Engineerblogger
Dec 8, 2011
The University of Southampton’s Optoelectronics Research Centre (ORC) is developing lasers, which will allow for a better understanding of the combustion process in jet engines and reduce emissions.
The ORC is working on the £2.7m research project called FLITES (Fibre-Laser Imaging of gas Turbine Exhaust Species). It is funded by the Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council, led by University of Manchester and aims to develop technology to reduce jet engine emissions.
"FLITES will allow us to map different chemical species and soot in the exhaust plume of aero engines,” said Professor Johan Nilsson at the ORC. "This will create a better understanding of the combustion process in the engine and enable us to optimise it at lower cost - with the increasing interest for substitution of fossil fuels with bio-fuels in the aviation industry, this is particularly important. Currently the cost is too high and the data collected too limited for extensive evaluations of new bio-fuels in aero-engines."
FLITES aims to establish a world-leading capability to map several exhaust species from aeroplanes using tomographic imaging.
The ORC, the University of Manchester, the University of Strathclyde, and commercial partners including Rolls-Royce, Shell, Covesion, Fianium and OptoSci, will work on the four-year study, motivated by lower-cost engine evaluation and monitoring and reduced carbon dioxide emissions and pollution.
It is expected that the research project will enhance turbine-related research and development capacity in both academia and industry by opening up access to exhaust plume chemistry.
It will underpin a new phase of low-net-carbon development that is underway in aviation, based on bio-derived fuels, and which entails extensive research in turbine engineering, turbine combustion, and fuel product formulation.
Source: University of Southampton Optoelectronics Research Centre (ORC)
Showing posts with label Rolls royce. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Rolls royce. Show all posts
Thursday, 8 December 2011
Tuesday, 21 June 2011
Rolls-Royce to develop higher-thrust Trent XWB engine
The Engineer
June 20, 2011
Rolls-Royce is to redevelop the engines for the largest of Airbus’s new composite-based airliners, which aim to slash fuel use and CO2 emissions.
The UK-based aerospace firm announced the deal last night at the Paris Air Show, confirming speculation that Airbus would need a more powerful engine for the biggest version of its new, lightweight composite-based aircraft family, the A350 XWB.
The higher-thrust version of the Trent XWB engine will deliver 97,000lb maximum thrust for the A350-1000 model, using new high-temperature turbine technology, increased engine core size and advanced fan aerodynamics.
To read more click here...
June 20, 2011
The UK-based aerospace firm announced the deal last night at the Paris Air Show, confirming speculation that Airbus would need a more powerful engine for the biggest version of its new, lightweight composite-based aircraft family, the A350 XWB.
The higher-thrust version of the Trent XWB engine will deliver 97,000lb maximum thrust for the A350-1000 model, using new high-temperature turbine technology, increased engine core size and advanced fan aerodynamics.
To read more click here...
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Tuesday, 7 June 2011
Rolls-Royce in costly A350 engine redesign - sources
Reuters
June 6, 2011
Rolls-Royce is set to bow to airline pressure by building a new engine for the Airbus A350, a costly rethink of strategy for Europe's newest airliner, aviation industry sources said on Monday.
The plan would involve a major overhaul of Rolls-Royce's largest civil jet engine and give the Airbus A350 some missing muscle to compete with Boeing's popular long-range 777-300ER.
Two smaller versions of the A350 will broadly compete with Boeing's revolutionary new 787 Dreamliner from 2013 onwards.
But airlines have criticized a one-size-fits-all policy that they say would leave the third and largest model, the A350-1000, unable to reach its goal of competing with the popular Boeing 777-300ER mini-jumbo because it is saddled with the same engine.
"My understanding is that Rolls-Royce has agreed to build a new engine," the chief executive of a major A350 customer told Reuters at an IATA airlines industry event on Monday.
Airbus and Rolls-Royce declined comment.
A new engine typically costs up to $2 billion (1.22 billion pounds) to develop, according to engine industry executives.
To read more click here...
June 6, 2011
Rolls-Royce is set to bow to airline pressure by building a new engine for the Airbus A350, a costly rethink of strategy for Europe's newest airliner, aviation industry sources said on Monday.
The plan would involve a major overhaul of Rolls-Royce's largest civil jet engine and give the Airbus A350 some missing muscle to compete with Boeing's popular long-range 777-300ER.
Two smaller versions of the A350 will broadly compete with Boeing's revolutionary new 787 Dreamliner from 2013 onwards.
But airlines have criticized a one-size-fits-all policy that they say would leave the third and largest model, the A350-1000, unable to reach its goal of competing with the popular Boeing 777-300ER mini-jumbo because it is saddled with the same engine.
"My understanding is that Rolls-Royce has agreed to build a new engine," the chief executive of a major A350 customer told Reuters at an IATA airlines industry event on Monday.
Airbus and Rolls-Royce declined comment.
A new engine typically costs up to $2 billion (1.22 billion pounds) to develop, according to engine industry executives.
To read more click here...
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Friday, 6 May 2011
GE and Rolls in funds offer on F-35
The Financial Times
May 6, 2011
General Electric and Rolls-Royce have offered to pay for part of the development costs of their alternate engine for the F-35 combat jet in a last-ditch effort to save the programme after the Pentagon moved to shut it down in March.
The commitment could cost more than $100m but may bolster flagging political support for the project and give the pair a chance to finish their engine and compete against Pratt & Whitney, maker of the main engine, in a multi-billion dollar market.
“We believe so strongly in our engine and the need for competition in defence procurement that we have committed to self-fund F136 development costs,” Jeff Immelt, chief executive of GE, said.
To read more click here...
May 6, 2011
The commitment could cost more than $100m but may bolster flagging political support for the project and give the pair a chance to finish their engine and compete against Pratt & Whitney, maker of the main engine, in a multi-billion dollar market.
“We believe so strongly in our engine and the need for competition in defence procurement that we have committed to self-fund F136 development costs,” Jeff Immelt, chief executive of GE, said.
To read more click here...
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Friday, 11 March 2011
Rolls-Royce and Areva Teams Up
Financial Times
March 11, 2011
Rolls-Royce is to become a strategic partner on France’s new third generation nuclear reactor under an agreement set to be signed on Friday between the aero-engine maker and Areva, the French nuclear group.
To read more click here...
March 11, 2011
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Rolls-Royce is to become a strategic partner on France’s new third generation nuclear reactor under an agreement set to be signed on Friday between the aero-engine maker and Areva, the French nuclear group.
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Wednesday, 9 March 2011
Rolls-Royce and Daimler eye Tognum Engine-Maker
The Independent
March 8, 2011
Rolls-Royce is in talks with Daimler about the possible acquisition of German engine-maker Tognum, the UK engineering giant said yesterday. The two companies are in "constructive discussions" over the plan for each to acquire equal stakes in Tognum, which is a leading supplier of engines and powertrains for ships, trains, and heavy industry.
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March 8, 2011
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Monday, 7 February 2011
Rolls-Royce Blemished by Engine Failure
FT.com
Feb 06, 2011
Feb 06, 2011
This Thursday’s full-year results statement from Rolls Royce will be the swansong of Sir John Rose, who is stepping down as chief executive from the group after 15 years at the helm of the aerospace and engineering group.
To read more click here...
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