"With Clean Sky 2, the European Commission sends out a strong political signal recognizing the need to support the European aviation industry and secure its international competitiveness," comments Dr. Rainer Martens, MTU Chief Operating Officer. MTU concentrates its efforts on the low-pressure turbine and high-pressure compressor, two technology areas in which the company excels. The primary focus of its activities is on the development of new, lighterweight, more temperatureresistant materials and improved aerodynamics for secondgeneration geared turbofan engines.
"What's new about the approach is that we don't just look at the individual components or modules, but focus on integrated systems," adds Martens. Take the low-pressure turbine, for example, where the challenge will be to further optimize low-pressure turbine technology while also taking inlet and exit case designs into consideration. Similarly, optimizing the high-pressure compressor will involve making improvements to the low-pressure compressor and inter-turbine case too. To validate the new technologies, MTU uses demonstrators, which will be tested between 2017 and 2019.
Another central task of Clean Sky 2, alongside the development of break-through technologies, is the integration of core partners for strategic tasks - small and mediumsized enterprises, universities and research establishments. MTU is now issuing calls for proposals to identify partners to help cover its technology demands.
The Clean Sky 2 technology program is part of the EU's Horizon 2020 Framework Program for Research and Innovation and is slated to run through 2024. Its primary aim is to make aviation even more environmentally friendly and efficient. From 2025 on, the matured technologies will be incorporated in nextgeneration aircraft. Clean Sky 2 will have a budget of a little less than four billion euros.