life benefits the fuel burn for London–Abu
Dhabi due to less fuel burn at climb
The blade oxidation life optimised trajectories are detrimental to the fuel
burn due to slower cruise speeds and more time spent at cruise and
descent
The disc creep life optimised trajectories benefit the fuel burn for London
– Ankara and London–Abu Dhabi due to flying at higher cruise altitudes
and burning less fuel.
The recommendations from this research include making improvements to
the framework such as a) Integrating the lifing methodologies because in reality
the failure modes are not entirely independent of each other but do interact b)
Develop and incorporate a diagnostics and prognostics tool to predict levels of
degradation c) Using actual waypoints and incorporate horizontal trajectory
profiles d) Future studies can include noise as an objective, which though
mentioned has not been within the scope of this work. e) A key driver to lower
operating costs is a considerable reduction in fuel burn. Maintenance costs will
inevitably rise with engine life consumption. Further study of the trade-offs
between fuel burn and engine life is therefore recommended.