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Electric aircraft

An electric aircraft is an aircraft powered by electricity. Electric aircraft are seen as a way to reduce the environmental effects of aviation, providing zero emissions and quieter flights. Electricity may be supplied by a variety of methods, the most common being batteries. Most have electric motors driving propellers or turbines.

The Velis Electro became the first type certificated crewed electric aircraft on 10 June 2020.

Crewed flights in an electrically powered airship go back to the 19th century, and to 1917 for a tethered helicopter. Electrically powered model aircraft have been flown at least since 1957, preceding the small unmanned aerial vehicles (UAV) or drones used today. Small UAS could be used for parcel deliveries, and larger ones for long-endurance applications: aerial imagery, surveillance, telecommunications. The first crewed free flight by an electrically powered aeroplane, the MB-E1, was made in 1973, and most crewed electric aircraft today are still only experimental prototypes. Between 2015 and 2016, Solar Impulse 2 completed a circumnavigation of the Earth using solar power. Electric VTOL aircraft or personal air vehicles are being considered for Urban Air Mobility. Electric commercial airliners could lower operating costs.[1]: 1–7 

Environmental effects of aviation edit

The environmental effects of aviation on climate change have become a major driving force for the development of electric aircraft, with a zero-emissions electric powertrain being the goal for some development teams. Aviation accounts for 2.4% of all fossil fuel derived CO2 emissions, and its emissions of air transportation altogether increased by 32% between 2013 and 2018.[2] While estimating aviation's non-CO2 effects on climate change is complex, NOx and contrails could increase this responsibility to 3.5%.[3] Other benefits are the potential for noise reduction, in an industry with a severe noise pollution and abatement problem.[4]

Offboard power supply edit

Mechanisms for supplying the necessary electricity without storing all of it onboard include:

Solar cells edit

 
Solar panels on the NASA Pathfinder wing's upper surface

A solar cell converts sunlight directly into electricity, either for direct power or temporary storage. The power output of solar cells is low and requires that many be connected together, which limits their use. Typical solar panels running at 15–20% conversion efficiency (sunlight energy to electrical power) produce about 150–200 W/m2 (0.019–0.025 hp/sq ft) in direct sunlight.[5] Usable areas are further limited as output from a poorly performing panel impacts the output of all the panels on its circuit, meaning they all require similar conditions, including being at a similar angle to the sun, and not being masked by shadow.[6]

Between 2010 and 2020, solar power modules have declined in cost by 90% and continue to drop by 13–15% per year.[7] Solar cell efficiency has also risen substantially, from 2% in 1955 to 20% in 1985, and some experimental systems now exceed 44%. However, most of the technologies at these high efficiencies have only been possible under laboratory settings and not at full-scale production level.[8]

The free availability of sunlight makes solar power attractive for high-altitude, long-endurance applications, where the cold and reduced atmospheric interference make them significantly more efficient than on the ground.[9][10] The drop in the dry-air temperature as altitude increases, called the environmental lapse rate (ELR), averages 6.49 °C/km[11] (memorized in pilot training as 1.98 °C/1,000 ft or 3.56 °F/1,000 feet) so that temperature for a typical airliner's cruising altitude of around 35,000 ft (11,000 m) will be substantially lower than at ground level.

Night flying, such for endurance flights and with aircraft providing 24 hour coverage over an area typically require a backup storage system, which is charged during the day from surplus power, and supplies power during the hours of darkness.

Microwaves edit

Power beaming of electromagnetic energy such as microwaves relies on a ground-based power source. However, compared to using a power cable, power beaming allows the aircraft to move laterally and carries a much lower weight penalty, particularly as altitude increases. The technology has only been demonstrated on small models and awaits practical development at larger scales.[12]

External power cables edit

For powered vehicles replacing tethered aerostats, an electrical power cable can be connected to a ground-based supply, such as an electric generator or the local power grid. At low altitudes this avoids having to lift batteries, and was used by the experimental Petróczy-Kármán-Žurovec PKZ-1 observation vehicle of 1917. However the higher it flies, the heavier the length of cable it lifts becomes.

Power storage edit

Mechanisms for storing the necessary electricity include:

  • Batteries which use a chemical reaction to generate electricity which is reversed when recharged.
  • Fuel cells consume fuel and an oxidizer in a chemical reaction to generate electricity, they need to be refueled, typically with hydrogen.

Batteries edit

 
Batteries for the Tier1 Engineering electric Robinson R44

Batteries are the most common onboard energy storage component of electric aircraft, due to their relatively high storage capacity. Batteries first powered airships in the nineteenth century but the lead–acid batteries were very heavy and it was not until the arrival of other chemistries, such as nickel–cadmium (NiCd) later in the twentieth century, that batteries became practical for heavier-than-air aircraft. Modern batteries are mostly rechargeable types based on lithium technologies.

Lithium polymer (LiPo), a type of lithium-ion batteries (LIB), have long been applied in unmanned flight for their light weight and rechargeability. However, their energy density limits their application mostly to being drone batteries.[13] Increasing maximum time of flight by simply designing larger aircraft using larger batteries is inefficient, because of the payload-range compromise. After a certain increase in battery weight, there are diminishing returns through the mass penalty not outweighing the increase in battery specific energy.[14][15] There is a similar trade-off between the maximum range and number of passengers. Computational tools have been used to model this trend, predicting that a small-scale electric aircraft of average weight (1500 kg) and average energy density (150 Wh/kg) could travel a range of ~80 mi with one passenger, ~60 mi with two, and less than ~30 mi with three.[15]

In 2017 the power available from batteries was estimated at 170 Wh/kg, 145 Wh/kg at the shaft including the system efficiency, while a gas turbine extracted 6,545 Wh/kg of shaft power from an 11,900 Wh/kg fuel.[16] In 2018 Lithium-ion batteries including packaging and accessories were estimated to give 160 Wh/kg while aviation fuel gave 12,500 Wh/kg.[17] In 2018 the specific energy of electricity storage was still only 2% of aviation fuel.[18] This 1:50 ratio makes electric propulsion impractical for long-range aircraft, as a 500 nmi (930 km) mission for an all-electric, 12-passenger aircraft would require a six-fold increase in battery power density.[19] That said, battery-electric motors have a higher efficiency (~90%) than most jet engines (~50%), which can be further exploited through emerging battery chemistries.[20]

To be feasible for electric aircraft application, it is essential that power storage be improved. Energy density is widely recognized to be the bottleneck for zero-emission electric powertrain.[21][22] Another limitation is the discharge rate due to demand-pack energy ratio and sensitive mission segments, as the discharge C-rate for take-off is 4C while it is almost 5C for landing.[23][15][clarification needed] Electric aircraft have additional heat generation and end-of-life needs, requiring novel thermal management strategies, power-fade capabilities and battery pack failure modes.

As of 2019, the best Li-ion batteries achieved 250–300 Wh/kg, sufficient for a small aircraft, while a regional airliner would have needed a 500 Wh/kg battery pack and an Airbus A320-sized single-aisle would need 2 kWh/kg.[19] Electric power is only suitable for small aircraft while for large passenger aircraft, an improvement of the energy density by a factor 20 compared to li-ion batteries would be required.[24][better source needed]

Such batteries can reduce the overall operating costs for some short-range flights. For example, the electricity used in the Harbour Air Beavers costs them around $0.10 Canadian per kWh compared to $2.00 per liter for gas,[4] providing 33 MJ (9.2 kWh) of energy with a 44 MJ/kg fuel and a 0.75 density Avgas, $0.22 per chemical kWh or $0.65 per shaft kWh with an efficiency of one third. Jet fuel is cheaper and large gas turbine are more efficient, though. In 2021, beyond-lithium-ion technologies such as Solid-state battery (lithium-sulfur, LSB) and lithium-air batteries (LAB) have become increasingly promising areas of research for more competitive battery-electric aircraft performance.[25][26]

The SAE International AE-7D[27] committee was formed by Electro.Aero in 2018 to standardise electric aircraft charging and energy storage. One of the first documents developed was the AS6968 standard for sub-megawatt electric aircraft charging of electric aircraft. The AE-7D committee is also developing Aerospace Information Report AIR7357 for megawatt power level charging. Some airports have charging stations for electric cars which can also charge aircraft.[28]

Ultracapacitors edit

An ultracapacitor is a hybrid electrochemical energy storage system bridging batteries and capacitors, and has some advantages over batteries in being able to charge and discharge much faster with higher peak currents, while not being as limited in the number of charge-discharge cycles, as the reaction is not just chemical but also electrical.[29][better source needed]

Their energy density, typically around 5 Wh/kg, is however well below that of batteries, and they are considerably more expensive, even when their longer lifespan is factored in.[30][better source needed]

Fuel cells edit

 
The Taurus G4 taking off from the Sonoma County Airport in California

A fuel cell (FC) uses the reaction between two chemicals such as hydrogen and oxygen to create electricity, much like a liquid-propellant rocket motor, but generating electricity in a controlled chemical reaction, instead of thrust. While the aircraft must carry the hydrogen (or a similar fuel), with its own complications and risks, the oxygen can be obtained from the atmosphere.

