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![]() http://www.avweb.com/avwebflash/news/Team-Aims-To-Fly-300-MPH-On-Batteries222710-1.html Electroflight Team Aims To Fly 300 MPH On Batteries By Mary Grady | September 1, 2014 Electroflight http://www.electro-flight.co.uk/aeroplane.html, a team of British glider builders, recently announced it has teamed up with Williams Advanced Engineering to build a single-seat airplane that will set a new speed record for electric aircraft of 300 mph. Team Electroflight has built a mock-up of its design, and said it will be powered by a "unique contra-rotating electric propulsion system." Williams is affiliated with the Williams Martini Formula One car-racing team, which is developing technology to compete in a new fully electric car-racing series, called Formula E, that is set to debut this month. "We are certain that the combined expertise of the teams will enable us to achieve our goal and break the world speed record for electric aircraft," said Roger Targett, of Electroflight. The current speed record for electric flight is 220 mph. Electroflight exhibited its mock-up of the new design at the recent Red Bull Air Races in Ascot, England. "There was a huge amount of interest and large numbers of people, mainly children, queuing to sit in the cockpit of our space allocation fuselage," said Targett. According to the Electroflight website: "Our aircraft design combines advances in carbon composite materials and construction methods with emerging electric motor, control system and energy-storage technologies. Its twin propeller contra-rotating propulsion offers unique maneuvering capabilities. … Two fixed-pitch propellers have been designed and engineered specifically to the rotational and torque characteristics of the motors, together with thrust and acceleration bearing assemblies that far exceed the loads presented during aggressive 10 G aerobatics and air racing. "The carbon composite airframe is fitted with a whole aircraft ballistic parachute system and incorporates a separate pilot safety cell, similar to that in F1 racing cars. The airframe has extremely low form drag and incorporates purpose designed compartments to carry batteries, controllers and electronic equipment. The result is a completely new type of race plane and technology demonstrator that is light, fast and capable of maneuvers impossible for single-propeller piston or gas-turbine-driven aircraft." ------------------ Propulsion System The propulsion system is a wholly new generation of an electric contra-rotating unit. The high torque of the electric motors allows the propeller shafts to be directly driven without gearing or other speed reduction devices and achieves simplicity unknown in non-electric forms of contra-rotating propeller propulsion. Except for the shaft bearings, the motor rotors, propeller shafts and propellers form the only two rotating assemblies in the system. This allows for almost maintenance free operation for the life of the system. A unique feature of electric propulsion is the ability to apply full power almost instantly with no spool up or inertial lag time found in piston or turbine types. The system's thrust to take-off weight ratio is greater than one and allows the aircraft to accelerate vertically (vertical take-off) and to operate at extreme altitudes far above oxygen dependant engines in unpiloted conditions. Two fixed pitch propellers have been designed and engineered specifically to the rotational and torque characteristics of the motors, together with thrust and acceleration bearing assemblies that far exceed the loads presented during aggressive 10 G aerobatics and air racing. The carbon composite airframe is fitted with a whole aircraft ballistic parachute system and incorporates a separate pilot safety cell, similar to that in F1 racing cars. The airframe has extremely low form drag and incorporates purpose designed compartments to carry batteries, controllers and electronic equipment. The result is a completely new type of race plane and technology demonstrator that is light, fast and capable of manoeuvres impossible for single propeller piston or gas turbine driven aircraft. Facts The single seat prototype aircraft is designed to demonstrate the advantages of pure electric flight. All Up Weight (excluding pilot); 345 kgs. Maximum Power (3400rpm): 225 kW Thrust 500 Kgs Maximum level Speed (sea level) 250 kts Climb rate (vertical) 9,000 ft/min Battery power (720 volts) 15 kW |
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Larry Dighera wrote:
http://www.avweb.com/avwebflash/news/Team-Aims-To-Fly-300-MPH-On-Batteries222710-1.html Electroflight Team Aims To Fly 300 MPH On Batteries Whoopee. Let me know when they can fly 4 hours at at least 120 knots. -- Jim Pennino |
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On 9/8/2014 6:43 AM, Larry Dighera wrote:
