LIVESCIENCE
Hydrogen-powered
VTOL aircraft makes record 523-mile journey — and lands with 10% of its fuel
left in the tank
By Sascha Pare
published yesterday
An air taxi has completed the first forward flight
of a hydrogen-fueled aircraft capable of vertical takeoff and landing — and it
broke a distance record in the process.
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Joby Aviation's hydrogen-electric air taxi
recently flew three times further than the company's battery-electric air taxi. (Image
credit: Joby Aviation)
A hydrogen-electric air taxi has completed a
record-breaking, 523-mile (842 kilometers) flight over California, producing
only water as a direct by-product.
The flight, which was
three times further than the distance records set by electric vehicles of the
same developer, "demonstrates the potential for hydrogen to unlock
emissions-free, regional journeys," according to a statement from Joby Aviation,
the company behind the air taxi prototype. The air taxi had 10% of its hydrogen
fuel load remaining after the flight, meaning it could fly even longer in the
future.
The flight took place June
24 and is the first ever forward flight of a hydrogen-fueled aircraft capable
of vertical takeoff and landing (VTOL), according to Joby Aviation. Previous hydrogen-fueled
flights used either airplane-like aircraft requiring a runway or smaller vehicles,
such as Metavista's unmanned multi-rotor design. Those hydrogen-fueled
airplane flights lasted between 10 minutes and 3 hours, in the case of a H2FLY design (H2FLY is a Joby
Aviation subsidiary). Metavista's vehicle flew for a record 12 hours. It's
unclear what distance these aircraft covered, but H2FLY said its airplane could
one day fly up to 930 miles (1,500 km).
Joby Aviation's air taxi
is a modified electric aircraft with six rotors that can be used in urban
settings. The original battery-operated vehicle completed 25,000 miles (40,000
km) of testing across many flights at the company's base in Marina, California
and over New York City. Engineers then converted
this battery-electric aircraft into a hydrogen-electric one by adding a fuel
tank capable of storing 88 pounds (40 kilograms) of liquid hydrogen, as well as
a hydrogen fuel cell system, according to the statement.
Related: Largest ever fully electric concept plane could take to the skies by
2033
The fuel cells convert hydrogen into electricity,
water and heat in the presence of oxygen. The electricity then powers the
aircraft's rotors, according to the statement, while the water is released as a
waste product. The aircraft also carries a reduced number of batteries at all
times, providing extra power during takeoff and landing.
"Imagine being able
to fly from San Francisco to San Diego, Boston to Baltimore, or Nashville to
New Orleans without the need to go to an airport and with no emissions except
water," JoeBen Bevirt, the founder and CEO of Joby Aviation, said in
the statement.
Joby
Aviation's hydrogen-electric aircraft is equipped with a fuel tank capable of
storing 88 pounds of liquid hydrogen. (Image credit: Joby Aviation)
The advantage of the
hydrogen-powered design is that it can go much further than the
battery-electric one, which needs recharging every 100 to 150 miles (160 to 240 km).
Joby Aviation plans to start selling its original battery-electric design in 2025. The hydrogen-electric air taxi will take longer to bring to market, but "the vast majority of the design, testing and certification work we've completed on our battery-electric aircraft carries over to commercializing hydrogen-electric flight," Bevirt said.
Joby Aviation recently
became the first developer of electric VTOL aircraft to complete the third of five stages of the Federal
Aviation Administration (FAA) type certification process. During this third
stage, the FAA reviewed and approved Joby's certification plans for its
aircraft's structural, mechanical and electrical systems. The next stage will
involve the FAA looking at the entire aircraft and all its systems.
Joby
Aviation plans to roll out the same infrastructure, landing pads, operations
team and software for both types of vehicles, according to the statement,
making it possible to use them simultaneously or transition seamlessly from one
to the other.
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