Propulsion edit

Electric motors edit

 
The Siemens SP200D motor powering the Airbus CityAirbus

Almost all electric aircraft to date have been powered by electric motors driving thrust-generating propellers or lift-generating rotors.[31]

While the batteries weigh more than the equivalent in fuel, electric motors weigh less than their piston-engine counterparts and in smaller aircraft used for shorter flights, can partly offset the disparity between electric and gasoline energy densities.[4][32] Electric motors also do not lose power with altitude, unlike internal-combustion engines,[28] avoiding the need for complex and costly measures used to prevent this, such as the use of turbochargers.

The experimental Extra 330LE have a 260 kW (350 hp) Siemens SP260D motor weighing 50 kg, with a 37.2 kWh battery pack, for an aircraft weight of 1,000 kg.[33] It replaces a 235 kW (315 hp) Lycoming AEIO-580 piston engine weighing 202 kg.[34] The piston-engine Extra 330 empty weight is 677 kg,[35] 474 kg without the engine. The Lycoming engine has a fuel consumption of 141 lb (64 kg) per hour when outputting 315 hp (235 kW),[36] or 0.27 kg/kWh: it needs 10 kg of fuel to output the same 37.2 kWh.

Besides the motor itself, an aircraft weight is hampered by the necessary energy reserves: a 19-seat aircraft needs the mandatory IFR reserves of 5% route contingency, the flight to a 100 nmi alternate plus 30 minutes of holding before landing – 308 kg of fuel for a turboprop, or 4,300 kg of 250 Wh/kg batteries, similar to a current 19-seater empty weight.[37] An electric propulsion system also includes a power inverter, while fuel engines have a fuel system themselves.

The 750 shp (560 kW) experimental magniX magni500 electric motor weighs 297 lb (135 kg),[38] while the 729 hp (544 kW) certified Pratt & Whitney Canada PT6A-114 weighs 297 lb (135 kg),[39] both powering the Cessna 208 Caravan.

The increase in power, combined with Supplemental Type Certificate (STC) modifications can offset the weight of the batteries by increasing the airplane's gross operating weight, including the landing weight.[28] Aircraft that use fossil fuels are lighter when they land, which allows the structure to be lighter. With a battery powered aircraft, the weight remains the same, and so may require reinforcement.[28]

Hybrid power edit

A hybrid electric aircraft is an aircraft with a hybrid electric powertrain. It typically takes off and lands under clean and quiet electric power, and cruises under conventional piston or jet engine power. This makes long flights practical, while reducing their carbon footprint.[17] By May 2018, there were over 30 projects, and short-haul hybrid-electric airliners were envisioned from 2032.[40] The most advanced are the Zunum Aero 10-seater,[41] the Airbus E-Fan X demonstrator,[42] the VoltAero Cassio,[43] UTC is modifying a Bombardier Dash 8,[44] while the Ampaire Electric EEL prototype first flew on 6 June 2019.[45]

Magnetohydrodynamics edit

In November 2018, MIT engineers achieved the first free flight with a model aircraft having no moving parts, the EAD Airframe Version 2. It is propelled by creating an ion wind using magnetohydrodynamics (MHD).[46][47] MHD has been used to achieve vertical lift in the past, but only by cabling up the MHD ion generator system to an external power supply.

History edit

By May 2018 almost 100 electric aircraft were known to be under development.[48] This was up from 70 the previous year and included 60% from startups, 32% from aerospace incumbents, half of them major OEMs and 8% from academic, government organizations and non-aerospace companies, mainly from Europe (45%) and the U.S. (40%).[40] Mostly urban air taxis (50%) and general aviation aircraft (47%), a majority are battery-powered (73%), while some are hybrid-electric (31%), most of these being larger airliners.[40] By May 2019, the number of known electric aircraft development programmes was closer to 170, with a majority of them aimed at the urban air taxi role.[49] By 2022, about 100 electric aircraft designs were under development worldwide.[1]: 10–11  By 2023, the number of sustainable aircraft concepts under development (not only electric) was estimated at up to 700.[50]

Airships edit

The use of electricity for aircraft propulsion was first experimented with during the development of the airship in the latter part of the nineteenth century. On 8 October 1883, Gaston Tissandier flew the first electrically powered airship.[51]: 292 [52] The following year, Charles Renard and Arthur Krebs flew La France with a more powerful motor.[51]: 306  Even with the lifting capacity of an airship, the heavy accumulators needed to store the electricity severely limited the speed and range of such early airships.

Fully electric airships are expected to be available again by the 2030s.[53]

Unmanned aircraft edit

In 1909, an electric free flight model was claimed to have been flown eight minutes, but this claim has been disputed by the builder of the first recorded electric Radio-Controlled model aircraft flight in 1957.[54] Power density for electric flight was problematic even for small models.

 
The NASA Pathfinder Plus electric-powered unmanned aerial vehicle

NASA's Pathfinder, Pathfinder Plus, Centurion, and Helios were a series of solar and fuel cell system–powered unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs) developed by AeroVironment, Inc. from 1983 until 2003 under NASA's Environmental Research Aircraft and Sensor Technology program.[55][56] On September 11, 1995, Pathfinder set an unofficial altitude record for solar-powered aircraft of 50,000 feet (15,000 m) during a 12-hour flight from NASA Dryden. After further modifications, the aircraft was moved to the U.S. Navy's Pacific Missile Range Facility (PMRF) on the Hawaiian island of Kauai. On July 7, 1997, Pathfinder raised the altitude record for solar–powered aircraft to 71,530 feet (21,800 m), which was also the record for propeller–driven aircraft.[55]

On August 6, 1998, Pathfinder Plus raised the national altitude record to 80,201 feet (24,445 m) for solar-powered and propeller-driven aircraft.[55][57]

On August 14, 2001, Helios set an altitude record of 29,524 metres (96,863 ft) – the record for FAI class U (experimental/new technologies), and FAI class U-1.d (remotely controlled UAV with a mass between 500 and 2,500 kg (1,100 and 5,500 lb)) as well as the altitude record for propeller–driven aircraft.[58] On June 26, 2003, the Helios prototype broke up and fell into the Pacific Ocean off Hawaii after the aircraft encountered turbulence, ending the program.

In 2005, AC Propulsion flew an unmanned airplane named "SoLong" for 48 hours non-stop, propelled entirely by solar energy. This was the first such around-the-clock flight, on energy stored in the batteries mounted on the aircraft.[59][60]

The QinetiQ Zephyr is a lightweight solar-powered unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV). As of 23 July 2010 it holds the endurance record for an unmanned aerial vehicle of over 2 weeks (336 hours).[61] It is of carbon fiber-reinforced polymer construction, the 2010 version weighing 50 kg (110 lb)[62] (the 2008 version weighed 30 kg (66 lb)) with a span of 22.5 m (74 ft)[62] (the 2008 version had a 18 m (59 ft) wingspan). During the day it uses sunlight to charge lithium-sulphur batteries, which power the aircraft at night.[63] In July 2010 a Zephyr made a world record UAV endurance flight of 336 hours, 22 minutes and 8 seconds (more than two weeks) and also set an altitude record of 70,742 feet (21,562 m) for FAI class U-1.c (remotely controlled UAV with a weight between 50 and 500 kg (110 and 1,100 lb)).[64][65][66]

Vertical flight edit

 
The 1918 Petróczy-Kármán-Žurovec PKZ-2 tethered helicopter followed the 1917 PKZ-1

