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Establishing Electrified Aircraft Propulsion Concepts—How AATT identified viable propulsion concepts and established foundational technologiesIn the mid 2000’s NASA challenged the aeronautics industry to identify the routes for achieving ambitious improvements in fuel burn, emission, and noise reductions. These so-called “N+3” studies were exploring broad changes three commercial aircraft generations, or nominally 30 years, in the future. Many intriguing propulsion-airframe integrated solutions were proposed and pursued, which incorporated technologies such as high-aspect-ratio wings, boundary-layer ingestion, and hybrid-electric powertrains. When the Advanced Air Transport Technology (AATT) Project introduced “Technical Challenge 5.2-Establish viable concept for 5-10 MW hybrid gas-electric propulsion system for a commercial transport aircraft” in 2014, industry was very skeptical that electrified propulsion could make a significant impact in commercial air transport over the subsequent 30 years. Yet there were many practical reasons why improvements in electric power system and electric powertrains were advancing at a rapid rate and could lead to paradigm changes in aircraft propulsion. The challenge to the aeronautics community was to discover how to harness this power revolution and apply it to aircraft propulsion. This talk summarizes the approaches and achievements from the Hybrid Gas-Electric Propulsion Concept Technical Challenge that concluded in 2019. The balanced portfolio of concepts studies anchored with practical technology development demonstrated that electrified aircraft propulsion is an aircraft revolution whose time has come.
Document ID
20205006128
Acquisition Source
Glenn Research Center
Document Type
Presentation
Authors
Cheryl Bowman
(Glenn Research Center Cleveland, Ohio, United States)
Date Acquired
August 10, 2020
Subject Category
Aircraft Propulsion And Power
Meeting Information
Meeting: NASA ARMD Technical Seminar
Location: Cleveland, OH
Country: US
Start Date: August 11, 2020
Sponsors: National Aeronautics and Space Administration
Funding Number(s)
WBS: 081876.02.03.05.02.01
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Work of the US Gov. Public Use Permitted.
Technical Review
Single Expert
Keywords
electric propulsion
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