Moderators: richierich, ua900, PanAm_DC10, hOMSaR
kalvado wrote:If you can magically store H2 with total energy density per weight and per volume better than that of kerosene, you may start talking drop-in replacements.
gloom wrote:kalvado wrote:If you can magically store H2 with total energy density per weight and per volume better than that of kerosene, you may start talking drop-in replacements.
I'm well aware of lower energy density of H2 liq.
I'm not considering it at the moment, I'm not asking the question of range or economic feasibility. My question is as simple as "can it be done, or it fails to work at all?".
Cheers,
Adam
gloom wrote:Since most airliners currently in production are built to a specific configuration (turbine jets under the wings, ever bigger fan blades around smaller, more efficient cores=higher bypass), I was wondering if anyone can help with three questions. These are sort of expanding on each other:
1. I believe modern turbojets produce most of the thrust out of fan. Would an engine producing raw fan thrust (with fan only) work as well? I'm most curious in current fan/core thrust proportion in edges of flight envelope, like high and hot, or high altitude.
2. If so, natural replacement for core I can think of, is an electric engine. Would the power density be good enough to place an electric core inside of fan and be able to power it to speeds required?
3. if so, I can think of powercells in fuselage producing power (hydrogen cells). Again, would that be possible to put just enough of these to power up the engines as required?
I'm now just exploring "possible or not" question, not the cost or feasability (or a possible technical difficulties making it possible; I believe one of these would be providing proper amount of oxygen to powercells).
Cheers, Adam
gloom wrote:kalvado wrote:If you can magically store H2 with total energy density per weight and per volume better than that of kerosene, you may start talking drop-in replacements.
I'm well aware of lower energy density of H2 liq.
I'm not considering it at the moment, I'm not asking the question of range or economic feasibility. My question is as simple as "can it be done, or it fails to work at all?".
Cheers,
Adam
gloom wrote:So basically there are no hard, technical problems there with such a concept, it's more an issue of fuel volume/range limitations as such, and fuel availability.
Thanks for your input.
Cheers,
Adam
Starlionblue wrote:Hydrogen as fuel runs into volumetric issues.
rjsampson wrote:Starlionblue wrote:Hydrogen as fuel runs into volumetric issues.
Presumably we're discussing this in the context of environmental friendliness. Batteries obviously have energy density/volume issues. The Mass issue is even worse. As we know, as such an aircraft won't "lose weight" throughout a flight.
As for Hydrogen. Arch points out the volumetric issues with H2 as well. On top of this: substantially more energy goes into the necessary electrolysis, transport, containment, etc. etc. of H2 compared to refining Crude and pumping Jet-A into an aircraft.
eeightning wrote:What sort of compact light electric motors are there that could replace the gas turbine core on a commercial airliner?
We are talking motors in the 2,000 kw to 50,000 kw range. Is there anything like that at TRL 8?
What is the TRL of fuel cells capable of supplying that size motor?
I believe fuel cells are much more efficient than heat engines. Would a liquid hydrogen to fuel cell to electric motor VS liquid hydrogen to gas turbine be twice as fuel efficient?
GalaxyFlyer wrote:eeightning wrote:What sort of compact light electric motors are there that could replace the gas turbine core on a commercial airliner?
We are talking motors in the 2,000 kw to 50,000 kw range. Is there anything like that at TRL 8?
What is the TRL of fuel cells capable of supplying that size motor?
I believe fuel cells are much more efficient than heat engines. Would a liquid hydrogen to fuel cell to electric motor VS liquid hydrogen to gas turbine be twice as fuel efficient?
I doubt there’s anything near a TRL 8 65000 KW fuel cell and drive mechanism. Fuel cells emit water vapor, another GHG, so there’s that.
We have two warnings about airborne H2 powered vehicles—Hindenburg and the Challenger. It’s not a happy story.
GalaxyFlyer wrote:We haven’t had any modern planes spontaneously start fire in flight using fossil fuel.
eeightning wrote:Engine weighs 1/2. Fuel weighs 1/5. That leaves a lot of room for fuel cells and tank insulation.
kalvado wrote:GalaxyFlyer wrote:We haven’t had any modern planes spontaneously start fire in flight using fossil fuel.
TWA800. And I heard a rumor B-52 exploded at Sawer had a similar issue.
eeightning wrote:I couldn’t find size weight specs for megawatt class fuel cells, but I gather their efficiency is around 60-70%.
So combined with a 98% efficient motor, they burn like 1/2 the fuel of a gas turbine!
Except that H2 has 2.8 times the energy density of JetA, so the fuel weight is 18%.
Engine weighs 1/2. Fuel weighs 1/5. That leaves a lot of room for fuel cells and tank insulation.
GalaxyFlyer wrote:kalvado wrote:GalaxyFlyer wrote:We haven’t had any modern planes spontaneously start fire in flight using fossil fuel.
TWA800. And I heard a rumor B-52 exploded at Sawer had a similar issue.
TW 800 was a wiring issue. Yes, and several other planes have had ground fires, usually lightning strikes or static discharge due to improper fueling procedural adherence.