Abstract

The race for speed ruled the early Jet Age on aviation. Aircraft manufacturers chased faster and faster planes in a fight for pride and capability. In the early 1970s, dreams were that the future would be supersonic, but fuel economy and unacceptable noise levels made that era never happen. After the 1973 oil crisis, the paradigm changed. The average cruise speed on newly developed aircraft started to decrease in exchange for improvements in many other performance parameters. At the same pace, the airliner’s power-plants are evolving to look more like a ducted turboprop, and less like a pure jet engine as the pursuit for the higher bypass ratios continues. However, since the birth of jet aircraft, the propeller-driven plane has lost its dominant place, associated with the idea that going back to propeller-driven airplanes, and what it represents in terms of modernity and security, has started a propeller avoidance phenomenon with travelers and thus with airlines. Today, even with the modest research effort since the 1980s, advanced propellers are getting efficiencies closer to jet-powered engines at their contemporary typical cruise speeds. This paper gives a brief overview of the performance trends in aviation since the last century. Comparison examples between aircraft designed on different paradigms are presented. The use of propellers as a reborn propulsive device is discussed.

Highlights

  • The propeller is a device that converts the rotary power of an engine or motor into a thrust force that pushes the vehicle to which it is attached

  • Aircraft design aimed for speed and drove the airliners cruise speeds up to Mach

  • The global environmental consciousness is forcing the reduction of engine emissions, driving recent investigations to suggest that future airliners may have to reduce their design cruise Mach number [26]

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Summary

Introduction

The propeller is a device that converts the rotary power of an engine or motor into a thrust force that pushes the vehicle to which it is attached. The first controlled, powered flight, starred by the Wright Brothers in 1903, marked the turn of a page of skepticism concerning heavier-than-air manned flight This remarkable achievement brought an increased excitement around the aviation community, and in the period 1905–1910, there was an impressive growth in the number of filed patents [4] (see Figure 1). The second section introduces the influence of the cruise speed in the aircraft aerodynamic efficiency and engine fuel consumption It discusses the evolution of the flight speed of the airliners since the jet age. The third section shows the relevance of bringing back the propeller and continue its development

Early Jet Age
Fuel Efficiency
Q400NG
Present-Day Airliner Speeds
Design cruise speed
Propellers Avoidance Phenomenon and the Oil Price Effect
The Advanced Turboprop Project
Is There a Future for Aircraft Propellers?
Multirotor Drone Emergence and the Future Personal Aerial Mobility
Findings
Conclusions
Full Text
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