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Capability-Based Electric Personal Air Vehicles May 23 rd 2007 Electric Aircraft Symposium

Capability-Based Electric Personal Air Vehicles May 23 rd 2007 Electric Aircraft Symposium. Mark D. Moore NASA Langley Research Center 757.864.2262 mark.d.moore@nasa.gov. Prior Research Capabilities Missions The 100/100 Aircraft Enabling Technologies.

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Capability-Based Electric Personal Air Vehicles May 23 rd 2007 Electric Aircraft Symposium

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  1. Capability-Based Electric Personal Air VehiclesMay 23rd 2007Electric Aircraft Symposium Mark D. Moore NASA Langley Research Center757.864.2262 mark.d.moore@nasa.gov

  2. Prior ResearchCapabilities MissionsThe 100/100 AircraftEnabling Technologies

  3. Not What Industry Considers All Electric • The Prospects and Potential of All Electric Aircraft, Cronin, Lockheed-California, AIAA-83-2478, 1983. • Evaluation of All-Electric Secondary Power for Transport Aircraft, McDonnell Douglas, MDC Report 91K0418, 1992. • Really Good Primer for Electric Vehicle Issues • Vehicular Electric Power Systems – Land, Sea, Air and Space Vehicles, Emadi, Illinois Institute of Tech, Marcel Dekker, 2004. • One of the Best Overall Electric Aircraft Technology Reports • Electric Power System for High Altitude UAV Technology Survey, Schmidtz, Paul, NASA Ames, 1997. Prior Research

  4. Fuel Cell Electric • Investigation of Fuel Cell Power System for Aircraft Electric Propulsion, Stedman, J.K., Naval Air Warfare Center FCR-12194A, 1992. • Fuel Cell Powered Electric Propulsion for HALE Aircraft, Bentz, John, Naval Air Development Center, American Society of Mechanical Engineers Paper 92-GT-404, 1992. • Fuel Cell Propulsion for All Electric PAV, Kohout, Lisa, NASA TM 2003-212354, 2003. • Fuel Cell Aircraft Applications Presentation, Dunn, Jim, Portable Fuel Cell Conference, 2002. • Latest GM Fuel Cell Developments, Bosco, Andrew, GM, 2001. • Hydrogenics Fuel Cell Specifications. Prior Research

  5. Electric UAVs • Flight Testing of an Electric Powered Vehicle, Cross, US Naval Research Laboratory, AIAA Paper 92-4077, 1992 • Performance Characterization of a Lithium-Ion Gel Polymer Battery Power Supply System for an Unmanned Aerial Vehicle, Reid, Concha, NASA Glenn Research Center, SAE 2004-01-3166. • Flight Testing of an Electric Powered Vehicle, Cross, US Naval Research Laboratory, AIAA Paper 92-4077, 1992 • Recent Articles and Activities • Electric Flight – A Design Exploration, Palmer, EAA Sport Aviation, March 2007. • Electric Airplane (E-Plane), Stough, Paul, NASA Langley, Jan 2007. • Air Travel Greener By Design, Report of the Technology Sub-group, 2001. Prior Research

  6. Small Aircraft Design Studies with Electric Propulsion • Electric Propulsion for High Performance Light Aircraft, Galbraith, A.D., Continental Group, AIAA 79-1265, 1979. • Practical Feasibility Assessment of Electric Power Propulsion in Small Helicopters using Lithium Hydroxide Battery Technology, Kirchen, Hughes Helicopters, 1981. • An Analytical Performance Assessment of a Fuel-Cell Powered Small Electric Airplane, Berton, NASA TM-2003-212393, 2003. • Emissionless Aircraft: Requirements and Challenges, Arun, Partial Unpublished Paper, 2003. Prior Research

  7. Electric Sailplanes • Silent Worldwide Debut, SSA Convention and Airsports Expo, 2003. • Silent The Light Sailplane with a Glide Ratio Greater than 31, Alisport. • Silent AE-1 Specifications. • Silent IN Specifications. • Silent US Price List, 2003. • Antares A Self-Starting Silent Super Sailplane, Boermans, L.M.M., Soaring Magazine, Feb 2001. • Antares Electric Motorglider, Lange Flugzeugbau, 2005. • Antares The Electric Motorglider from Lange Flugzeugbau Part 1,2001. • Antares Fully Equipt • Sparrowhawk Ultralight Sailplane, Greenwell, Eric, Soaring Magazine, Jan 2001. • Battery Powered Sailplanes, Gehrmann, OSTIV Congress, 1999. Prior Research

