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Gas Turbine Handbook : Principles and Practices

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Applications 11<br />

Chapter 2<br />

Applications<br />

<strong>Gas</strong> turbines are used in diversified services from jet engines<br />

<strong>and</strong> simple mechanical drives (on l<strong>and</strong>, sea <strong>and</strong> air) to sophisticated<br />

gas lasers <strong>and</strong> supersonic wind tunnels. For simplicity<br />

the gas turbine will be considered for airborne applications <strong>and</strong> surface<br />

(l<strong>and</strong> <strong>and</strong> sea) based applications. In the airborne applications<br />

these units are referred to as jets, turbojets, turbofans, <strong>and</strong> turboprops.<br />

In l<strong>and</strong> <strong>and</strong> sea based applications these units are referred to<br />

as mechanical drive gas turbines. Each category will be discussed in<br />

detail.<br />

JET ENGINES<br />

In the strict sense all gas turbines are gas generators. Their hot<br />

gases are exp<strong>and</strong>ed either through a turbine to generate shaft power<br />

or through a nozzle to create thrust. Some gas generators exp<strong>and</strong><br />

their hot gases only through a nozzle to produce thrust—these units<br />

are easily identified as jet engines (or turbojets). Other gas turbines<br />

exp<strong>and</strong> some of the hot gas through a nozzle to create thrust <strong>and</strong> the<br />

rest of the gas is exp<strong>and</strong>ed through a turbine to drive a fan —these<br />

units are called turbofans. When a unit exp<strong>and</strong>s virtually all of its hot<br />

gases through the turbine driving the compressor <strong>and</strong> the attached<br />

propeller <strong>and</strong> no thrust is created from the gas exiting the exhaust<br />

nozzle—it is called a turboprop. All of the above describe flight engines.<br />

However, turboprops have much in common with l<strong>and</strong> <strong>and</strong> sea<br />

based gas turbines. This should not be surprising as in many cases<br />

the basic gas turbine is identical for both applications. The engines<br />

used in aircraft applications may be either turbojets, turbofans, or<br />

turboprops, but they are all commonly referred to as “jet engines.”<br />

11

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