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Rendering of the midsize aircraft
concept design, complete with "cheek tanks".Photo: Aerospace
Technology Institute
Flying from
London to San Francisco on a single tank of liquid hydrogen: UK unveils
taxpayer-backed concept plane
The aircraft would be cheaper to operate than conventional planes from
the mid-2030s onwards, according to project leaders
6 December 2021 22:15 GMT UPDATED 6 December 2021
22:43 GMT
A concept aircraft that can fly almost 10,000km on a single tank of
liquid hydrogen has been unveiled as part of a £15m ($19.9m) UK
government-funded project.
“Up to 279 passengers could fly between London and San Francisco direct
or Auckland, New Zealand, with just one [refuelling] stop with the same speed
and comfort as today’s aircraft, revolutionising the future of air travel,”
said the UK’s Aerospace Technology Institute (ATI), which led the project.
The concept was developed by aerospace and aviation experts from across
the country as part of the government-financed FlyZero project.
“Big technological challenges exist to realise green liquid
hydrogen-powered flight but there is a growing incentive and reward involved in
resolving these,” said the ATI.
“A new generation of highly efficient hydrogen-powered aircraft with
low fuel costs is forecast to have superior operating economics than
conventional aircraft from the mid-2030s onwards.”
Because liquid hydrogen contains far less energy than fossil-based jet
fuel by volume — and needs to be stored at about minus 250°C — new aircraft
designs with larger, cryogenic fuel tanks will be needed.
The new midsize FlyZero concept has cryogenic fuel tanks in its
fuselage and in two bulging “cheek” tanks underneath the front of the aircraft.
It would be propelled by two turbofan hydrogen-burning engines on its wings,
which span 54 metres.
Artist's impression of the plane at an airport. Photo: Aerospace Technology Institute
ATI claims that the plane would be able to replace flights that today
account for 93% of the aviation industry’s carbon emissions.
“These designs could define the future of aerospace and aviation,” said
UK business and energy secretary Kwasi Kwarteng. “By working with industry, we
are showing that truly carbon free flight could be possible, with hydrogen a
front runner to replace conventional fossil fuels.”
Despite the bold statements, the concept plane might well still result
in greenhouse gas emissions. Burning hydrogen in air releases nitrous oxides
(NOx), which form when nitrogen and oxygen in the air combine at high
temperatures, as well as water vapour — both of which are greenhouse gases,
although the latter is short-lived.
Detailed findings from the project, including on three final aircraft
concepts (the above midsize, as well as a regional and "narrowbody"
plane) will be published early next year, along with technology roadmaps,
market and economic reports and a sustainability assessment.
The European aircraft manufacturer Airbus is also working on its own
hydrogen-fuelled planes and last year similarly unveiled three new designs for
different uses, the most revolutionary of which was a “blended-wing
body” design for up to 200 passengers.
Due to the greater energy density by volume of existing jet fuel, many
in the aviation sector believe that so-called green “drop-in fuels” that are
chemically identical to kerosene represent the clean future of aviation and can
thus be used by existing aircraft. These can either be biofuel, also known as
sustainable aviation fuel (SAF), or synthetic “e-fuel”
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