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vapilot2004
7th Sep 2006, 07:53
Found this little gem in my inbox:

Boeing's Zero-Emission Plane Set To Take Off
August 29, 2006 09:44 AM - Justin Thomas, Virginia


Boeing plans to launch a hydrogen fuel cell-powered light-aircraft prototype within a year, the Sunday Times reports. The only emissions from such a plane would be water vapor. The plane will be a small craft, and might have a top speed of only 70 miles per hour. Boeing is working with Intelligent Energy, a British fuel cell designer. “What we are designing is a demonstrator aircraft to see if it can be done,” said Boeing. “This technology is in its infancy but it has great potential.” The aircraft is based on the Diamond Dimona, an Austrian plane chosen for its light weight. Boeing engineers in Madrid have stripped out its fuel tank, replacing it with a bottle of compressed hydrogen that will feed into a fuel cell.


There, the hydrogen will be chemically combined with oxygen from the air to generate power. This will then be fed to an electric motor to turn the propeller.

The system is mechanically simple. Fuel cells have no moving parts and run silently. They tend, however, to be bulky and expensive, which is why their use has never become widespread.

Dr Jon Moore, director of communications at Intelligent Energy, based in Loughborough, Leicestershire, said technological advances were now making such devices far lighter and cheaper, but aviation remained the biggest challenge.

“The secret lies in making a fuel cell powerful enough to get an aircraft off the ground and to keep it climbing,” he said. “That takes a huge amount of energy and it is a big obstacle.”

Boeing has overcome this by backing up the fuel cell with batteries that provide extra power for take-off and then recharge while the aircraft is cruising.

The Boeing project will be the first manned fuel cell- powered aircraft. Last year AeroVironment, a Californianfirm, flew an unmanned surveillance plane, the Global Observer, which was powered by a fuel cell.

Even if Boeing succeeds with its aircraft it will take many years to scale it up for commercial use.

Another big problem is finding a supply of “green” hydrogen. Most commercially produced hydrogen is synthesised in refineries from fossil fuels such as natural gas. Critics call this “black hydrogen” because carbon dioxide is generated as a by-product, cancelling out many of the potential benefits.

Evening Star
7th Sep 2006, 16:29
As opposed to the hydrogen powered Tupolev 155 (http://www.tupolev.ru/English/Show.asp?SectionID=82). Size (and location) of the tank in illustrations here (http://www.tupolev.ru/English/Picture.asp?PubID=1786) and here (http://www.tupolev.ru/English/Picture.asp?PubID=1788) suggests that this was, despite flight tests, a work in progress and the 1988 date indicates a project quietly forgotten except as publicity material?

barit1
7th Sep 2006, 18:15
The Boeing project appears to be old news (http://www.boeing.com/news/frontiers/archive/2004/july/ts_sf7b.html)(2004)

Unwell_Raptor
7th Sep 2006, 22:35
Lockheed built a 1011 powered by hydrogen a long time ago.

Unfortunately, when it reached 30,000 feet the pilot went out.

WHBM
8th Sep 2006, 09:13
Unfortunately as soon as Boeing get there with such a project, the greens will have moved on to attack vehemently anything that exudes water vapour and it will all be wasted .....

chornedsnorkack
8th Sep 2006, 10:52
A hydrogen-powered aircraft ought to have completely different proportions from an oil-powered aircraft, because hydrogen is 10 times less dense.

What would be the right proportions for a hydrogen-powered craft?

Rear fuselage is the wrong place. Too far from centre of lift - CoG would move as the tanks empty. That leaves wings or underbelly. And wings are aerodynamically better than underbelly...