She told me that their fuel cell was 60% efficient in producing electricity from oxygen in the air and compressed hydrogen; this is in contrast to ~30% efficiency of internal combustion engines. If true, that will enable this technology to surpass current propulsion technology. Fuel cells have been the ultimate "vaporware". Starting about in the 1990's and continuing thru the first decade of the 2000's, fuel cells were always "next year's technology. Several companies actually announced consumer products, only to see them never actually materialize on the marketplace. Now we seem to hear a lot less about them. It turns out that fuel cells are delicate things that have trouble lasting in the real world. Feed them tainted fuel just once, and they are junk. There are major problems obtaining a huge supply of hydrogen and making the infrastructure to distribute it. It seems that we have lots of oil wells and lots of natural gas wells, but no hydrogen wells. To produce hydrogen takes prodigious amounts of energy, so it will never be cheap. Still, when Honda actually introduced a few fuel cell cars starting in the early 2000's, I thought that fuel cells were finally on the way. History seems to be proving otherwise. The Honda fuel cell cars remained a pilot program, producing only a few hundred units over a decade or so. Not one unit was actually sold. Honda leased them to carefully vetted customers. Now the word is that they will end production with the 2015 model. Over all this time, battery technology has continued to improve and has actually led to real products in the consumer market. We now have a choice of several practical battery cars that are on the mass market, although most of us choose not to buy them for solid economic and practical reasons. Now we are seeing the beginnings of the same thing happening in aviation. There will be eventually be a few practical battery airplanes available. They will be around, but few of us will actually buy them. Fuel cells? Don't hold your breath! But if we ever get them, they will be expensive to operate because hydrogen will never be cheap. |
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Vaughn wrote:
On 9/8/2014 6:43 AM, Larry Dighera wrote: She told me that their fuel cell was 60% efficient in producing electricity from oxygen in the air and compressed hydrogen; this is in contrast to ~30% efficiency of internal combustion engines. If true, that will enable this technology to surpass current propulsion technology. Fuel cells have been the ultimate "vaporware". Starting about in the 1990's and continuing thru the first decade of the 2000's, fuel cells were always "next year's technology. Several companies actually announced consumer products, only to see them never actually materialize on the marketplace. Now we seem to hear a lot less about them. It turns out that fuel cells are delicate things that have trouble lasting in the real world. Feed them tainted fuel just once, and they are junk. There are major problems obtaining a huge supply of hydrogen and making the infrastructure to distribute it. It seems that we have lots of oil wells and lots of natural gas wells, but no hydrogen wells. To produce hydrogen takes prodigious amounts of energy, so it will never be cheap. The vast majority of commercial hydrogen is produced by steam reforming of natural gas. A fuel cell that runs directly on natural gas would make a lot more sense for many reasons, but primarily because you can skip the reforming stage and natural gas is a LOT easier and safer to store in a tank. Still, when Honda actually introduced a few fuel cell cars starting in the early 2000's, I thought that fuel cells were finally on the way. History seems to be proving otherwise. The Honda fuel cell cars remained a pilot program, producing only a few hundred units over a decade or so. Not one unit was actually sold. Honda leased them to carefully vetted customers. Now the word is that they will end production with the 2015 model. Over all this time, battery technology has continued to improve and has actually led to real products in the consumer market. We now have a choice of several practical battery cars that are on the mass market, although most of us choose not to buy them for solid economic and practical reasons. Like the 2 to 3 times greater cost for an electric car versus a gas car and the fact that batteries have a limited life span and are not cheap to replace. Another issue that is significant for aviation is the self discharge rate of those high-tech batteries. If you let them sit without charging for a month or two they go dead and won't recharge. Now we are seeing the beginnings of the same thing happening in aviation. There will be eventually be a few practical battery airplanes available. They will be around, but few of us will actually buy them. Unless you fly a motor glider which is the only aviation application where electric power is practical and likely to be for a very long time. Fuel cells? Don't hold your breath! But if we ever get them, they will be expensive to operate because hydrogen will never be cheap. Again, only natural gas fuel cells make any sense. -- Jim Pennino |