For a tethered device such as an air observation platform, it is possible to run the power up the tether. In an attempt to create a more practical solution than the clumsy balloons then in use, the Austro-Hungarian Petróczy-Kármán-Žurovec PKZ-1 electric-powered helicopter was flown in 1917. It had a specially-designed 190 hp (140 kW) continuous-rated electric motor made by Austro-Daimler and received its power up a cable from a ground-based DC generator. However electric motors were not yet powerful enough for such applications and the motor burned out after only a few flights.[67]

In 1964, William C. Brown at Raytheon flew a model helicopter that received all of the power needed for flight by microwave power transmission.[68]

The world's first large-scale all-electric tilt-rotor was the AgustaWestland Project Zero unmanned aerial vehicle technology demonstrator, which performed unmanned tethered fights on ground power in June 2011, less than six months after the company gave the official go-ahead.[69]

 
Solution F/Chretien Helicopter

The first free-flying electric helicopter was the Solution F/Chretien Helicopter, developed by Pascal Chretien in Venelles, France. It went from computer-aided design concept on September 10, 2010, to first flight in August 2011, in under a year.[70][71]

In September 2016, Martine Rothblatt and Tier1 Engineering successfully tested an electric-powered helicopter. The five minute flight reached an altitude of 400 feet (120 m) with a peak speed of 80 knots (150 km/h). The Robinson R44 helicopter was modified with two three-phase permanent magnet synchronous YASA Motors, weighing 45 kg (100 lb), plus 11 Lithium polymer batteries from Brammo weighing 500 kg (1,100 lb).[72][73][74] It later flew for 20 minutes in 2016.[75][76] On December 7, 2018, Tier 1 Engineering flew an electric, battery-powered R44 over 30 nmi (56 km) at 80 kn (150 km/h) and an altitude of 800 ft (240 m), setting a Guinness World Record for the farthest distance.[77]

In June 2017, Airbus presented its CityAirbus, an electrically powered VTOL aircraft demonstrator.[78] The multirotor aircraft is intended to carry four passengers, with a pilot initially and to become self-piloted when regulations allow.[78] Its first unmanned flight was scheduled for the end of 2018 with manned flights planned to follow in 2019.[79] Type certification and commercial introduction are planned for 2023.[80]

Ingenuity, the NASA small uncrewed aerial system (sUAS) which flew on Mars in 2021 to become the first extraterrestrial aircraft, has a single pair of coaxial rotors. The Dragonfly rotorcraft lander should be the second aircraft and rotorcraft to operate on another astronomical object than Earth. It should be flying in the atmosphere of Titan starting around 2034. The VTOL capabilities is incorporated in order to move the lander and its sensors at various locations farther from the landing site.[81]

Experimental demonstrators edit

 
The Militky MB-E1, a converted Brditschka HB-3 motor glider (later HB-23 pictured) was the first full-size electric aircraft
 
NASA developed the X-57 Maxwell from a Tecnam P2006T

On 21 October 1973, the Militky MB-E1, a Brditschka HB-3 motor glider converted by Fred Militky and piloted by Heino Brditschka, flew for 9 minutes from Linz in Austria: the first electric aircraft to fly under its own power with a person on board, powered by Nickel–cadmium batteries (NiCad).[82][83] NiCad batteries have a higher energy density than lead–acid batteries, needed to power a heavier than air aircraft.

Following successful human-powered flight, a relaunched Kremer prize allowed the crew to store energy before takeoff.[84] In the 1980s several such designs stored electricity generated by pedalling, including the MIT Monarch and the Aerovironment Bionic Bat.[85]

The Boeing-led FCD (fuel cell demonstrator) project uses a Diamond HK-36 Super Dimona motor glider as a research test bed for a hydrogen fuel cell powered light airplane.[86] Successful flights took place in February and March 2008.[86][87]

The European Commission has financed many low TRL projects for innovative electric or hybrid propulsion aircraft. The ENFICA-FC is a project of the European Commission, to study and demonstrate an all-electric aircraft with fuel-cells as the main or auxiliary power system. During the three-year project, a fuel-cell based power system was designed and first flown in a Rapid 200FC ultralight aircraft on 20 May 2010.[88]

The first NASA Green Flight Challenge took place in 2011 and was won by a Pipistrel Taurus G4 on 3 October 2011.[89][90][91]

In 2013 Chip Yates demonstrated that the world's fastest electric airplane, a Long ESA, a modified Rutan Long-EZ, could outperform a gasoline-powered Cessna and other aircraft in a series of trials verified by the Fédération Aéronautique Internationale. The Long ESA was found to be less expensive, have a higher maximum speed, and higher rate of climb, partly due to the ability of the aircraft to maintain performance at altitude as low air density does not impair engine performance.[92][93]

In 2017, Siemens used a modified Extra EA-300 acrobatic airplane, the 330LE, to set two new records: on March 23 at the Dinslaken Schwarze Heide airfield in Germany, the aircraft reached a top speed of around 340 km/h (180 kn) over 3 km (1.6 nmi) and the next day, it became the first glider towing electric aircraft.[94]

NASA was developing the X-57 Maxwell to demonstrate technology to reduce fuel use, emissions, and noise, but the program was cancelled due to problems with the propulsion system.[95] Modified from a Tecnam P2006T, the X-57 will have 14 electric motors driving propellers mounted on the wing leading edges.[96] In July 2017, Scaled Composites is modifying a first P2006T by replacing the piston engines with electric motors, to fly early in 2018, then will move the motors to the wingtips to increase propulsive efficiency and finally will install the high aspect ratio wing with 12 smaller props.[97]

US/UK startup ZeroAvia develops zero-emissions fuel-cell propulsion systems for small aircraft, and tests its HyFlyer in Orkney supported by £2.7 million from the UK government.[98]

Solar aircraft edit

 
The Mauro Solar Riser, the first solar-powered aircraft, flew on April 29, 1979
 
In 2016, Solar Impulse 2 was the first solar-powered aircraft to complete a circumnavigation

On April 29, 1979, the Mauro Solar Riser became the first person-carrying, solar-powered aircraft to fly, with photovoltaic cells delivering 350 W (0.47 hp) at 30 volts and charging a small battery, which powered the motor. Following a 1.5-hour charge, the battery could power the aircraft for 3 to 5 minutes to reach a gliding altitude.[99] It followed a successful model test in 1974, as solar cells were developed, at the same period than with NiCad batteries.

Under the direction of Freddie To, an architect and member of the Kremer prize committee, the Solar One was designed by David Williams and produced by Solar-Powered Aircraft Developments. A motor-glider type aircraft originally built as a pedal-powered airplane to attempt the Channel crossing, the airplane proved too heavy to be successfully powered by human power and was then converted to solar power,[100] using an electric motor driven by batteries that were charged before flight by a solar cell array on the wing.[101] The maiden flight of Solar One took place at Lasham Airfield, Hampshire, on June 13, 1979.[102]

The MacCready Gossamer Penguin first flew carrying a pilot in 1980.

The MacCready Solar Challenger was first flown in 1980, and in 1981 flew 163 miles from Pontoise Aerodrome, north of Paris, to Manston Royal Air Force Base in Manston, England, staying aloft 5 hours and 23 minutes, with pilot Stephen Ptacek at the controls.

The human piloted Solair 1, developed by Günther Rochelt, flew in 1983 with notably improved performance.[103][104] It employed 2499 wing-mounted solar cells.[103]

The German solar-powered aircraft "Icaré II" was designed and built by the institute of aircraft design (Institut für Flugzeugbau) of the University of Stuttgart in 1996. The leader of the project and often pilot of the aircraft is Rudolf Voit-Nitschmann, the head of the institute. The design won the Berblinger prize in 1996, the EAA Special Achievement Award in Oshkosh, the Golden Daidalos Medal of the German Aeroclub and the OSTIV-Prize in France in 1997.[105]

Solar Impulse 2 is powered by four electric motors. Energy from solar cells on the wings and horizontal stabilizer is stored in lithium polymer batteries and used to drive propellers.[106][107] In 2012 the first Solar Impulse made the first intercontinental flight by a solar aircraft, flying from Madrid, Spain to Rabat, Morocco.[108][109] Completed in 2014, Solar Impulse 2 carried more solar cells and more powerful motors, among other improvements. In March 2015, the aircraft took off on the first stage of a planned round-the-world trip, flying eastwards from Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates.[110] Due to battery damage, the craft halted at Hawaii, where its batteries were replaced. It resumed the circumnavigation in April 2016[111] and reached Seville, Spain, in June 2016.[112] The following month it returned to Abu Dhabi, completing its circumnavigation of the world.[113]

General aviation edit

 
The Air Energy AE-1 Silent ultralight electric motorglider received its type approval in 1998.[114]

An application is as a sustaining motor or even a self-launching motor for gliders. The most common system is the front electric sustainer, which is used in over 240 gliders. The short range is not a problem as the motor is used only briefly, either to launch or to avoid an outlanding (an unplanned landing while soaring).