  8. Hydrogen Vehicles • BMW Hydrogen Vehicle Presentation, Gebler, 2002 Clean Energy Seminar. • Hydrogen – The Fuel for Future Powertrain Technologies, Braess, BMW Motor Group, 2002. • Hydrogen Storage, Niedzwiecki, Alan, Quantum Technologies, Hydrogen Vision Meeting, 2001. Prior Research

  9. On the Wild Side • Futures of Civilian Aeronautics Presentation, Bushnell, Dennis, 2007. • Advanced Energetics for Aeronautical Applications, Alexander, MSE Technology Applications, NASA CR-212169, 2003. • Tip Driven Fan Based on SERAPHIM Technology, Marder, Barry, Sandia National Lab, SAND2002-0029, 2002. • Electromagnetic Thrust Patent, Campbell, Patent 6,317,310, 2001. • Electromagnetic Thrust Patent, Patrick, Patent 6,362,718, 2002. • Why Small Engines, Edkins, General Electric, SAE, CN-51880, 1957. Prior Research

  10. Web Pages • Batteries • Lithium Polymer (SAFT, Electrovaya, Apogee, Maintence) • Lithium Ion (Toshiba, Panasonic, Prismatic Polymer, Cells for Military Applications) • Lead Acid (TMF) • Carbon (Isuzu FDK) • NiMH (Ovonic) • Zinc/Air (LBL) • Fuel Cells • SoLong Solar Electric AC Propulsion UAV • Solar Cells (Beco Solar, Uni-Solar, United, Full Spectrum) • Ultra Capacitors (Power Cache) • Electric Motors (UQM) Prior Research

  11. Major concern in approaching electric propulsion technologies for aircraft is to insure desired capabilities determine approaches, not a pet technology area. • What is the justification for investment over alternative approaches? • Electric propulsion promotes low emissions, noise, and improved safety, ease of use, and reliability as desired capabilities, but require a dramatic increase in cost while decreasing efficiency (for a conventional installation). • Why should stakeholders invest in this technology for aircraft? • Private investors • Small aerospace (AeroVironment, Scaled Composites, Cirrus) • Mid-size aerospace (Cessna, Raytheon) • Large aerospace (Boeing, Lockheed, Northrup) • Government (NASA, DARPA, FAA) • Non aerospace (Toyota, Honda, GM) Capabilities

  12. Personal Air Vehicle GOTChA Reduce Community Noise Goal = 60 dBA @ TO/Land SOA = 84 dbA @ TO/Land Reduce Training Time/Cost Goal = 5 days $1000 SOA = 45 day $10,000 Reduce Avionics Cost Goal = $15K/ suite SOA = $100K/ suite Reduce Airframe Cost Goal = $20/ lbm struc. SOA = $100/ lbm struc. Reduce SFC Cruise Goal = .22 lbm/lbf hr SOA = .28 lbm/lbf hr Reduce Propulsion Cost Goal = $10/ lbf SLS thrust SOA = $40/ lbf SLS thrust GOALS 2 5 3 4 1 6 OBJECTIVES Reduce cruise sfc by 20%. Reduce flight training time and cost by 90%. Decrease avionics suite cost by 85%. Reduce airframe cost by 80%. Decrease propulsion system cost by 75%. Reduce community noise by 24 db at flyover TO/landing. 01 03 04 02 06 05 TECHNICAL CHALLENGES Developing and certifying flight architecture and control systems within cost. Developing, integrating, flight architecture and control systems that are failsafe and reliable. Developing and certifying low labor assembly time structures at modest production volumes. Reducing community and cabin propulsion noise sources (ie high tip-speed prop, asymmetric flow, exhaust, etc) while meeting performance reliability, and cost. Quality Assurance (QA) based certification procedures instead of Quality Control. Achieving low cost variable pitch ducted prop while maintaining efficiency in acoustically constrained system 01 02 03 APPROACHES 04 Develop Naturalistic Flight Control Deck with control, guidance, sensing, avoidance, and airborne internet. Develop streamlined software and systems certification procedures, processes, and tools Develop reduced part count and lean design structural design concepts. Adapt mass produced QA products for aviation use.while developing new certification procedure framework. 05 Develop low-cost variable pitch ducted propeller hub and blades for low tip-speed,. 06 06 04 Develop integrated and shielded ducted propeller system with active wake control, and acoustical suppression. 01 Develop engine exhaust systems that can survive sustained high power operation. • Advanced low cost fastener technologies ie adhesives, laser and friction stir welding. Develop certifiable simulator-based training that facilitates use of Naturalistic Flight Deck. 09 10 Develop health monitoring, healing, and recovery for failsafe user interfaces and flight critical systems.. 07 12 05 Validate low cost mfg processes, materials, and techniques for major components. 11 02 Develop autonomous operation capability within Digital Airspace 08 - Page 1 - SOA = Cirrus SR-22/TCM IO-550N 03