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Larry Dighera wrote:
On Sun, 7 Sep 2014 23:52:34 -0000, wrote: Larry Dighera wrote: http://www.avweb.com/avwebflash/news/Team-Aims-To-Fly-300-MPH-On-Batteries222710-1.html Electroflight Team Aims To Fly 300 MPH On Batteries Whoopee. Let me know when they can fly 4 hours at at least 120 knots. Hello Jim, I recall researching this with you some years back in this newsgroup. Technology is advancing, and hydrogen powered fuel cell based electric power is on the horizon. Yep, right around the corner along with cheap fusion power, true artificial intelligence, a cure for the common cold and peace in the Middle East. At the 2014 Consumer Electronics Show I spoke with Toyota engineer Ms. Jackie Birdsall about Toyota's FCV concept car on display there. Here's link to a video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2bluUNxVLhE. She told me that their fuel cell was 60% efficient in producing electricity from oxygen in the air and compressed hydrogen; this is in contrast to ~30% efficiency of internal combustion engines. If true, that will enable this technology to surpass Efficiency has never been a particular issue, it has alway been energy density, and for airplanes, that is both by weight and volume. And to have an apples to apples comparison you have to include all the support pieces like tanks and delivery equipment. current propulsion technology. She also said the hydrogen would be compressed to ten bar, which would raise its energy density comparable to that of gasoline. So, it would appear that your dream specifications could be achievable soon. That's OK for a car, but a 145 psi hydrogen tank after the FAA gets done with the requirements is not going to be particularly light. There is also the issue of tank life. Tanks for compressed gas of any kind are typically subject to periodic static testing and/or replacement. I just can't see how all that is going to be practical in an aircraft wing. Best regards, Larry I'm not going to be holding my breath... -- Jim Pennino |
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Larry Dighera wrote in
: She also said the hydrogen would be compressed to ten bar, which would raise its energy density comparable to that of gasoline. I'm not so sure about that. An article I found many many years ago, published in 2002, discusses such things. If the information in the article is correct, it is extremely difficult to beat gasoline for energy density. It lists gasoline as having an energy density of 9000Wh/l (watt-hours per liter). 150 bar H2 is only 405 Wh/l. Liquid H2 is 2600 Wh/l. Lithium batteries are listed as 250 Wh/l, but mind you this was published 12 years ago. Battery technology has made large leaps since then. Even if they've only doubled in energy density since then, that would still beat 150 bar H2. http://www.tinaja.com/glib/energfun.pdf Brian -- http://www.earthwaves.org/forum/index.php - Earth Sciences discussion http://www.skywise711.com - Lasers, Seismology, Astronomy, Skepticism Sed quis custodiet ipsos Custodes? |
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In article ,
Skywise wrote: Larry Dighera wrote in : She also said the hydrogen would be compressed to ten bar, which would raise its energy density comparable to that of gasoline. I'm not so sure about that. An article I found many many years ago, published in 2002, discusses such things. If the information in the article is correct, it is extremely difficult to beat gasoline for energy density. It lists gasoline as having an energy density of 9000Wh/l (watt-hours per liter). 150 bar H2 is only 405 Wh/l. Liquid H2 is 2600 Wh/l. Lithium batteries are listed as 250 Wh/l, but mind you this was published 12 years ago. Battery technology has made large leaps since then. Even if they've only doubled in energy density since then, that would still beat 150 bar H2. http://www.tinaja.com/glib/energfun.pdf Brian Battery technology hasn't (and probably never will) reached a competitive level with hydrocarbons for energy density. Just think, for back-of-the-envelope calculation, that the energy stored in a battery represents the entire mass of all the fuel (and air) that a combustion engine uses for power. The fuel represents only 1/15 the total mass, which means that, for every gallon of gasoline (6 lb) 90 lb of air must pass through the motor. So, for a 50-gallon fuel tank (300 lb), one must also carry 4500 lb of air. |
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