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EASA draws up initial certification
requirements for electric and hybrid engines
European aviation safety regulators have drawn up an initial set of
certification requirements for electric or hybrid propulsion systems for future
aircraft types.
The in-depth special condition has been shaped from an initial proposal in
January last year, following extensive comments from multiple aerospace
companies including Airbus, Boeing, Embraer, Rolls-Royce, Safran and other
organisations specialising in electric propulsion.
Current certification specifications do not consider such engines for
conventional small and large aircraft and helicopters, or new aircraft
architectures, says the European Union Aviation Safety Agency.
EASA says innovative electric and hybrid systems bring new challenges and
considerations, including interfaces, functions and interactions.
“It is considered challenging at this stage to provide a generic set of
requirements for [such propulsion systems] that could encompass all
possibilities,” it adds.
Heart’s ES-19 is one of several electric-propulsion concepts under
development
For large aircraft, covered by CS-25 certification standards, the special
condition must be complemented with appropriate emissions requirements which are
“yet to be defined” for electric propulsion, says EASA.
It also points out that any design including use of hydrogen – whether to
feed fuel cells or combustion engines – is also outside of the scope.
“These designs require further work and research before defining the
associated certification requirements,” it says.
Running to 30 pages, the document sets out basic criteria for safety of
materials, stresses and loads on components, fire protection, assessment of
failure conditions, resistance to bird-strike and icing, and other design and
operational aspects.
Although EASA has taken dozens of comments into account and amended the
details accordingly, it has also indicated that it is “willing to offer
flexibility” on certain matters for the time being, “in order to enable
innovation”.
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