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From Cutting Tool Engineering

A murky roadmap for next-gen aircraft

Future narrow-body aircraft hinge on new propulsion: open rotor, ultrahigh bypass, hybrid systems and blended-wing designs—promising but decades away.

December 15, 2025
Image of Open Rotor
Open Rotor
Image of Alternative Propulsion
Alternative Propulsion
Image of Ultra High Bypass Ratio
Ultra High Bypass Ratio
Image of Blended Wing Body
Blended Wing Body AeroDynamic Advisory

The aerospace market seems to really like a large single-aisle, or narrow-body, fleet strategy, according to Richard Aboulafia at AeroDynamic Advisory LLC, even for international flights. “More than half the flights over the Atlantic over the past couple of years have been on single aisles. That’s a major change.”

However, he noted, there are no concrete roadmaps for the next-generation narrow body from any of the OEMs, including Airbus, Boeing, Embraer and Comac. Those aircraft will depend on novel propulsion technologies, such as engines that employ an open rotor, ultrahigh bypass ratio or alternative propulsion.

In an open rotor engine, the forward propeller pushes the air backwards, while the rear one sucks it. “Open rotor is very promising. It was very promising when I started my career in the late 1980s.” Aboulafia said.

With a bypass ratio generally greater than 15-1, an ultrahigh bypass ratio engine is a close cousin to the open rotor design, he explained. In an ultrahigh bypass ratio arrangement, a large quantity of fuel goes around the engine core and does not get burned, significantly enhancing fuel efficiency. “You are getting all that thrust, all that power for free.”

Aboulafia added that alternative propulsion sources include electric-, hydrogen- and hybrid-powered engines, with hybrid designs likely to come first. “It’s really a slow road. Even with hybrid, we’re talking 2040. In the long run, who knows?”

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