AFRL Commences GE VAATE Core Compressor Testing

  • Published
  • By HQ AFRL
  • HQ AFRL
AFRL engineers began testing General Electric's (GE) long-range strike (LRS) Versatile Affordable Advanced Turbine Engines (VAATE) core compressor at the laboratory's Compressor Research Facility (CRF). These tests will further develop the front three stages of the dual-use core compressor to increase part speed efficiency, investigate concepts that mitigate blade row interaction losses without requiring large axial spacing, and validate and improve time-accurate computational fluid dynamics design tools.

AFRL engineers obtained 70%-80% corrected speeds at all throttle conditions, while maintaining the low-power stall margin. The test data also demonstrated that at high power, similar levels of flow, efficiency, and stall margin were maintainable with respect to the baseline. These improvements help the GE LRS engine meet thrust-to-weight, thrust-specific fuel consumption, and development cost goals.

Completing this effort will require testing of five different builds. Engineers completed the first build tests for mechanical checkout, stator optimization, and aero mapping. The data collected at AFRL's CRF demonstrates a significant efficiency improvement over previous tests conducted at GE's Lynn, Massachusetts, facility.