The first commercially available, non-certified production electric aircraft, the Alisport Silent Club self-launching glider, flew in 1997. It is optionally driven by a 13 kW (17 hp) DC electric motor running on 40 kg (88 lb) of batteries that store 1.4 kWh (5.0 MJ) of energy.[115]

The first certificate of airworthiness for an electric powered aircraft was granted to the Lange Antares 20E in 2003. Also an electric, self-launching 20 m (66 ft) glider/sailplane, with a 42 kW (56 hp) DC/DC brushless motor and lithium-ion batteries, it can climb up to 3,000 m (9,800 ft) with fully charged cells.[116] The first flight was in 2003. In 2011 the aircraft won the 2011 Berblinger competition.[117]

In late 2000s Chinese manufacturer of radio-controlled models Yuneec International developed and tested several battery-powered manned fixed-wing aircraft, including E430, the first electric aircraft designed to be serially produced, but failed to commercialize them (only prototypes were built) and in mid-2010s turned to the lucrative consumer drone market.

The Taurus Electro was the first two-seat electric aircraft to have ever flown,[118] while the Taurus Electro G2 is the production version, that was introduced in 2011. Powered by a 40 kW (54 hp) electric motor and lithium batteries for self-launching[119] to an altitude of 2,000 m (6,600 ft), after which the engine is retracted and the aircraft then soars as a sailplane. It is the first two-seat electric aircraft to have achieved series production.[120][121]

As pilot training emphasises short flights, several companies make, or have demonstrated, light aircraft suitable for initial flight training. The Airbus E-Fan was aimed at flight training but the project was cancelled. Pipistrel makes light sport electric aircraft such as the Pipistrel WATTsUP, a prototype of the Pipistrel Alpha Electro. The advantage of electric aircraft for flight training is the lower cost of electrical energy compared to aviation fuel. Noise and exhaust emissions are also reduced compared with combustion engines.

The Bye Aerospace eFlyer 2 (formerly the Sun Flyer 2) is a light electric aircraft designed and under development by Bye Aerospace of Denver, Colorado. The aircraft was first publicly introduced on 11 May 2016, and first flew on 10 April 2018.

On 10 June 2020, the Velis Electro variant of the two-seat Pipistrel Virus was the first electric aircraft to secure type certification, from the EASA. Powered by a 76 hp (58 kW) electric motor developed with Emrax, it offers a payload of 170 kg (370 lb), a cruise speed of 90 kn (170 km/h), and a 50 min endurance. Pipistrel plans to deliver over 30 examples in 2020, to be operated as a trainer aircraft.[122]

On 12 October 2021, Diamond Aircraft announced the development of the eDA40, targeting a 2022 first flight and a 2023 EASA/FAA Part 23 certification, tailored to the flight training market.[123] The two-seat aircraft is expected to be able to fly for up to 90 minutes, with 40% lower operating costs than piston power. The eDA40 has a planned three-seat variant for future release.[124] The eDA40 had its initial flight on 20 July 2023.[125]

Airliner projects edit

 
NASA Electric Aircraft Testbed

The NASA Electric Aircraft Testbed (NEAT) is a NASA reconfigurable testbed in Plum Brook Station, Ohio, used to design, develop, assemble and test electric aircraft power systems, from a small, one or two person aircraft up to 20 MW (27,000 hp) airliners.[126] NASA research agreements (NRA) are granted to develop electric-propulsion components.[127] They will be completed in 2019[needs update] and the internal NASA work by 2020,[needs update] then they will be assembled in a megawatt-scale drive system to be tested in the narrowbody-sized NEAT.[127]

In September 2017, UK budget carrier EasyJet announced it was developing an electric 180-seater for 2027 with Wright Electric.[128] Founded in 2016, US Wright Electric built a two-seat proof-of-concept with 272 kg (600 lb) of batteries, and believes they can be scaled up with substantially lighter new battery chemistries. A 291 nmi (540 km) range would suffice for 20% of Easyjet passengers.[129] Wright Electric will then develop a 10-seater, eventually an at least 120 passengers single aisle, short haul airliner and targets 50% lower noise and 10% lower costs.[130] Jeffrey Engler, CEO of Wright Electric, estimates that commercially viable electric planes will lead to around a 30% reduction in energy costs.[131]

On March 19, 2018, Israel Aerospace Industries announced it plans to develop a short-haul electric airliner, building on its small UAS electric power systems experience.[132] It could develop it in-house, or with a startup like Israeli Eviation, U.S. Zunum Aero or Wright Electric.[132]

Australia-based MagniX has developed an electric Cessna 208 Caravan with a 540 kW (720 hp) motor for flight durations up to an hour.[133] The company's Magni5 electric motor produces continuously 265 kW (355 hp), 300 kW (400 hp) peak at 2,500 rpm at 95% efficiency with a 53 kg (117 lb) dry mass, a 5 kW/kg power density, competing with the 260 kW (350 hp), 50 kg (110 lb) Siemens SP260D for the Extra 330LE.[133] By September 2018, a 350 hp (260 kW) electric motor with a propeller had been tested on a Cessna iron bird. The 750 hp (560 kW) Caravan was expected to fly by the fall of 2019[needs update] and by 2022 MagniX estimates electric aircraft will have ranges of 500 and 1,000 mi (800 and 1,610 km) by 2024.[134] The motor ran on a test dynamometer for 1,000 hours.[135] The iron bird is a Caravan forward fuselage used as a test bed, with the original Pratt & Whitney Canada PT6 turboprop engine replaced by an electric motor, inverter and a liquid-cooling system, including radiators, driving a Cessna 206 propeller.[135] The production motor will produce 280 kW (380 hp) at 1,900 rpm, down from the test motor's 2,500 rpm, allowing the installation without a reduction gearbox.[135] On 28 May 2020, the MagniX electric-powered nine-passenger Cessna 208B eCaravan flew on electric power,[136] towards commercial operation certification.[137]

A 560-kW (750-hp) MagniX electric motor was installed in a de Havilland Canada DHC-2 Beaver seaplane. Harbour Air, based in British Columbia, was hoping to introduce the aircraft in commercial service in 2021, for trips under 30 minutes initially, until range increases as better batteries are introduced.[98] On December 10, 2019, it made its first flight of four minutes duration from the Fraser River near Vancouver. The normally-fitted Pratt & Whitney R-985 Wasp Junior piston engine of the six-passenger Beaver was replaced by a 135 kg (297 lb) magni500, with swappable batteries, allowing 30 minute flights with a 30-minute reserve.[138] By April 2022, flight testing of a certifiable version through a STC was delayed until late 2023, to carry four passengers and a pilot on 30 minute flights with a 30-minute reserve.[139] Magnix is seeking FAA certification for its 640 kW (850shp) Magni650 aircraft engine, while battery provider H55 (a spin-off from Solar Impulse) is pursuing EASA approval.[139]

A demonstrator for the German Scylax E10 10-seater should fly in 2022.[needs update] It should be used by FLN Frisia Luftverkehr to connect East Frisian islands with its 300 km (160 nmi) range and 300 m (980 ft) short takeoff and landing distance.[98]

On 23 September 2020, Gothenburg-based Heart Aerospace presented its ES-19 design, a 19-seat all-electric commercial aircraft planned to fly by mid-2026.[140] With a conventional aluminium airframe and wing, its planned range is 400 km (222 nmi) and expects to operate from runways as short as 800 m (2,640 ft).[140] Initially targeting airlines operating in the Nordic countries, Heart has received "expressions of interest" for 147 ES-19 aircraft worth about €1.1 billion or US$1.3 billion (€7.5 million or $8.8 million each) from at least eight airlines.[140] Backed by Swedish venture capitalist EQT Ventures, Nordic governments and the European Union, Heart was initially funded by the Swedish innovation agency Vinnova and is an alumnus of Silicon Valley start-up accelerator Y Combinator.[140]

On 22 March 2021, Toulouse-based Aura Aero announced the development of its ERA (Electric Regional Aircraft), a 19-passenger electric aircraft, planned to be certified in 2026.[141]

Shipments edit

The following table summarizes electric aircraft shipments worldwide by manufacturer.

