Could the UK produce its own regional electric
aircraft design? BILL READ FRAeS reports from
Cranfield University on the work of Cranfield
Aerospace Solutions and its ambitious plans to
compete in the emerging market for ‘green’
electric-powered aircraft.
aircraft design? BILL READ FRAeS reports from
Cranfield University on the work of Cranfield
Aerospace Solutions and its ambitious plans to
compete in the emerging market for ‘green’
electric-powered aircraft.
Cranfield Aerospace Solutions (CAeS) is a company owned by
Cranfield University with aircraft design organisation capability/approval
(DOA) for complex modifications to existing aircraft, which can also design and
create new concept aircraft or flying demonstrators. CAeS also has production
organisation approval (POA) from the UK Civil Aviation Authority (CAA) and the
European Aviation Safety Authority (EASA) for complex modifications, as well as
a similar range of military approvals .
Over the past 20 years since the company was set up, CAeS has
been working on projects for major OEMs, such as Boeing, Airbus, Lockheed
Martin and Raytheon. It also designed and built the X-48 dynamically scaled jet-engined
blended-wing demonstrator for Boeing/NASA. “Because we are a small company we
are more agile and can do one off demonstrators more quickly than the large
aerospace OEMs,” explained CAeS CEO Paul Hutton. “This also means that for
projects such as these we are completely at the whim of these companies’
discretionary spend, and we can have good years and bad years depending on how
many projects we are working on.”
An electric
opportunity
CEO of Cranfield Aerospace Solutions, Paul Hutton.
However, CAeS recently announced plans to use its design and
manufacturing capabilities to branch out in a new direction with the ambitious
aim of restarting the manufacturing of complete aircraft in the UK. “The core
capability of Cranfield Aerospace is that we have retained all the engineering
disciplines to enable us to design a whole new aircraft concept or one-off
flying demonstrator for clients,” declared Hutton. “However, we can also use
these core capabilities to develop our own projects.”
CAeS has been looking at particular aircraft manufacturing
sectors where a new entry might be feasible. “How do you introduce a new
competitor in the aircraft market?” asks Hutton. “You clearly don’t begin by
entering the very competitive single and twin-aisle aircraft market. The answer
is to find a niche. We think that where we could be credible and able to
compete is in the small sub-regional nine to 19-seat aircraft market. This is
currently a neglected sector as, in the present market, such small aircraft are
not economical to operate with conventional fuels and airlines have largely
upgraded to larger aircraft. However, there has been a lot of attention in the
past 12 months on ‘green’ aviation and the potential market for these smaller
sub-regional electric aircraft. With electric propulsion, all of a sudden, a
sector that didn’t make any economic sense now makes a lot of sense.”
Project
Fresson
CAeS is not merely proposing entering the electric aircraft
market, it has already done so with Project Fresson. Named after Scottish
aviation pioneer Ted Fresson, the £18m project aims to refit a nine-seat
twin-engine Britten-Norman Islander with an electric propulsion system
(see Electric pioneer, February 2019, p38). CAeS is currently
leading a consortium with Britten Norman, Rolls-Royce, Delta Motor Sport,
Dennis Ferranti and Warwick Manufacturing Group. Britten Norman is providing
the airframe; Rolls-Royce will provide the critical power management design and
implementation; Delta Motor Sport will supply the battery pack; Dennis Ferranti
the electric motors; and Warwick Manufacturing Group will do the battery
testing. Also involved is Scottish regional airline Loganair which plans to
introduce the electric version of the Islander on its shortest ‘island-hopping
routes’ in the Orkney islands. Critical to solving some of the tougher
technical challenges will be the support of Cranfield University.
Half the money for the project has come from the partner
companies with the other 50% of funding being providing by the UK Government’s
Aerospace Technology Institute (ATI), as part of a match funding programme.
Hybrid design
The electric engines and batteries on the Islander will be
supplemented with a conventional motor to provide additional range in the event
of an emergency. (CAeS/Loganair)
Phase 1 will begin with partners starting on their own
individual projects. CAeS is considering acquiring more than one Islander from
Britten-Norman, one to fit the new electric engines to and another non-working
airframe for engineers to work on. So that it will be easier for the regulators
to certificate, the aircraft will feature a hybrid-electric architecture. The
conventional engines will be replaced by two electric motors fed by a battery
pack. Behind the battery packs will be a hybrid element - a fuel-efficient
conventional motor.
“The architecture will be capable of pure electric flight,”
explained Hutton. “The aircraft will be able to fly on batteries for around
20min. The range extender will allow the aircraft to have an endurance similar
to the current conventionally-engined version, with necessary safety reserve.
We are hoping to have a flying demonstrator within 30 months.”
Towards an
all-new electric aircraft
Phase 2 of the Fresson Project will look at the electrification
of a larger airframe, such as a Twin Otter. (Viking Air)
However, the conversion of the Islander is only the beginning of
a longer-term plan. CAeS plans to use the knowledge and technology learned from
Phase 1 to move onto Project Phase 2 which is the electric conversion of a
larger 19-seat aircraft (such as a de Havilland Canada/Viking Air Twin Otter).
‘From the architecture that we develop from converting the Phase 1 aircraft, we
can then scale up to convert the Phase 2 aircraft,” said Hutton.
