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NASA’s Electric Aircraft Propulsion Research: Yesterday, Today and Tomorrow NASA has been making investments since ~2015 in technologies related to electric aircraft propulsion. These investments span all-electric with our four passenger X-plane and electric vertical lift studies, to regional flight demonstrators and targeted technology maturation programs. These latter two areas are focused ultimately on reducing fuel burn and overall energy use in transport-class aircraft, with the goal of reducing carbon impact of aviation on our planet. Key technology contributions include such as electric machines, power electronics, cables/bus bars, fault management systems, controls and systems studies, and enabling materials. Today we are seeing the fundamental technology investments manifest themselves in flight demonstrations, that are aimed at impacting aircraft entering service 2035-2040 time range. These efforts have largely been aimed at megawatt scale technologies that can enable hybrid electric or mildly distributed airplane concepts. While these concepts offer benefits to regional and single isle aircraft it is thought that a more fully electrified propulsion system requiring greater than 10 MW of distributed power offers more possible pathways to configure the propulsion-airframe system to gain new efficiencies. A few examples of this are NASA’s SUSAN distributed electrofan concept and NASA University Leadership Initiatives such as CHEETA and IZEA that champion turbo-electric concepts. These concepts utilize combination of advanced technologies such as, fuel cells, power dense electronics and power dense electric machines and superconducting technologies. How much or which of these concepts will be adopted by industry is unclear, however another step function in electrifying aircraft propulsion is now on the horizon.
Document ID
20230008891
Acquisition Source
Glenn Research Center
Document Type
Presentation
Authors
Andrew Woodworth
(Glenn Research Center Cleveland, Ohio, United States)
Date Acquired
June 12, 2023
Subject Category
Aircraft Propulsion and Power
Meeting Information
Meeting: IEEE Workshop on Power Electronics for Aerospace Applications
Location: Nottingham, UK
Country: US
Start Date: July 18, 2023
End Date: July 19, 2023
Sponsors: IEEE Foundation, University of Nottingham
Funding Number(s)
WBS: 081876.02.03.10.01
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Portions of document may include copyright protected material.
Technical Review
Single Expert
Keywords
Electric Aircraft Propulsion
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