I am wondering if a large SAWTH can gain by being propelled with two R&R turbofan, like the new airliners engines.
I see no more shafting, easier to maintain the engine, been on deck level.
The consumption can be high, but perhaps with a derating the engine?
I know the combine air/salt/water is not the best for gas turbine but that can be resolved since some warship use the gas-turbine to power the gen-set and as a high speed propulsion also. Like some yacht.
But the mode I am thinking si more simpler, get rid of shaft and propellers. Just plain R&R prop-fan on deck, that it's. This engine with fans are described as very efficient, more than a gas-turbine by itself.
The goal will be not for speed, but for simplicity of design.
Note: I know nothing about gas turbine, I just put two an two together, and see if it can come to four, or go .........to five!
Two turbofan engines designed to operate well near ground level are those used in the A-10 attack aircraft and Harrier VTOL fighter.
The comment above about "engines designed to operate at lower altitude" indicates a fundamental lack of understanding about the design of turbine engines. I've been in the turbine engine design business for over 40 years and I can tell you absolutely that there is no such thing as an engine designed for low altitudes. Gas turbine engines commonly operate from sea level to altitudes up to 40,000 ft without any real concerns.
The density of the air entering the engine obvioulsy is reduced as the altitude increases, but the engine operates the same (with the exception of Reynolds number effects, which is beyond the scope of this conversation), it only produces less thrust as you go up in altitude
Neither of those particular engines noted above are well suited for powering a low speed vehicle since they are several generations old and are not considered high bypass ratio engines compared to current technology.
The key element in consideration of a turbofan engine for lower speed duty is what is called the bypass ratio. That is, the amount of air bypassing the core of the engine compared to the amount of air passing through the core. The higher the bypass ratio, the better the PROPULSIVE EFFICIENCY, (there's that pesky term again). The reason higher bypass ratios result in better fuel consumption is that they are much more efficient because the move more air at lower velocity than a smilar engine with lower bypass ratio. Aircraft designed for higher speed operation (typically above Mach 1) will have lower bypass ratios, but for aircraft operating up to high subsonic speeds, like commercial aircraft engines, higher bypass ratios will improve fuel consumption. This is why the later generations of engines have much better fuel consumption than older engines, and the next generation of engines will have geared fans that turn slower, and move more air and consequently have better propulisive efficiency and burn less fuel.
The OP in his post (shown above) was really asking if it made sense to use a modern high bypass turbofan engine to push a SWATH (not a very high speed hull), as opposed to more conventional propulsion. His question was basically if he could derate the engine and save fuel, since the fuel consumption of these engines is very high.
Turbine engines actually have their best specific fuel consumpion (fuel burned per thrust generated) at high power. This is because the thermodynamic efficiency of these engines is highest at the the highest power because the engine is running at the highest pressure ratio and cycle temperature at these conditions. Part power fuel consumption is lower, but you burn more fuel per pound of thrust at those conditions, so derating the engine, or picking a bigger engine and running it at lower power is less efficient than picking the right size engine and running it at higher power.
The fundamental problem is that the propulsive efficiency of a turbofan is worse than a turboprop at low speed. You can think of a turboprop as much higher bypass ratio fan engine and you wouldn't be wrong. Up to about .6 or .7 Mach propellers are more efficient than fans, and above that turbofans are more efficient. This is why most air cushion vehicles use props as opposed to fans.
However, we've shown demonstrably that props are a poor way to propel a lower speed boat, and if props are bad, then in this speed regime, fans are even worse. So a turboprop would be a better choice than a fan, but the fuel consumption of a turboprop would likely be twice that of a turboshaft engine driving a propeller, and that would, unless you are talking about a very large and modern engine will burn a good bit more than a diesel. Moreover a turboprop engine has a gearbox, so the difference between a turboprop and a marine engine in terms of complexity isn't as great, and some of the advanges of the prop over the fan go away.
Bottom line is that you can propel a boat with a turbofan, but it's going to burn so much fuel that it doesn't make sense. If you put a turboprop on it, it's not as simple and elegant as a fan, and the prop makes more noise and has other safety drawbacks, and it's going to burn about twice the fuel of a water prop driven by the same engine, so an airscrew is also a poor choice.
It's the old saw of "just because you can do something, it doesn't mean you should".