  13. Personal Air Vehicle GOTChA GOALS Increase L/D Cruise Goal = 16 SOA =11 Decrease Empty Wt Fraction Goal = .58 SOA = .65 Increase Clmax Landing Goal = 9.0 SOA = 2.2 Increase Propulsion System T/W Goal = 4.0 SOA = 2.0 Reduce / Eliminate Harmful Exhaust Emissions Goal = 0 SOA = 350 CO2, 80 CO, 10 HC, 3.5 NOx, .2lead (grams/mile) 8 10 11 7 9 OBJECTIVES Reduce NOx emissions by 100% Reduce HC, CO, CO2, particulates, and lead emissions by 100% Reduce required field length by 75%. Increase Clmax and L/D by 50% with a cruise-sized wing. Reduce structural weight fraction by 15% Increase propulsion system T/W by 100%. Reduce subsystem weight fraction by 20% 12 11 13 10 08 09 07 TECHNICAL CHALLENGES Current non-combustion based power generation, distribution, propulsion, and energy storage systems have low specific power and energy density. Combustion based processes produce harmful emissions as a byproduct. Lightweight subsystems that achieve low cost and high reliability. Achieving simple, effective, highlift system for higher wing loading for efficiency and ride quality at low cost and high reliability. Lightweight minimum gage structures that achieve low cost.and assembly. Achieving high power to weight propulsion system while maintaining equivalent cost and maintenance. Achieve simple, effective, powered-lift highlift system with low speed gust control and engine-out robustnes at low cost. 12 APPROACHES 09 08 13 10 11 07 Lightweight, low density, stiff materials for minimum gage structures. Lightweight, low cost de-icing system Simple, effective powered-lift systems. Develop combustion- based propulsion systems for use with alternative hydrocarbon fuels (eg. ethanol, methanol, bio-diesel) that avoid octane additives and has zero net carbon increase to the environment. Develop alternative propulsion systems (ie variable compression engines, multi-gas generator fan system, lightweight diesel, electric hybrid, etc.). Develop low-emission combustion-based propulsion (eg. gas turbine, internal combustion) and energy storage systems for use with non-hydrocarbon fuel (hydrogen). Develop highly-efficient, lightweight hybrid electric /combustion propulsion systems with compatible energy storage systems. Develop highly-efficient, lightweight electric propulsion power generation, drive systems, and energy storage systems. Develop no external moving part Circulation Control highlift system (coanda blowing over trailing edge). 16 19 Integrated multi-purpose subsystems. 14 Active and passive gust alleviation systems. 17 Integrated multi-purpose structures. 20 13 15 22 24 25 21 18 - Page 2 - SOA = Cirrus SR-22/TCM IO-550N

  14. The design mission will assist in determining the desired capability priority. • What is the vehicle design mission of interest? • Light Sport Aircraft Recreational Market • $100 hamburger, flight training, joy flights, sight seeing • Recreational Market as emergent market for future transportation choice • Gridlock commuter, fast regional transport • New aerospace commercialization opportunities in air services • Community services, homeland security, surveillance, traffic monitoring, communication, lightweight express mail delivery • If advocating a technology development program without respect for specific future applications, this is a leap of faith. • Extrapolating that aircraft should follow automotive path of hybrid to full electric is not sufficient. • Automobiles have a very different mission that makes hybrid and all electric propulsion much more attractive than aircraft (lots of idling, large efficiency losses due to part power operation, auto engine avg duty is ~25% power). Missions

