UH2 Cleared To Fly Dash 8 Hydrogen-Electric
Testbed
Graham Warwick February
07, 2023
Taxi testing of the Dash 8-300 is underway at Moses Lake, Washington,
with a 1-megawatt fuel cell powertrain in the left nacelle.
Credit: Universal Hydrogen
Universal Hydrogen has received an FAA
experimental airworthiness certificate for its De Havilland Canada Dash 8-300
flying testbed, clearing the way for its first flight fitted with a
megawatt-scale hydrogen fuel cell propulsion system.
The 1-megawatt powertrain demonstrator is
installed in a modified nacelle with large air inlets on either side to cool
the fuel cells, supplied by Plug Power, and electric motor, supplied by MagniX.
As its first product, Universal Hydrogen (UH2) is developing a 2-megawatt
powertrain for retrofit to the ATR 72-600 regional airliner. Work on the ATR
conversion is underway in Toulouse.
Taxi testing at AeroTEC’s flight test center in
Moses Lake, Washington, is evaluating ground handling and performance of the
powertrain at low power settings and airspeeds.
When it takes to the air, the modified Dash 8 will
be the largest hydrogen-electric aircraft yet to fly. Rival startup ZeroAvia
began flight tests of a 600-kW fuel cell powertrain in a Dornier 228 testbed in
the UK on Jan. 19.
Unlike ZeroAvia’s demonstrator, where half the
power comes from fuel cells and half from a battery, UH2 says its powertrain
does not use a hybrid battery architecture, with all of the power transmitted
directly from the fuel cells to the electric motor. ZeroAvia plans to dispense
with the battery for its production system. Both demonstrator aircraft are
using pressurized gaseous hydrogen storage.
In addition to the powertrain retrofit, UH2 is
developing a hydrogen logistics system using modular capsules and the existing
freight network to deliver hydrogen to airports and into aircraft. “This
eliminates the need for costly new infrastructure, with any airport capable of
handling cargo being hydrogen-ready,” the startup says, adding the system also
eliminates transfer losses and speeds up hydrogen refueling.
In December, UH2 conducted the first operational
tests of its modular hydrogen delivery system at its engineering center in
Toulouse. It used its ATR 72 test aircraft to show how standard air freight
containers can be used to transport its capsules from the hydrogen production
site to the airport, then return them after use for refilling.
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