Worldwide shipments of certified electric GA aircraft[142]
2020 2021 2022
Pipistrel Velis Electro 13 48 17
Total 13 48 17

List of battery-electric aircraft edit

See also edit

References edit

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External links edit

  • Hepperle, Martin. "Electric Flight – Potential and Limitations" (PDF). Institute of Aerodynamics and Flow Technology.

electric, aircraft, electric, aircraft, aircraft, powered, electricity, seen, reduce, environmental, effects, aviation, providing, zero, emissions, quieter, flights, electricity, supplied, variety, methods, most, common, being, batteries, most, have, electric,. An electric aircraft is an aircraft powered by electricity Electric aircraft are seen as a way to reduce the environmental effects of aviation providing zero emissions and quieter flights Electricity may be supplied by a variety of methods the most common being batteries Most have electric motors driving propellers or turbines The Velis Electro became the first type certificated crewed electric aircraft on 10 June 2020 Crewed flights in an electrically powered airship go back to the 19th century and to 1917 for a tethered helicopter Electrically powered model aircraft have been flown at least since 1957 preceding the small unmanned aerial vehicles UAV or drones used today Small UAS could be used for parcel deliveries and larger ones for long endurance applications aerial imagery surveillance telecommunications The first crewed free flight by an electrically powered aeroplane the MB E1 was made in 1973 and most crewed electric aircraft today are still only experimental prototypes Between 2015 and 2016 Solar Impulse 2 completed a circumnavigation of the Earth using solar power Electric VTOL aircraft or personal air vehicles are being considered for Urban Air Mobility Electric commercial airliners could lower operating costs 1 1 7 Contents 1 Environmental effects of aviation 2 Offboard power supply 2 1 Solar cells 2 2 Microwaves 2 3 External power cables 3 Power storage 3 1 Batteries 3 2 Ultracapacitors 3 3 Fuel cells 4 Propulsion 4 1 Electric motors 4 2 Hybrid power 4 3 Magnetohydrodynamics 5 History 5 1 Airships 5 2 Unmanned aircraft 5 3 Vertical flight 5 4 Experimental demonstrators 5 5 Solar aircraft 5 6 General aviation 5 7 Airliner projects 6 Shipments 7 List of battery electric aircraft 8 See also 9 References 10 External linksEnvironmental effects of aviation editMain article Environmental effects of aviation The environmental effects of aviation on climate change have become a major driving force for the development of electric aircraft with a zero emissions electric powertrain being the goal for some development teams Aviation accounts for 2 4 of all fossil fuel derived CO2 emissions and its emissions of air transportation altogether increased by 32 between 2013 and 2018 2 While estimating aviation s non CO2 effects on climate change is complex NOx and contrails could increase this responsibility to 3 5 3 Other benefits are the potential for noise reduction in an industry with a severe noise pollution and abatement problem 4 Offboard power supply editMechanisms for supplying the necessary electricity without storing all of it onboard include Solar cells convert sunlight directly into electricity using photovoltaic materials Microwave energy that is beamed from a remote transmitter Power cables connected to a ground based electrical supply Solar cells edit nbsp Solar panels on the NASA Pathfinder wing s upper surfaceA solar cell converts sunlight directly into electricity either for direct power or temporary storage The power output of solar cells is low and requires that many be connected together which limits their use Typical solar panels running at 15 20 conversion efficiency sunlight energy to electrical power produce about 150 200 W m2 0 019 0 025 hp sq ft in direct sunlight 5 Usable areas are further limited as output from a poorly performing panel impacts the output of all the panels on its circuit meaning they all require similar conditions including being at a similar angle to the sun and not being masked by shadow 6 Between 2010 and 2020 solar power modules have declined in cost by 90 and continue to drop by 13 15 per year 7 Solar cell efficiency has also risen substantially from 2 in 1955 to 20 in 1985 and some experimental systems now exceed 44 However most of the technologies at these high efficiencies have only been possible under laboratory settings and not at full scale production level 8 The free availability of sunlight makes solar power attractive for high altitude long endurance applications where the cold and reduced atmospheric interference make them significantly more efficient than on the ground 9 10 The drop in the dry air temperature as altitude increases called the environmental lapse rate ELR averages 6 49 C km 11 memorized in pilot training as 1 98 C 1 000 ft or 3 56 F 1 000 feet so that temperature for a typical airliner s cruising altitude of around 35 000 ft 11 000 m will be substantially lower than at ground level Night flying such for endurance flights and with aircraft providing 24 hour coverage over an area typically require a backup storage system which is charged during the day from surplus power and supplies power during the hours of darkness Microwaves edit Power beaming of electromagnetic energy such as microwaves relies on a ground based power source However compared to using a power cable power beaming allows the aircraft to move laterally and carries a much lower weight penalty particularly as altitude increases The technology has only been demonstrated on small models and awaits practical development at larger scales 12 External power cables edit For powered vehicles replacing tethered aerostats an electrical power cable can be connected to a ground based supply such as an electric generator or the local power grid At low altitudes this avoids having to lift batteries and was used by the experimental Petroczy Karman Zurovec PKZ 1 observation vehicle of 1917 However the higher it flies the heavier the length of cable it lifts becomes Power storage editMechanisms for storing the necessary electricity include Batteries which use a chemical reaction to generate electricity which is reversed when recharged Fuel cells consume fuel and an oxidizer in a chemical reaction to generate electricity they need to be refueled typically with hydrogen Batteries edit nbsp Batteries for the Tier1 Engineering electric Robinson R44Batteries are the most common onboard energy storage component of electric aircraft due to their relatively high storage capacity Batteries first powered airships in the nineteenth century but the lead acid batteries were very heavy and it was not until the arrival of other chemistries such as nickel cadmium NiCd later in the twentieth century that batteries became practical for heavier than air aircraft Modern batteries are mostly rechargeable types based on lithium technologies Lithium polymer LiPo a type of lithium ion batteries LIB have long been applied in unmanned flight for their light weight and rechargeability However their energy density limits their application mostly to being drone batteries 13 Increasing maximum time of flight by simply designing larger aircraft using larger batteries is inefficient because of the payload range compromise After a certain increase in battery weight there are diminishing returns through the mass penalty not outweighing the increase in battery specific energy 14 15 There is a similar trade off between the maximum range and number of passengers Computational tools have been used to model this trend predicting that a small scale electric aircraft of average weight 1500 kg and average energy density 150 Wh kg could travel a range of 80 mi with one passenger 60 mi with two and less than 30 mi with three 15 In 2017 the power available from batteries was estimated at 170 Wh kg 145 Wh kg at the shaft including the system efficiency while a gas turbine extracted 6 545 Wh kg of shaft power from an 11 900 Wh kg fuel 16 In 2018 Lithium ion batteries including packaging and accessories were estimated to give 160 Wh kg while aviation fuel gave 12 500 Wh kg 17 In 2018 the specific energy of electricity storage was still only 2 of aviation fuel 18 This 1 50 ratio makes electric propulsion impractical for long range aircraft as a 500 nmi 930 km mission for an all electric 12 passenger aircraft would require a six fold increase in battery power density 19 That said battery electric motors have a higher efficiency 90 than most jet engines 50 which can be further exploited through emerging battery chemistries 20 To be feasible for electric aircraft application it is essential that power storage be improved Energy density is widely recognized to be the bottleneck for zero emission electric powertrain 21 22 Another limitation is the discharge rate due to demand pack energy ratio and sensitive mission segments as the discharge C rate for take off is 4C while it is almost 5C for landing 23 15 clarification needed Electric aircraft have additional heat generation and end of life needs requiring novel thermal management strategies power fade capabilities and battery pack failure modes As of 2019 the best Li ion batteries achieved 250 300 Wh kg sufficient for a small aircraft while a regional airliner would have needed a 500 Wh kg battery pack and an Airbus A320 sized single aisle would need 2 kWh kg 19 Electric