Hydrogen-powered aircraft


A hydrogen aircraft is an aeroplane that uses hydrogen fuel as a power source. Hydrogen can either be burned in a jet engine, or other kind of internal combustion engine, or can be used to power a fuel cell to generate electricity to power a propeller.
Unlike most aircraft, which use wings for storing fuel, hydrogen aircraft are usually designed with the hydrogen fuel tanks carried inside the fuselage.
According to research at the Pennsylvania State University in 2006, large commercial hydrogen aircraft could be built by 2020 but "will probably not enter service until closer to 2040." In the nearer term, interest has grown in using fuel cell aircraft as personal air vehicles.
The European Union's research project in cooperation with Airbus and 34 other partner companies dubbed CRYOPLANE assessed the technical feasibility, safety, environmental compatibility and economic viability of using liquid hydrogen as an aviation fuel. This was concluded in 2002.

Properties of hydrogen

Hydrogen has an energy density per unit mass that is 3 times higher than traditional jet fuel, but a lower energy density per unit of volume. In aircraft carbon fiber tanks are used, which can sustain a pressure of 700 bar. Cryogenic liquid hydrogen is also used.
If hydrogen is available in quantity from low-carbon energy sources such as wind or nuclear, its use in aircraft will produce fewer greenhouse gases than current aircraft. Currently very little hydrogen is produced using low-carbon energy sources, and there are several serious obstacles to the use of hydrogen in aircraft and other vehicles.
Due to the way it is produced, and the relative inefficiencies of its production given current technology, hydrogen is more expensive than fossil fuels.
Liquid hydrogen is one of the best coolants used in engineering, and it has been proposed to use this property for cooling intake air for very high speed aircraft, or even for cooling the vehicle's skin itself, particularly for scramjet-powered aircraft.

Properties of hydrogen aircraft

Liquid hydrogen has about four times the volume for the same amount of energy of kerosene based jet-fuel. In addition, its highly volatile nature precludes storing the fuel in the wings, as with conventional transport aircraft. Therefore, most liquid hydrogen aircraft designs store the fuel in the fuselage, leading to a larger fuselage length and diameter than a conventional kerosene fuelled aircraft. This lowers the performance due to the extra wetted area of the fuselage. The larger fuselage size causes more skin friction drag and wave drag. On the other hand, hydrogen is about one-third of the weight of kerosene jet-fuel for the same amount of energy. This means that for the same range and performance, the hydrogen aircraft would have about one-third of the fuel weight. For a Boeing 747-400 type aircraft, this would reduce the takeoff gross weight from. Thus, the performance of a hydrogen-fueled aircraft is a trade-off of the larger wetted area and lower fuel weight. This trade-off depends essentially on the size of the aircraft.

Prototypes

The Russian manufacturer Tupolev built a prototype hydrogen version of the Tu-154 airliner, named the Tu-155, which made its first flight in 1989. This was the first experimental aircraft in the world operating on liquid hydrogen.
– the world's first passenger aircraft powered by a hydrogen fuel cell.
Boeing Research & Technology Europe made a civilian aircraft from a 2-seat Diamond Aircraft Industries DA20 running on a fuel cell. Lange Aviation GmbH and the German aerospace center had also made a hydrogen-powered aeroplane with its Antares DLR-H2 airplane. These aircraft are of course configured in such fashion that the current low energy output from hydrogen propulsion do not pose a problem. For example, the Boeing Theator airplane only required 45 kW to take off, and 20 kW to stay airborne. In July 2010 Boeing also unveiled its hydrogen powered Phantom Eye UAV, that uses two Ford Motor Company internal combustion engines converted to operate on hydrogen.
In 2010 Rapid 200-FC, the first airplane in Europe and in the World fueled by gaseous hydrogen, successfully concluded six flight tests.
According to FAI Sporting Code, the airplane is considered in Class C while motor-gliders are considered Class D. The aircraft and the electric and energy system was developed within the European Union's "ENFICA-FC" project coordinated by Prof. Giulio Romeo of the Politecnico di Torino. The completely electrical power system was successfully tested during the experimental flight.
The rotation speed of 84 km/h has been obtained within 184 m of taxi at power of 35 kW. After take-off, speed was than increased up to indicated values of 110–120 km/h. Level flight at 700 ft and 130 km/h was attained by mean of only fuel cell power setting. A new speed record of 135 km/h was established. Also several higher speed at 145–150 km/h for tens of seconds were measured during free flights.
The flights reached an endurance of 45 minutes. The aircraft has an entirely electric 40 kW propeller; power is supplied to the propeller through 20 kW fuel cells fueled by hydrogen gas stored at 350 bar. In order to guarantee absolute safety of the operations, the airplane also has a second source of energy that consists of a set of 20 kW lithium polymer batteries which are able to guarantee alternative or supplementary power during take-off.
In 2011, an AeroVironment Global Observer which was fitted with a hydrogen-fueled propulsion system.
HY4 became the world's first passenger aircraft with an engine powered by a hydrogen fuel cell. Its first flight took place in Stuttgart airport, Germany, on September 29, 2016. It has the possibility to store 9 kg hydrogen, 4x11 kW fuel cells and 2x10 kWh batteries.

Proposed hydrogen aircraft

Historical