“This
is a learning curve to get to the big ones in the future”
Airbus Group Chief
Technical Officer Jean Botti commenting on the Twin-Engine E-Fan All-Electric Airplane
Airbus
is going Electric with the Twin-Engine
Airbus E-Fan All-Electric Airplane as stated in “Airbus
Electric Aircraft takes to the skies”, published June 11, 2014 -- Updated
1135 GMT (1935 HKT) By Katie Pisa, CNN
and “Airbus’s
E-Fan Electric Plane Takes Flight”, published 16 May 2014 | 16:56 GMT By
Katherine Tweed, Spectrum IEEE. You can
read more about the Twin-Engine
Airbus E-Fan All-Electric Airplane in their informative brochure!
The
Twin-Engine Airbus E-Fan All-Electric Airplane is the result of five years of
research by the Airbus Group and is slated to make an appearance at the LA
Berlin and Farnborough airshows later in 2014 as stated in “Electric
E-Fan Aircraft Demonstrates Airborne E-Mobility”, published 25 April 2014, Airbus Group.
Since
its official debut in April 2014, the Aircraft has gained popularity among Jet Aircraft
Trainers due to the low cost of Operation. The spec of the Twin-Engine Airbus E-Fan
All-Electric Airplane leaves room for developement for Commercial use in 2017.
The
Main focus of their Research Center in Munich, Germany is developing better
Li-Ion Batteries, to quote Airbus Group Chief Technical Officer Jean
Botti: “We cannot afford to stay with
the state of batteries today. We need to go much higher in terms of efficiency”.
Airbus Group and the
E-Fan – Kickstart with Training Schools, Commercial Flights in the Pipeline
Plans
are already afoot to use it at Airbus Group's Training School in Bordeaux,
France to train Jet Aircraft Pilots by 2017. This as the benefits are easily
realized by any Training School makes the Twin-Engine Airbus E-Fan All-Electric
Airplane very attractive as a training Aircraft:
1.
Small compact design Twin-Engine in
History
2.
Reduces noise
3.
Zero Carbon Dioxide (CO2(g)) emissions
4.
US$0.02 cents per hour to train Jet Engine
Pilots
For
those glossing over these specs, that’s a cost reduction of 50% to 60% over
training with conventional Twin-Engine Aircraft!
It's
basically a Hybrid Electric motor glider. It's powered by two (2) Li-Polymer
Batteries made by KOKAM, a leading advanced battery maker with a combined
voltage of 250 V that put out 60 kW of power to its two Twin Turbo Fan engines.
This
is really a Propeller Aircraft, but instead of the Propellers being at the
front, they're paired and placed at the back of the Twin-Engine Airbus E-Fan
All-Electric Airplane. The two (2) Li-Polymer Batteries drive motors that turn
a pair of variable pitch fans that are basically propellers inside of Jet
Engine looking fuselage.
This
gives better control, much in the same way a rear-wheel stick shift vehicle on
the ground is more versatile, making it more maneuverable and able to stay
aloft for approximately 45 minutes, with Airbus Group aiming for a total flight
time of 75 minutes in the future. Its design also mimics a typical Private
LearJet, making it an easy choice to be used as a Trainer for Pilots to fly Jet
Aircraft.
Although
it’s clearly a All-Electric Glider, I hope that “Hybrid” here means that it
runs on Batteries in flight but can switch back to being a regular Jet Engine
should the Batteries run out. Even better if its configured in a Range Extender
configuration that allows you to fly on Batteries while Kerosene on Board the Aircraft
powers a mini Generators that recharges the Batteries and also aids in running
the two Twin Turbo Fan engines.
Throw
in Solar Panels to power the Twin-Engine Airbus E-Fan All-Electric Airplane's
and Mini-Wind Turbines to harvest Drag as the Aircraft slices through the air
and this Aircraft can move from being a prototype to full Commercial usage.
Flightpath 2050 and
Fischer–Tropsch Process - Fossil Fuel a Renewable Resource by 2050
The
commercialization of Hydrogen Fuel Cell Vehicles from Toyota by 2015 and GM by
2020 is on the horizon. Thus I’ve always wondered what the Airline Industry is
doing with regards to meeting the European Commission's Flightpath
2050 in the year 2050.
European
Commission's Flightpath
2050 in an ambitious Emissions Goals set by the EU (European Union) to
reduce Air Pollution and Noise Pollution from Propeller and Jet Aircraft to the
levels as shown below:
1.
75% reduction in (CO2(g)) emissions from their 2000 Levels
2.
65% reduction in Noise Levels from their
2000 Levels
3.
90% reduction in Nitrous Oxide (N2O)
emissions
This
is a Kyoto Protocol on Green House Gases, but applied specifically to Propeller
and Jet Aircraft. Already the EU has had a good head start as their SOLAR-JET
Project has been developing a Technique to produce SynGas from Carbon Dioxide (CO2(g))
and Water (H2O(g)) in order to fuel the Fischer–Tropsch
Process for making Kerosene as explained in my blog article
entitled “SOLAR-JET
Project create Kerosene from Syngas - How Fresnel Lens in SynGas for
Fischer–Tropsch Process means Fossil Fuel a Renewable Resource by 2017”.
Commercial
Flights with All-Electric Aircraft be it Private Jets to 90-seater Commercial
Jet planes by 2030 is certainly an ambitious goal, but one I'd love to see,
especially as it means that we'll be flying renewable Fossil Fuels by then.
By
then, along with my suggestions of augmenting the Li-Ion Batteries with a Range
Extender design and Solar-Wind Energy Recharging, the Fischer–Tropsch
Process may eventually result in Aircraft that produces its own fuel while
it flies! Who knows, maybe even Hybrid Flex-fuel and Hydrogen Fuel Cell
Aircraft may be possible by 2030!
Airbus
Group’s Twin-Engine Airbus E-Fan All-Electric Airplane is a kickstart in that
direction!
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