1. Introduction
In recent years, liquefied hydrogen (LH
2) as a fuel for gas turbines has received fresh traction both in aero and industrial applications, due to its potential benefit of allowing very clean combustion and zero-carbon emission [
1]. With the growing demand for stringent environmental regulations on fossil fuel, it is predicted that hydrogen could be a viable alternative for jet fuel [
2,
3]. It has an extensive stability limit, global availability, reduced noise, and low maintenance cost. Hydrogen is also projected to be safer than jet fuel, since hydrogen is a lighter gas and can escape into the atmosphere without much hazardous effect [
4,
5]. Another justification for hydrogen is its high specific energy, which is almost 2.8 times higher than jet fuel. The high energy per unit mass reduces the total fuel weight, thereby enabling more payload or flight range than jet fuel. However, the benefit of high energy per unit mass is countered by the low density of hydrogen, requiring high storage volume, which could erode aircraft performance relative to jet fuel [
6,
7,
8].
Despite these advantages, hydrogen still has its technical and economic demerits that must be contained, and go through various certification requirements before its full-scale application could become feasible [
9]. Some of the problems with LH
2 include embrittlement in metals, its high volatility due to its low boiling point (−252.87 °C), which means it can boil off in storage, and water vapor formation, or OH radicals which form a greenhouse gas. However, unlike with jet fuel, the contrail effect depends on the altitude, and the residence time of water vapor is relatively short [
10,
11]. LH
2 also has a greater propensity to generate high NOx than jet fuel, due to its higher flame temperature at a given equivalence ratio [
7,
11]. Another important limitation of LH
2 is cost, which includes production, transporting and storage costs [
12,
13]. The cost factor could be overcome with technology advancement in the use of cheaper methods and foreseeable large-scale production and supplier competition [
12,
14,
15]. When we consider other production options for LH
2, like electrolysis, which has less impact on the environment, the need to account for high energy losses from building new infrastructure and the liquefication process must be justified to make economic sense, compared with jet fuel.
Although the subject of LH
2 dates as far back as 1937 [
10,
15], when the first aero-derivative gas turbine fueled by hydrogen was successfully run, the uptake of LH
2 as a fuel has been slow for aviation and is still in its infancy, due to the many limitations mentioned in the previous paragraph. It is, therefore, vital to develop both analytical and experimental tools to assess further mitigations and designs that would enable the LH
2 technology to mature for its use in aero engines.
Interestingly, there are ongoing research discussions and publications around mitigating some of the drawbacks of LH
2, especially on combustor design, NOx mitigation or management, and the issue of high storage volume. Cranfield University has been at the forefront of combustor design and redesign studies for LH
2 aero-engine applications within the European Union (EU) CRYOPLANE and ENABLEH2 project [
4,
11,
15,
16,
17]. One of the problems with facilitating lean combustion to reduce flame temperature, thereby reducing NOx emission, is the stability limit. Since LH
2 has a much greater stability limit, the primary combustion zone could be designed to realize lean combustion at all load conditions without approaching flameout. However, an imperfection in the fuel to air ratio (FAR) can create a localized fuel-rich and high-temperature flame pocket [
6]. Hence, micromix combustors have been proposed to offer benefits that extend beyond NOx reduction. It has been demonstrated through a proof of concept study that micro-mixing with a cross-flow fuel injection system provides miniaturized diffusive combustion that could solve auto-ignition or flashback problems [
18]. Lei and Khandelwal proposed ways in their studies to reduce the combustion temperature in the chamber to reduce NOx emission. Six cases of injection method and injector position effect were simulated to understand the combustion performance. Their result showed that the angled air inlet increased the airflow rotation, which improved the mixing intensity of hydrogen and air and reduced the chamber’s peak temperature [
19]. Robinson et al. [
20] performed a detailed study on the design and testing of a micromix combustor with recuperative wall cooling. The investigation uses a set of mass and equivalence ratio variations at different temperatures and pressures to carry out exhaust gas analysis on combustion efficiency and stability. Other works on combustion design and mitigation for LH
2 are documented in the references [
4,
7,
11,
21,
22].
Figure 1 provides the temperature characteristics of LH
2 and kerosene as a function of the equivalence ratio.
The high storage volume issue is a key hurdle to overcome if LH
2 will be successfully used for aero engines, as it has four times the volume compared to jet fuel. Several works reported different configurations and integration of the LH
2 fuel tank in both conventional and unconventional airframes. The critical driver of fuel storage positioning is the airframe and propulsion system configuration. Mital et al. [
23] and Khandelwal et al. [
10] provide a detailed description of addressing storage configuration for the airframe.
Figure 2 shows different LH
2 aircraft with varying designs of storage.
