Quantcast

CFM progresses Rise open-fan engine testing ahead of flight demonstrations

American Testing Tech to Help Passengers Make Connecting Flights
Why fuel price crash won’t make flying cheaper
Kristi Noem says travelers without Real ID will still be able to fly after deadline
Frontier Airlines Announces New Routes Launching This Summer, Connecting Baltimore With Chicago O’Hare and Trenton, N.J. With Myrtle Beach, S.C.
Airlines in North America prioritize investments in cyber, AI
Global Airlines & HiFly Operate 1st Passenger Airbus A380 Flight Between Barcelona And Berlin
American Airlines unveils ritzy new plane suites launching this summer
Airline Stocks To Keep An Eye On - April 28th
50 New Routes Starting In May 2025
Report: JetBlue, United Mulling Partnership
New First-Class Suites, Futuristic Aircraft and the Top Air Travel News From April 2025
Southwest Airlines Announces Reimagined Fare Products, New Benefits for Rapid Rewards Credit Cardmembers and Tier Member Customers
New Alaska Airlines trading cards take flight this World Pilots’ Day - Alaska Airlines News
United CEO calls Trump's tariffs a 'chess game'
Virtual Training Becomes a Reality
Korean Air Restarts Longest 747 Passenger Flight in the World
Flight tickets from Srinagar remain exorbitantly high despite aviation ministry request
RTX Q1 Earnings & Sales Beat Estimates, Increase Year Over Year
Delta faces federal investigation as it scraps hundreds of flights for fifth straight day
Coalition pledges to remove EV tax break two days after Dutton ruled out scrapping it – as it happened
Adani’s airport unit seeks $750 million loan from global banks
GE Aerospace affirms outlook; CEO met with Trump to discuss tariffs
Flight made emergency landing in Denver after reported animal strike and engine fire
General Dynamics says G800 jet receives FAA, EASA certifications
Archer unveils plans for NYC air-taxi network in partnership with United Airlines
United Airlines doubles down on Chicago roots with new O'Hare billboards
ICAO Proposes ‘Journey Pass’ Biometric ID Boarding
Gatwick airport strikes, Easter 2025: will my flight be cancelled?
Boarding passes and check-in could be scrapped in air travel shake-up
The most in Mexico: American Airlines adds 30th destination as part of a record-breaking schedule
CFM progresses Rise open-fan engine testing ahead of flight demonstrations
Policy
Webp 4icawwvtg7mupp051grumj0ndq6y
JSX Aircraft | Official Website

Development work for the Rise open-fan engine has shifted from the design phase to an extensive ground testing campaign as CFM International prepares to begin flying a technology demonstrator in the coming years.

CFM launched the Revolutionary Innovation for Sustainable Engines (RISE) program in 2021 to develop a successor to the ubiquitous Leap turbofan engine, which powers the Airbus A320neo, Boeing 737 Max, and Comac C919 airliners. It could support the next generation of single-aisle aircraft that airframers such as Boeing and Airbus aim to introduce in the 2030s.

Pierre Cottenceau, executive vice president of engineering and R&T for CFM partner Safran Aircraft Engines, updated AIN on the project's many technical advances. “We have made significant progress in our testing plan, which confirms the benefits of the Open Fan propulsive system for the next generation of single-aisle aircraft," he explained. "We successfully completed key tests on fan acoustics, aerodynamics, and blade ingestion, and the high-speed, low-pressure turbine while advancing hybrid electric tests for our suite of pioneering technologies."

Get the Newsletter
Sign-up to receive weekly round up of news from Sky Industry News
By submitting, you agree to our Privacy Policy and Terms of Service. By providing your phone number you are opting in and consenting to receive recurring SMS/MMS messages, including automated texts, to that number from our short code. Msg & data rates may apply. Reply HELP for help, STOP to end. SMS opt-in will not be sold, rented, or shared.

The joint venture between GE Aerospace and Safran Aircraft Engines looks to achieve a 20% reduction in fuel burn and carbon dioxide emissions compared with the most efficient jet engines available today—a goal that GE Aerospace vice president of engineering Mohamed Ali says he feels increasingly confident it will achieve, and possibly overshoot.

During a media briefing before the Farnborough International Airshow at GE Aerospace’s Cincinnati headquarters last month, Ali said his team recently received some promising results from wind tunnel tests. Safran conducted the tests earlier this year in collaboration with the Onera aerospace research agency at its wind tunnel facility in Modane, France.

To validate the open-fan engine performance and noise levels, GE Aerospace has used supercomputers to run simulations and compare calculations with real-world test results. “When we compare them to supercomputing predictions, always with computational fluid dynamics there is a correction factor—they never match,” Ali explained. “We needed none because we are able to model it essentially at the molecular level.”

With the power to process trillions of calculations per second, supercomputers are shortening the product development cycle “and enabling us to get accurate results faster,” Ali said.

GE Aerospace has become one of the largest consumers of supercomputing capability in the world, and according to Ali, now uses about the same amount of computational power as prominent artificial intelligence platforms like OpenAI.

Last year GE Aerospace became the first business to use the U.S. Department of Energy’s new Frontier supercomputer. Located at Oak Ridge National Laboratory in Tennessee, it is considered one of fastest supercomputers globally carrying capacity more than a quintillion (one million trillion) calculations per second.

Noise testing of open fan design began last year at an Airbus facility in Hamburg Germany Those tests validated lower noise levels than today's Leap engines according to Ali

At 2022 Farnborough show CFM Airbus announced plans flight-testing open-fan technology demonstrator on A380-based testbed Earlier two companies signed separate agreement collaborate hydrogen demonstration program

Airbus CFM plan install modified GE Passport turbofan combustion engine A380 testbed filled liquid hydrogen tanks fly end 2026 Separately GE Aerospace works NASA modify Passport engine hybrid-electric propulsion technology

After successfully demonstrating hydrogen-combustion technology with Airbus CFM intends produce hydrogen-powered variant Rise engine initially compatible ordinary jet fuel sustainable aviation fuel SAF

This hydrogen demonstration also contributes Airbus ZeroE program aims introduce hydrogen-powered airliner capable carrying around 200 people up 2 nm by 2035

So far CFM Rise team conducted more than 100 tests validate various aspects its engine technology Ali called results measuring durability capability open fan quite encouraging

"So we actually are increasingly feeling confident about our ability achieve 20% fuel burn improvement really set standards what future will be" he concluded

Organizations Included in this History
More News

Flying Food Group has announced that a union employee at its Schiller Park, Illinois facility has filed a petition with the National Labor Relations Board (NLRB) seeking a vote to remove Unite Here Local 1 as the union representative for the...

Jul 8, 2025

Air New Zealand has launched Dream Seats, a nationwide initiative aimed at supporting New Zealanders in pursuing their dreams.

Jul 8, 2025

dnata Catering & Retail has entered into a management contract with PT IAS Hospitality Indonesia (IASH) to enhance the inflight catering business at Denpasar International Airport.

Jul 8, 2025

Emirates is set to introduce its Premium Economy service on the Dubai-Kolkata route, starting July 18, 2025.

Jul 8, 2025

FedEx has announced a partnership with FUSO to introduce 12 electric trucks into its ground transportation fleet in Taiwan.

Jul 8, 2025

Flight searches for summer travel in 2025 have increased by 7% compared to the previous year, with France experiencing a significant 35% rise in outbound travel searches.

Jul 8, 2025