Study of the Direct Turbine Driven Rotor system in various flight conditions
Laubacher, Mickaël
Promotor(s) : Dewallef, Pierre
Date of defense : 24-Jun-2021/25-Jun-2021 • Permalink : http://hdl.handle.net/2268.2/11391
Details
Title : | Study of the Direct Turbine Driven Rotor system in various flight conditions |
Author : | Laubacher, Mickaël |
Date of defense : | 24-Jun-2021/25-Jun-2021 |
Advisor(s) : | Dewallef, Pierre |
Committee's member(s) : | Hillewaert, Koen
Andrianne, Thomas Antoine, Hubert |
Language : | English |
Number of pages : | 91 |
Keywords : | [en] Aeronautics [en] Sagita [en] TDR system [en] Off-Design study |
Discipline(s) : | Engineering, computing & technology > Aerospace & aeronautics engineering |
Research unit : | Sagita company |
Target public : | Professionals of domain Student General public Other |
Institution(s) : | Université de Liège, Liège, Belgique |
Degree: | Master en ingénieur civil en aérospatiale, à finalité spécialisée en "aerospace engineering" |
Faculty: | Master thesis of the Faculté des Sciences appliquées |
Abstract
[en] Currently, a mechanical transmission by a spool driving the rotor is implemented in
helicopters. This system is heavy and costly. Antoine Hubert, the founder of the Belgian
company Sagita based in Wandre, has invented a system that does not need mechanical
transmission. Indeed, this mechanical part is replaced by a turbine which drives directly
two contra-rotating rotors, where blades are attached. The purpose of this work is to
prove the viability of this system. Two aircraft uses this TDR system : the Sherpa
helicopter, and the S-75 Drone. The Sherpa project began few years ago, and was the
first aircraft built with this technology. The current project is the S-75 Drone, for which
two versions are studied : the first one with two blades per rotor is its prototype version
which was tested during this work. The second configuration has three blades per rotor.
It is the one considered for a future commercialization. These aircraft and the TDR
system are introduced in the first part of this work.
The viability of this system is studied in two main parts. First of all, the cycle is
studied at the nominal point, and the desired performances are compared with the one
obtained during this study. The power delivered by the cycle will be compared by the
one which is necessary for each flight condition. The determination of the pressure ratio
of the fan is one of the objective of this part.
The off-design conditions are then introduced in the second part of this work. Atmospheric
pressure, temperature and altitude are the main variables. Their implications
on the TDR cycle will be shown, as well as the potential limitations they introduce. The
three aircraft are studied, and a comparison between the performances of the two versions
of the S-75 Drone will be done. A comparison with a classical two-spool turboshaft will
then conclude this study.
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Description: Summary of the TFE report
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Description: Résumé en français du TFE
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