In general, the use of liquefied hydrogen as one of the promising fuel options for aero engines is promising and feasible. The foremost consideration in the successful development and deployment of this technology is performance simulation and assessment [
24]. Performance assessment is necessary to minimize the risks and costs associated with the test to analyze and evaluate the feasibility of LH
2 at the various technology readiness levels (TRL). It is also important to assess LH
2 compared to jet fuel and other potential fuels to see the performance benefit or advantage that LH
2 provides for aero-engine applications. It appears that there are many literary publications in the public domain around LH
2 combustor design and redesign. The few publications on performance comparison focus on the gas path and cycle performance using conventional or unconventional aero engines. For example, Haglind and Singh [
8] conducted a study on the performance and emissions effect of changing from kerosene to hydrogen fuel on a V2500 aero engine. The study revealed the feasibility of switching from kerosene to LH
2 but that it would require either redesigning the combustion chamber or using an external heat exchanger and a control system redesign. The study also showed a small performance improvement for a conventional aero engine; however, this is dependent on the fuel temperature and cycle configuration. The study also showed reduced emissions and an increase in NOx, in line with the works of Lee et al. [
25], Svensson et al. [
26], and Yildiz et al [
27]. Exergy is another way to understand and compare the performance of LH
2 [
28,
29,
30]. Gunasekar and Manigandan [
31] utilized an exergy approach to assessing LH
2 and jet fuel performance, with their result showing that the introduction of LH
2 reduced exergy efficiency, due to the high specific exergy of hydrogen fuel compared to jet fuel.
Another assessment that has not been visible is understanding the impact of LH
2 utilization on aero-engine hot section blade life compared with jet fuel. Creep is one of the most common failure mechanisms that reduce component life [
32,
33,
34]. Agbadede et al. [
35] provided a comparison for hydrogen and natural gas using an industrial gas turbine. The study shows a longer life to rupture for hydrogen against natural gas, which is in accordance with the expectation documented in references [
10,
14,
36,
37,
38]. However, this has not been demonstrated for an aero engine, comparing LH
2 and kerosene impact on creep life assessment, which this paper aims to discuss.
To this end, this paper provides performance and creep life assessment when comparing LH
2 with jet fuel in a turbofan aero engine. The benefit of this assessment is to justify the use of LH
2 from both the performance and hot section component life points of view. As mentioned in the previous paragraph, there are no publications to the authors’ knowledge that compare LH
2 and kerosene for turbofan aero engines that look at cycle performance, exergy, and creep life assessment, as well as highlighting the merits and drawbacks of LH
2. The cycle’s performance analysis was simulated with an in-house performance modeling technique developed by the authors [
39], while the exergy assessment used a thermodynamic relationship for each component. This paper provides a comprehensive evaluation of LH
2 compared with jet fuel from performance, exergy, and creep life viewpoints, which has not been covered in previous work. Knowing the HPT blade failure mode resulting from the fuel usage will minimize the level of uncertainty in fuel choice for aero engines, and the average time (hours) between overhaul or refurbishment of the HPT blade can be estimated in hindsight.
This paper has hance been divided into three focal points of discussion. The overarching results align with the advantages that LH2 offers over jet fuel as discussed in other research works. This advantage is mainly associated with the high specific fuel heating value of liquid hydrogen over kerosene. Aside from performance and life assessment, other factors will drive the feasibility and technology maturity for LH2, especially with other biofuels competing favorably. The drawbacks to LH2 becoming mainstream aviation fuel have been discussed extensively in this paper. The paper also recommends future work that can be done for comprehensive exergy and creep life assessment. One of the limitations of this work is that the authors did not look at combustor performance computation analysis, which would be addressed in future work. This combustor performance assessment will give depth of insight into the operational characteristics of LH2, as this would have an impact on the chosen control and fuel metering strategy of the turbofan engine. This paper did not address emission as there has been much ongoing discussion on combustor design and emission control, which is outside the scope of this study.
4. Conclusions
In this study, the performance benefit of LH2 compared with jet fuel (kerosene) has been discussed. The performance results show a 64% decrease in the fuel of LH2 compared to jet fuel, due to the high LHV of LH2. This also allows the turbofan engine to run on lower TET, thereby extending the engine life by 15%. The study also discussed the exergy analysis, with LH2 showing better exergy than jet fuel. Although there are several drawbacks to LH2 owing to its technology being still at a TRL less than 7, this study did not identify any insurmountable difficulties in the potential certification of a hydrogen-fueled engine in the future. Potential issues that need to be overcome include the fuel system, tank configuration and control system design. NOx and water vapor emission must be eliminated or optimized in the combustor design for reduced and acceptable emission; however, at lower than 10,000 m altitude, research has shown that water vapor does not have an adverse impact.
Another external concern mentioned in this paper is the cost of LH2 production, which is currently less competitive than kerosene. LH2 requires a large amount of energy, and most of the energy source for production comes from fossil fuel, which also adds to total environmental emission. To resolve the emission issue, hydrogen must be produced from water using a renewable or nuclear energy source. Whether we consider other production options for LH2, like electrolysis, which has less impact on the environment, the need to account for high energy losses from new infrastructure builds and the liquefication process needs justifying to make economic sense.
Some of this study’s limitations include the assumptions made on turbofan engine hardware and operating conditions used during the assessment. A detailed combustor performance assessment using an advanced computational fluid tool is also proposed in future work. Other future work includes component exergy and creep life assessment on turbine NGV and downstream components.