Abstract
Recent developments in ceramic-matrix composites and their successful use in combustor liners and shrouds have generated interest among researchers to adopt these materials in rotating gas turbine blades, especially in the first stages of high-pressure turbines where gas temperatures are highest. CMC blades have the potential of being retrofitted to replace superalloy turbine blades in operating gas turbines. In this paper, a comparative study on the thermodynamic performance of a marine gas turbine engine, LM 2500, featuring directionally solidified nickel superalloy blades versus novel CMC blades in the high-pressure turbine sections has been reported. Mathematical modeling of the gas turbine cycle components has been developed and then coded in
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