Phase 3 of the project is even more ambitious and is nothing
less than the design and manufacture of an all-new British regional electric
aircraft. Hutton believes that the UK has a unique opportunity to take the lead
in the emerging market for electric-powered commercial aircraft. “The UK has
largely lost its own whole aircraft design and manufacturing capability because
we’ve focused (for good financial reasons) on being part of the global supply
chain of larger non-UK aircraft OEMs,” he explained. “However, with our proven
aerospace expertise and approvals, CAeS is well positioned to develop our own
aircraft products. We can therefore play a critical role as an early stage new
aircraft integrator, working with aerospace partners, to enable the UK to lead
the green aerospace revolution.
Airbus automated assembly facility in Hamburg. Could Cranfield’s
proposed new British electric aircraft factory take advantage of new technology
and materials? (Airbus)
When asked by AEROSPACE whether this meant
that CAeS intended to set itself up as a new British aircraft manufacturing
OEM, Paul Hutton had an interesting reply: “Setting up a new UK manufacturing
centre will take more than us. To build these aircraft in the UK (and deliver
other disruptive whole aircraft projects), it will also be necessary to invest
in the creation of a new Industry 4.0 flexible aircraft manufacturing facility.
It will need a collaboration of government, local enterprise partnerships
(LEPs) and the wider UK aerospace industry. We are now seeking third-party
investment funding to allow CAeS to grow its capabilities so that we can be
correctly sized and structured to play a key role in this.”
Evolution not
revolution
The Islander is a well-established aircraft design familiar to
regulators.
(CAeS/Loganair)
Hutton explained how the plan to create a new electric aircraft
design would come in stages: “We’re not going to introduce all-new technology
straightaway, as that would delay certification and, so, introduction. Instead,
we want to find the quickest way with existing proven technology. We decided
that the quickest route to electrically-powered commercial passenger service
was to begin with adapting an existing airframe. We can then go to the
regulator with an aircraft that they already know. It’s not an end in itself,
it’s a means to an end to prove that electric aircraft can be certified for
commercial operation.”
“We’re following the lead taken by automotive manufacturers who
don’t begin by designing a new engine for a new car but with a new engine for
an existing car. Then, you wrap a new car around that engine. We intend to
follow the same path. In Phase 1 we will get approval for a new propulsion
architecture for an existing airframe. An evolution of that new propulsion
system architecture can then be used in a new aircraft. Once we’re got the
engine design approved, we can then go to regulators with modifications – for
example, more efficient lithium-oxide batteries.”
Creating an
electric supply chain
Hutton also explained that another reason why this gradual
approach was important was to generate business for companies supplying to the
electric aircraft market. “The reason that’s important to the UK is that it
creates the supply chain necessary to create that aircraft,” said Hutton. “On
the back of that supplemental type certificate (STC) we will have created a
supply chain in the UK for battery packs and electric motors. If that supply
chain is created in another country, then it will be much harder for UK
suppliers to enter this new market at a later date.
Window of
opportunity
Hutton believes that there is a brief window of opportunity for
the UK aerospace industry to take the lead in electric-powered aircraft. “The
UK has currently got a very significant presence in aerospace but, unless we
continue developing new technology, we won’t be able to be involved in new
projects,” he declares. ‘The UK has got the experience and know-how to develop
electric aircraft but we need to move quickly or we will lose the race and other
countries are taking the lead.”
However, Hutton is optimistic for the future of Project Fresson
now that both the UK Government and major companies have become involved. “The
ATI money is very important,” he stated. “It also helps when getting investment
for our other projects from third parties if they see that the UK Government is
investing in the project, as it gives you a level of credibility. It’s also
good that we’ve now got a major OEM in the form of Rolls-Royce involved on
Project Fresson Phase 1, as well as experts who know about battery packs,
testing and electric motors.”
Hutton also believes that Fresson Phase 3 will be able to take
advantage of new manufacturing techniques adapted for line manufacture of super
cars. Flexible batch manufacturing can be used to work on different aircraft
projects in the same factory. In addition to battery-power, CAeS is also
looking at the potential of fuel cells which would have 100% zero carbon
emissions.
All this and a
flying car too
CAeS is also involved with Aston Martin’s Volante Vision eVTOL
concept design. (Aston
Martin)
In addition to the Project Fresson, CAeS was also involved with
Aston Martin’s Volante Vision concept launched at the Farnborough Air Show in
2018, to create a new eVTOL aircraft aimed at the premium eVTOL market which
would not be dependent on the creation of urban ATM environments necessary for
air taxis in cities. As well as working on these new enterprises, CAeS will
also continue working on other projects with OEMs.
Future
challenges
There are still many issues to be resolved. As Project Fresson
is still in the early stages of its first phase, it is too early to speculate
what form the Phase 3 aircraft might take. However, some issues are already
being considered, such as that of intellectual property (IP) rights. “As the
projects develop, we will decide who has ownership of what,” said Hutton.
“There will be some joint IP but partner companies will retain IP that they
develop in their own fields.”
Another question is whether the new electric aircraft should be
manned. “The aim is for the first future electric aircraft to be piloted
because it will be quicker to certify,” said Hutton. “Then, as technology
develops, we might look at autonomous versions.”
The future of electric flight might be closer than we think.
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