  15. Achieving low emissions and decreasing dependency on oil will be a topical research area for many years – but this does not necessarily mean that electric propulsion technologies should be developed. • As part of the previous NASA PAV research, a ‘McDonalds Fryer’ environmentally friendly vehicle concept was developed to investigate the possibility of a unconventional collaborative research partner. • Goal was 100 mpg vehicle that cruises above 100 mph. • Started with a Strojnik S-3 (50’ span side by side seating sailplane) to minimize power required. • Added GSE high specific output bio-diesel engine. • Low wingloading was undesirable for handling qualities and efficient cruise was at too low of a velocity (80 mph). Investigated lower span, higher speed alternatives. • Needed greater efficiency, investigated Goldschmied propulsor (also in order to achieve lower noise without ducted prop drag). • Needed greater static thrust since Goldschmied propulsor has relatively high discloading and is only effective at thrust = drag (130% hprop) • Investigated electric auxilliary wingtip propulsor/turbines as a joint method of reducing span and increasing takeoff/climb low speed thrust. 100/100 Aircraft

  16. 100/100 Aircraft • Analysis results looked compelling, especially for Goldschmeid propulsor potential, • however wing oversizing in cruise still limited efficiency/handling qualities.

  17. 100/100 Aircraft • Example 100/100 aircraft concepts utilizing GSE engine Goldschmied propulsor, • with forward batteries to balance and wingtip propulsor/turbines for TO/climb.

  18. Synergistic Techs High Specific Output, Efficient Bio-Diesel Engine(GSE Heavy-Fuel SIETEC Engine with Variable Compression Ratio?) 55 hp / 45 lbs .5 to .6 sfc Integral supercharger Variable compression ratio Low pressure fuel injection Multi-heavy fuel capable Compact footprint

  19. Synergistic Techs Efficient, Low Noise, Low Cost Propulsor(Internal Goldschmied Propulsor with Fixed Pitch Plastic Fan?) 130%hprop at thrust = drag Muted trumpet noise effect from fuselage Single inflow velocity condition No bird strike issues Similar BLPP Experiment

  20. Synergistic Techs Electric Wing Tip Auxilliary Propulsor/Turbine Cruise sized engine Wingtip mounted electric motor/alternator Auxiliary low speed thrust for TO/Climb from batteries (Ps of 1000 ft/min @ 1320 lbs = 40 hp) Battery recharge during cruise with no engine power input and no drag penalty Blades need to be symmetric with full feather capability for rotation in both directions

  21. 0.26 Synergistic Techs Low Cost/Maintenance Small Aircraft Highlift System(Low Pressure Electric Compressor Pulsed Circulation Control System?) Cirrus SR-22 Drag Polar FAR Part 23 Limits L/Dmax =18 L/Dcruise = 11 Cruise ~ 0.24

  22. “H”- Metaphor Synergistic Techs Ease Of Use - State of the Art (System Administrator User Friendliness) Ease Of Use – Haptic Flight Control System (Mac/Windows User Friendliness)

  23. Research justification is for low emission alternative fuel propulsion, not electric propulsion. • Electric propulsion on aircraft must achieve synergistic integration in order to be considered, otherwise alternative approaches look better (until technology level of energy storage changes significantly to achieve parity in performance, cost and efficiency). • Technology goals for research/demonstration activity need to be developed and attached to future desired vehicle missions and desired societal capabilities. • While investigating multiple dependent technologies at the same time is failure prone, a hybrid electric propulsion aircraft may be able to manage this risk. • Opportunities exist to publish at future ATIO conference and to establish a working group in preparation for future government programs. • It is likely that primary interest (and funding) will focus on electric propulsion for small military UAVs, so any effort should indicate applicability to this application. • Other government agency funding will be scarce, so leveraging other industry efforts in this technology area (ala Tesla) is critical, especially in order to achieve any near term cost practicality. Conclusions

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