power is only suitable for small aircraft while for large passenger aircraft an improvement of the energy density by a factor 20 compared to li ion batteries would be required 24 better source needed Such batteries can reduce the overall operating costs for some short range flights For example the electricity used in the Harbour Air Beavers costs them around 0 10 Canadian per kWh compared to 2 00 per liter for gas 4 providing 33 MJ 9 2 kWh of energy with a 44 MJ kg fuel and a 0 75 density Avgas 0 22 per chemical kWh or 0 65 per shaft kWh with an efficiency of one third Jet fuel is cheaper and large gas turbine are more efficient though In 2021 beyond lithium ion technologies such as Solid state battery lithium sulfur LSB and lithium air batteries LAB have become increasingly promising areas of research for more competitive battery electric aircraft performance 25 26 The SAE International AE 7D 27 committee was formed by Electro Aero in 2018 to standardise electric aircraft charging and energy storage One of the first documents developed was the AS6968 standard for sub megawatt electric aircraft charging of electric aircraft The AE 7D committee is also developing Aerospace Information Report AIR7357 for megawatt power level charging Some airports have charging stations for electric cars which can also charge aircraft 28 Ultracapacitors edit An ultracapacitor is a hybrid electrochemical energy storage system bridging batteries and capacitors and has some advantages over batteries in being able to charge and discharge much faster with higher peak currents while not being as limited in the number of charge discharge cycles as the reaction is not just chemical but also electrical 29 better source needed Their energy density typically around 5 Wh kg is however well below that of batteries and they are considerably more expensive even when their longer lifespan is factored in 30 better source needed Fuel cells edit nbsp The Taurus G4 taking off from the Sonoma County Airport in CaliforniaSee also Hydrogen powered aircraft A fuel cell FC uses the reaction between two chemicals such as hydrogen and oxygen to create electricity much like a liquid propellant rocket motor but generating electricity in a controlled chemical reaction instead of thrust While the aircraft must carry the hydrogen or a similar fuel with its own complications and risks the oxygen can be obtained from the atmosphere Propulsion editElectric motors edit nbsp The Siemens SP200D motor powering the Airbus CityAirbusAlmost all electric aircraft to date have been powered by electric motors driving thrust generating propellers or lift generating rotors 31 While the batteries weigh more than the equivalent in fuel electric motors weigh less than their piston engine counterparts and in smaller aircraft used for shorter flights can partly offset the disparity between electric and gasoline energy densities 4 32 Electric motors also do not lose power with altitude unlike internal combustion engines 28 avoiding the need for complex and costly measures used to prevent this such as the use of turbochargers The experimental Extra 330LE have a 260 kW 350 hp Siemens SP260D motor weighing 50 kg with a 37 2 kWh battery pack for an aircraft weight of 1 000 kg 33 It replaces a 235 kW 315 hp Lycoming AEIO 580 piston engine weighing 202 kg 34 The piston engine Extra 330 empty weight is 677 kg 35 474 kg without the engine The Lycoming engine has a fuel consumption of 141 lb 64 kg per hour when outputting 315 hp 235 kW 36 or 0 27 kg kWh it needs 10 kg of fuel to output the same 37 2 kWh Besides the motor itself an aircraft weight is hampered by the necessary energy reserves a 19 seat aircraft needs the mandatory IFR reserves of 5 route contingency the flight to a 100 nmi alternate plus 30 minutes of holding before landing 308 kg of fuel for a turboprop or 4 300 kg of 250 Wh kg batteries similar to a current 19 seater empty weight 37 An electric propulsion system also includes a power inverter while fuel engines have a fuel system themselves The 750 shp 560 kW experimental magniX magni500 electric motor weighs 297 lb 135 kg 38 while the 729 hp 544 kW certified Pratt amp Whitney Canada PT6A 114 weighs 297 lb 135 kg 39 both powering the Cessna 208 Caravan The increase in power combined with Supplemental Type Certificate STC modifications can offset the weight of the batteries by increasing the airplane s gross operating weight including the landing weight 28 Aircraft that use fossil fuels are lighter when they land which allows the structure to be lighter With a battery powered aircraft the weight remains the same and so may require reinforcement 28 Hybrid power edit Main article Hybrid electric aircraft A hybrid electric aircraft is an aircraft with a hybrid electric powertrain It typically takes off and lands under clean and quiet electric power and cruises under conventional piston or jet engine power This makes long flights practical while reducing their carbon footprint 17 By May 2018 there were over 30 projects and short haul hybrid electric airliners were envisioned from 2032 40 The most advanced are the Zunum Aero 10 seater 41 the Airbus E Fan X demonstrator 42 the VoltAero Cassio 43 UTC is modifying a Bombardier Dash 8 44 while the Ampaire Electric EEL prototype first flew on 6 June 2019 45 Magnetohydrodynamics edit Main article Ion propelled aircraft In November 2018 MIT engineers achieved the first free flight with a model aircraft having no moving parts the EAD Airframe Version 2 It is propelled by creating an ion wind using magnetohydrodynamics MHD 46 47 MHD has been used to achieve vertical lift in the past but only by cabling up the MHD ion generator system to an external power supply History editBy May 2018 almost 100 electric aircraft were known to be under development 48 This was up from 70 the previous year and included 60 from startups 32 from aerospace incumbents half of them major OEMs and 8 from academic government organizations and non aerospace companies mainly from Europe 45 and the U S 40 40 Mostly urban air taxis 50 and general aviation aircraft 47 a majority are battery powered 73 while some are hybrid electric 31 most of these being larger airliners 40 By May 2019 the number of known electric aircraft development programmes was closer to 170 with a majority of them aimed at the urban air taxi role 49 By 2022 about 100 electric aircraft designs were under development worldwide 1 10 11 By 2023 the number of sustainable aircraft concepts under development not only electric was estimated at up to 700 50 Airships edit The use of electricity for aircraft propulsion was first experimented with during the development of the airship in the latter part of the nineteenth century On 8 October 1883 Gaston Tissandier flew the first electrically powered airship 51 292 52 The following year Charles Renard and Arthur Krebs flew La France with a more powerful motor 51 306 Even with the lifting capacity of an airship the heavy accumulators needed to store the electricity severely limited the speed and range of such early airships Fully electric airships are expected to be available again by the 2030s 53 Unmanned aircraft edit In 1909 an electric free flight model was claimed to have been flown eight minutes but this claim has been disputed by the builder of the first recorded electric Radio Controlled model aircraft flight in 1957 54 Power density for electric flight was problematic even for small models nbsp The NASA Pathfinder Plus electric powered unmanned aerial vehicleNASA s Pathfinder Pathfinder Plus Centurion and Helios were a series of solar and fuel cell system powered unmanned aerial vehicles UAVs developed by AeroVironment Inc from 1983 until 2003 under NASA s Environmental Research Aircraft and Sensor Technology program 55 56 On September 11 1995 Pathfinder set an unofficial altitude record for solar powered aircraft of 50 000 feet 15 000 m during a 12 hour flight from NASA Dryden After further modifications the aircraft was moved to the U S Navy s Pacific Missile Range Facility PMRF on the Hawaiian island of Kauai On July 7 1997 Pathfinder raised the altitude record for solar powered aircraft to 71 530 feet 21 800 m which was also the record for propeller driven aircraft 55 On August 6 1998 Pathfinder Plus raised the national altitude record to 80 201 feet 24 445 m for solar powered and propeller driven aircraft 55 57 On August 14 2001 Helios set an altitude record of 29 524 metres 96 863 ft the record for FAI class U experimental new technologies and FAI class U 1 d remotely controlled UAV with a mass between 500 and 2 500 kg 1 100 and 5 500 lb as well as the altitude record for propeller driven aircraft 58 On June 26 2003 the Helios prototype broke up and fell into the Pacific Ocean off Hawaii after the aircraft encountered turbulence ending the program In 2005 AC Propulsion flew an unmanned airplane named SoLong for 48 hours non stop propelled entirely by solar energy This was the first such around the clock flight on energy stored in the batteries mounted on the aircraft 59 60 The QinetiQ Zephyr is a lightweight solar powered unmanned aerial vehicle UAV As of 23 July 2010 it holds the endurance record for an unmanned aerial vehicle of over 2 weeks 336 hours 61 It is of carbon fiber reinforced polymer construction the 2010 version weighing 50 kg 110 lb 62 the 2008 version weighed 30 kg 66 lb with a span of 22 5 m 74 ft 62 the 2008 version had a 18 m 59 ft wingspan During