Electric Aviation
Could Be Closer Than You Think
In 2019 air travel
accounted for 2.5 percent of global carbon emissions, a number that could
triple by 2050. While some airlines have started offsetting their
contributions to atmospheric carbon, significant cutbacks are still needed.
Electric airplanes could provide the scale of transformation required, and
many companies are racing to develop them. Not only would electric
propulsion motors eliminate direct carbon emissions, they could reduce fuel
costs by up to 90 percent, maintenance by up to 50 percent and noise by
nearly 70 percent.
Among the companies
working on electric flight are Airbus, Ampaire, MagniX and Eviation. All
are flight-testing aircraft meant for private, corporate or commuter trips
and are seeking certification from the U.S. Federal Aviation
Administration. Cape Air, one of the largest regional airlines, expects to
be among the first customers, with plans to buy the Alice nine-passenger
electric aircraft from Eviation. Cape Air's CEO Dan Wolf has said he is
interested not only in the environmental benefits but also in potential
savings on operation costs. Electric motors generally have longer life
spans than the hydrocarbon-fueled engines in his current aircraft; they
need an overhaul at 20,000 hours versus 2,000.
Forward-propulsion
engines are not the only ones going electric. NASA's X-57 Maxwell electric
plane, under development, replaces conventional wings with shorter ones
that feature a set of distributed electric propellers. On conventional
jets, wings must be large enough to provide lift when a craft is traveling
at a low speed, but the large surface area adds drag at higher speeds.
Electric propellers increase lift during takeoff, allowing for smaller
wings and overall higher efficiency.
For the foreseeable
future, electric planes will be limited in how far they can travel. Today's
best batteries put out far less power by weight than traditional fuels: an
energy density of 250 watt-hours per kilogram versus 12,000 watt-hours per
kilogram for jet fuel. The batteries required for a given flight are
therefore far heavier than standard fuel and take up more space.
Approximately half of all flights globally are fewer than 800 kilometers,
which is expected to be within the range of battery-powered electric
aircraft by 2025. Russisk elfly - Foto: Sergei Ryabtsev
Electric aviation
faces cost and regulatory hurdles, but investors, incubators, corporations
and governments excited by the progress of this technology are investing
significantly in its development: some $250 million flowed to electric
aviation start-ups between 2017 and 2019. Currently roughly 170 electric
airplane projects are underway. Most electric airplanes are designed for
private, corporate and commuter travel, but Airbus says it plans to have
100-passenger versions ready to fly by 2030.
https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/electric-aviation-could-be-closer-than-you-think/
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