the day it uses sunlight to charge lithium sulphur batteries which power the aircraft at night 63 In July 2010 a Zephyr made a world record UAV endurance flight of 336 hours 22 minutes and 8 seconds more than two weeks and also set an altitude record of 70 742 feet 21 562 m for FAI class U 1 c remotely controlled UAV with a weight between 50 and 500 kg 110 and 1 100 lb 64 65 66 See also Unmanned aerial vehicle Vertical flight edit nbsp The 1918 Petroczy Karman Zurovec PKZ 2 tethered helicopter followed the 1917 PKZ 1For a tethered device such as an air observation platform it is possible to run the power up the tether In an attempt to create a more practical solution than the clumsy balloons then in use the Austro Hungarian Petroczy Karman Zurovec PKZ 1 electric powered helicopter was flown in 1917 It had a specially designed 190 hp 140 kW continuous rated electric motor made by Austro Daimler and received its power up a cable from a ground based DC generator However electric motors were not yet powerful enough for such applications and the motor burned out after only a few flights 67 In 1964 William C Brown at Raytheon flew a model helicopter that received all of the power needed for flight by microwave power transmission 68 The world s first large scale all electric tilt rotor was the AgustaWestland Project Zero unmanned aerial vehicle technology demonstrator which performed unmanned tethered fights on ground power in June 2011 less than six months after the company gave the official go ahead 69 nbsp Solution F Chretien HelicopterThe first free flying electric helicopter was the Solution F Chretien Helicopter developed by Pascal Chretien in Venelles France It went from computer aided design concept on September 10 2010 to first flight in August 2011 in under a year 70 71 In September 2016 Martine Rothblatt and Tier1 Engineering successfully tested an electric powered helicopter The five minute flight reached an altitude of 400 feet 120 m with a peak speed of 80 knots 150 km h The Robinson R44 helicopter was modified with two three phase permanent magnet synchronous YASA Motors weighing 45 kg 100 lb plus 11 Lithium polymer batteries from Brammo weighing 500 kg 1 100 lb 72 73 74 It later flew for 20 minutes in 2016 75 76 On December 7 2018 Tier 1 Engineering flew an electric battery powered R44 over 30 nmi 56 km at 80 kn 150 km h and an altitude of 800 ft 240 m setting a Guinness World Record for the farthest distance 77 In June 2017 Airbus presented its CityAirbus an electrically powered VTOL aircraft demonstrator 78 The multirotor aircraft is intended to carry four passengers with a pilot initially and to become self piloted when regulations allow 78 Its first unmanned flight was scheduled for the end of 2018 with manned flights planned to follow in 2019 79 Type certification and commercial introduction are planned for 2023 80 Ingenuity the NASA small uncrewed aerial system sUAS which flew on Mars in 2021 to become the first extraterrestrial aircraft has a single pair of coaxial rotors The Dragonfly rotorcraft lander should be the second aircraft and rotorcraft to operate on another astronomical object than Earth It should be flying in the atmosphere of Titan starting around 2034 The VTOL capabilities is incorporated in order to move the lander and its sensors at various locations farther from the landing site 81 Experimental demonstrators edit nbsp The Militky MB E1 a converted Brditschka HB 3 motor glider later HB 23 pictured was the first full size electric aircraft nbsp NASA developed the X 57 Maxwell from a Tecnam P2006TOn 21 October 1973 the Militky MB E1 a Brditschka HB 3 motor glider converted by Fred Militky and piloted by Heino Brditschka flew for 9 minutes from Linz in Austria the first electric aircraft to fly under its own power with a person on board powered by Nickel cadmium batteries NiCad 82 83 NiCad batteries have a higher energy density than lead acid batteries needed to power a heavier than air aircraft Following successful human powered flight a relaunched Kremer prize allowed the crew to store energy before takeoff 84 In the 1980s several such designs stored electricity generated by pedalling including the MIT Monarch and the Aerovironment Bionic Bat 85 The Boeing led FCD fuel cell demonstrator project uses a Diamond HK 36 Super Dimona motor glider as a research test bed for a hydrogen fuel cell powered light airplane 86 Successful flights took place in February and March 2008 86 87 The European Commission has financed many low TRL projects for innovative electric or hybrid propulsion aircraft The ENFICA FC is a project of the European Commission to study and demonstrate an all electric aircraft with fuel cells as the main or auxiliary power system During the three year project a fuel cell based power system was designed and first flown in a Rapid 200FC ultralight aircraft on 20 May 2010 88 The first NASA Green Flight Challenge took place in 2011 and was won by a Pipistrel Taurus G4 on 3 October 2011 89 90 91 In 2013 Chip Yates demonstrated that the world s fastest electric airplane a Long ESA a modified Rutan Long EZ could outperform a gasoline powered Cessna and other aircraft in a series of trials verified by the Federation Aeronautique Internationale The Long ESA was found to be less expensive have a higher maximum speed and higher rate of climb partly due to the ability of the aircraft to maintain performance at altitude as low air density does not impair engine performance 92 93 In 2017 Siemens used a modified Extra EA 300 acrobatic airplane the 330LE to set two new records on March 23 at the Dinslaken Schwarze Heide airfield in Germany the aircraft reached a top speed of around 340 km h 180 kn over 3 km 1 6 nmi and the next day it became the first glider towing electric aircraft 94 NASA was developing the X 57 Maxwell to demonstrate technology to reduce fuel use emissions and noise but the program was cancelled due to problems with the propulsion system 95 Modified from a Tecnam P2006T the X 57 will have 14 electric motors driving propellers mounted on the wing leading edges 96 In July 2017 Scaled Composites is modifying a first P2006T by replacing the piston engines with electric motors to fly early in 2018 then will move the motors to the wingtips to increase propulsive efficiency and finally will install the high aspect ratio wing with 12 smaller props 97 US UK startup ZeroAvia develops zero emissions fuel cell propulsion systems for small aircraft and tests its HyFlyer in Orkney supported by 2 7 million from the UK government 98 Solar aircraft edit nbsp The Mauro Solar Riser the first solar powered aircraft flew on April 29 1979 nbsp In 2016 Solar Impulse 2 was the first solar powered aircraft to complete a circumnavigationOn April 29 1979 the Mauro Solar Riser became the first person carrying solar powered aircraft to fly with photovoltaic cells delivering 350 W 0 47 hp at 30 volts and charging a small battery which powered the motor Following a 1 5 hour charge the battery could power the aircraft for 3 to 5 minutes to reach a gliding altitude 99 It followed a successful model test in 1974 as solar cells were developed at the same period than with NiCad batteries Under the direction of Freddie To an architect and member of the Kremer prize committee the Solar One was designed by David Williams and produced by Solar Powered Aircraft Developments A motor glider type aircraft originally built as a pedal powered airplane to attempt the Channel crossing the airplane proved too heavy to be successfully powered by human power and was then converted to solar power 100 using an electric motor driven by batteries that were charged before flight by a solar cell array on the wing 101 The maiden flight of Solar One took place at Lasham Airfield Hampshire on June 13 1979 102 The MacCready Gossamer Penguin first flew carrying a pilot in 1980 The MacCready Solar Challenger was first flown in 1980 and in 1981 flew 163 miles from Pontoise Aerodrome north of Paris to Manston Royal Air Force Base in Manston England staying aloft 5 hours and 23 minutes with pilot Stephen Ptacek at the controls The human piloted Solair 1 developed by Gunther Rochelt flew in 1983 with notably improved performance 103 104 It employed 2499 wing mounted solar cells 103 The German solar powered aircraft Icare II was designed and built by the institute of aircraft design Institut fur Flugzeugbau of the University of Stuttgart in 1996 The leader of the project and often pilot of the aircraft is Rudolf Voit Nitschmann the head of the institute The design won the Berblinger prize in 1996 the EAA Special Achievement Award in Oshkosh the Golden Daidalos Medal of the German Aeroclub and the OSTIV Prize in France in 1997 105 Solar Impulse 2 is powered by four electric motors Energy from solar cells on the wings and horizontal stabilizer is stored in lithium polymer batteries and used to drive propellers 106 107 In 2012 the first Solar Impulse made the first intercontinental flight by a solar aircraft flying from Madrid Spain to Rabat Morocco 108 109 Completed in 2014 Solar Impulse 2 carried more solar cells and more powerful motors among other improvements In March 2015 the aircraft took off on the first stage of a planned round the world trip flying eastwards from Abu Dhabi United Arab Emirates 110 Due to battery damage the craft halted at Hawaii where its batteries were replaced It resumed the circumnavigation in April 2016 111 and reached Seville Spain in June 2016 112 The following month it returned to Abu Dhabi completing its circumnavigation of the world 113 General aviation edit nbsp The Air Energy AE 1 Silent ultralight electric motorglider received its type approval in 1998 114 An application is as a sustaining motor or even a self launching motor for gliders The most common system is the front electric sustainer which is used in over 240 gliders The short range is not a problem as the motor is used only briefly either to launch or to avoid an outlanding an unplanned landing while soaring The first commercially available non certified production electric aircraft the Alisport Silent Club self launching glider flew in 1997 It is optionally driven by a 13 kW 17 hp DC electric motor running on 40 kg 88 lb of batteries that store 1 4 kWh 5 0 MJ of energy 115 The first certificate of airworthiness for an electric powered aircraft was granted to the Lange Antares 20E in 2003 Also an electric self launching 20 m 66 ft glider sailplane with a 42 kW 56 hp DC DC brushless motor and lithium ion batteries it can climb up to 3 000 m 9 800 ft with fully charged cells 116 The first flight was in 2003 In 2011 the aircraft won the 2011 Berblinger competition 117 In late 2000s Chinese manufacturer of radio controlled models Yuneec International developed and tested several battery powered manned fixed wing aircraft including E430 the first electric aircraft designed to be serially produced but failed to commercialize them only prototypes were built and in mid 2010s turned to the lucrative consumer drone market The Taurus Electro was the first two seat electric aircraft to have ever flown 118 while the Taurus Electro G2 is the production version that was introduced in 2011 Powered by a 40 kW 54 hp electric motor and lithium batteries for self launching 119 to an altitude of 2 000 m 6 600 ft after which the engine is retracted and the aircraft then soars as a sailplane It is the first two seat electric aircraft to have achieved series production 120 121 As pilot training emphasises short flights several companies make or have demonstrated light aircraft suitable for initial flight training The Airbus E Fan was aimed at flight training but the project was cancelled Pipistrel makes light sport electric aircraft such as the Pipistrel WATTsUP a prototype of the Pipistrel Alpha Electro The advantage of electric aircraft for flight training is the lower cost of electrical energy compared to aviation fuel Noise and exhaust emissions are also reduced compared with combustion engines The Bye Aerospace eFlyer 2 formerly the Sun Flyer 2 is a light electric aircraft designed and under development by Bye Aerospace of Denver Colorado The aircraft was first publicly introduced on 11 May 2016 and first flew on 10 April 2018 On 10 June 2020 the Velis Electro variant of the two seat Pipistrel Virus was the first electric aircraft to secure type certification from the EASA Powered by a 76 hp 58 kW electric motor developed with Emrax it offers a payload of 170 kg 370 lb a cruise speed of 90 kn 170 km h and a 50 min endurance Pipistrel plans to deliver over 30 examples in 2020 to be operated as a trainer aircraft 122 On 12 October 2021 Diamond Aircraft announced the development of the eDA40 targeting a 2022 first flight and a 2023 EASA FAA Part 23 certification tailored to the flight training market 123 The two seat aircraft is expected to be able to fly for up to 90 minutes with 40 lower operating costs than piston power The eDA40 has a planned three seat variant for future release 124 The eDA40 had its initial flight on 20 July 2023 125 Airliner projects edit nbsp NASA Electric Aircraft TestbedThe NASA Electric Aircraft Testbed NEAT is a NASA reconfigurable testbed in Plum Brook Station Ohio used to design develop assemble and test electric aircraft power systems from a small one or two person aircraft up to 20 MW 27 000 hp airliners 126 NASA research agreements NRA are granted to develop electric propulsion components 127 They will be completed in 2019 needs update and the internal NASA work by 2020 needs update then they will be assembled in a megawatt scale drive system to be tested in the narrowbody sized NEAT 127 In September 2017 UK budget carrier EasyJet announced it was developing an electric 180 seater for 2027 with Wright Electric 128 Founded in 2016 US Wright Electric built a two seat proof of concept with 272 kg 600 lb of batteries and believes they can be scaled up with substantially lighter new battery chemistries A 291 nmi 540 km range would suffice for 20 of Easyjet passengers 129 Wright Electric will then develop a 10 seater eventually an at least 120 passengers single aisle short haul airliner and targets 50 lower noise and 10 lower costs 130 Jeffrey Engler CEO of Wright Electric estimates that commercially viable electric planes will lead to around a 30 reduction in energy costs 131 On March 19 2018 Israel Aerospace Industries announced it plans to develop a short haul electric airliner building on its small UAS electric power systems experience 132 It could develop it in house or with a startup like Israeli Eviation U S Zunum Aero or Wright Electric 132 Australia based MagniX has developed an electric Cessna 208 Caravan with a 540 kW 720 hp motor for flight durations up to an hour 133 The company s Magni5 electric motor produces continuously 265 kW 355 hp 300 kW 400 hp peak at 2 500 rpm at 95 efficiency with a 53 kg 117 lb dry mass a 5 kW kg power density competing with the 260 kW 350 hp 50 kg 110 lb Siemens SP260D for the Extra 330LE 133 By September 2018 a 350 hp 260 kW electric motor with a propeller had been tested on a Cessna iron bird The 750 hp 560 kW Caravan was expected to fly by the fall of 2019 needs update and by 2022 MagniX estimates electric aircraft will have ranges of 500 and 1 000 mi 800 and 1 610 km by 2024 134 The motor ran on a test dynamometer for 1 000 hours 135 The iron bird is a Caravan forward fuselage used as a test bed with the original Pratt amp Whitney Canada PT6 turboprop engine replaced by an electric motor inverter and a liquid cooling system including radiators driving a Cessna 206 propeller 135 The production motor will produce 280 kW 380 hp at 1 900 rpm down from the test motor s 2 500 rpm allowing the installation without a reduction gearbox 135 On 28 May 2020 the MagniX electric powered nine passenger Cessna 208B eCaravan flew on electric power 136 towards commercial operation certification 137 A 560 kW 750 hp MagniX electric motor was installed in a de Havilland Canada DHC 2 Beaver seaplane Harbour Air based in British Columbia was hoping to introduce the aircraft in commercial service in 2021 for trips under 30 minutes initially until range increases as better batteries are introduced 98 On December 10 2019 it made its first flight of four minutes duration from the Fraser River near Vancouver The normally fitted Pratt amp Whitney R 985 Wasp Junior piston engine of the six passenger Beaver was replaced by a 135 kg 297 lb magni500 with swappable batteries allowing 30 minute flights with a 30 minute reserve 138 By April 2022 flight testing of a certifiable version through a STC was delayed until late 2023 to carry four passengers and a pilot on 30 minute flights with a 30 minute reserve 139 Magnix is seeking FAA certification for its 640 kW 850shp Magni650 aircraft engine while battery provider H55 a spin off from Solar Impulse is pursuing EASA approval 139 A demonstrator for the German Scylax E10 10 seater should fly in 2022 needs update It should be used by FLN Frisia Luftverkehr to connect East Frisian islands with its 300 km 160 nmi range and 300 m 980 ft short takeoff and landing distance 98 On 23 September 2020 Gothenburg based Heart Aerospace presented its ES 19 design a 19 seat all electric commercial aircraft planned to fly by mid 2026 140 With a conventional aluminium airframe and wing its planned range is 400 km 222 nmi and expects to operate from runways as short as 800 m 2 640 ft 140 Initially targeting airlines operating in the Nordic countries Heart has received expressions of interest for 147 ES 19 aircraft worth about 1 1 billion or US 1 3 billion 7 5 million or 8 8 million each from at least eight airlines 140 Backed by Swedish venture capitalist EQT Ventures Nordic governments and the European Union Heart was initially funded by the Swedish innovation agency Vinnova and is an alumnus of Silicon Valley start up accelerator Y Combinator 140 On 22 March 2021 Toulouse based Aura Aero announced the development of its ERA Electric Regional Aircraft a 19 passenger electric aircraft planned to be certified in 2026 141 Shipments editThe following table summarizes electric aircraft shipments worldwide by manufacturer Worldwide shipments of certified electric GA aircraft 142 2020 2021 2022Pipistrel Velis Electro 13 48 17Total 13 48 17List of battery electric aircraft editSee also List of electric aircraftSee also editElectric boat Electric vehicle Solar energy 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links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Aircraft with electric engines Hepperle Martin Electric Flight Potential and Limitations PDF Institute of Aerodynamics and Flow Technology Portals nbsp Renewable energy nbsp Energy Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Electric aircraft amp oldid 1191151703, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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