Showing posts with label NASA. Show all posts
Showing posts with label NASA. Show all posts

Sunday, August 8, 2010

Electric aircraft generates buzz at Oshkosh air show

Chicago Tribute (Hilkevitch) - Boeing working on hybrid plane to cut fuel use, noise, emissions.

Chicago-based Boeing is working on a concept plane called the SUGAR Volt that would use turbine engines and electric motors connected to the fans to more efficiently propel the electric airliner. On flights of up to 900 miles, the SUGAR Volt would cruise almost exclusively on battery power, said Marty Bradley, a technical fellow at Boeing's research and technology division in Huntington Beach, Calif. An electric propulsion system would help slash the amount of fuel burned as well as noise around airports by about 70 percent compared with today's airliner fleet, say aerospace researchers who believe they can have such a flying machine up and running by about 2035.

On a smaller scale, a competition is under way to develop by next year a personal commuter aircraft that operates on electricity or fuel cells and can average at least 100 mph on a 200-mile flight while achieving greater than 200 passenger mpg. The Green Flight Challenge, sponsored by NASA and the CAFE Foundation, offers a $1.5 million first prize for the aircraft with the best performance. Some of the competing teams presented their designs at the Oshkosh air show. The participants included aerospace engineers and students at Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University, Georgia Tech University, Penn State University and the University of Colorado. "The concept is winnable. The engineering still needs to get done,'' said Jack Langelaan, an assistant professor at Penn State.

Saturday, May 22, 2010

Future aircraft could cut fuel use by 70%

CNET News (Terdiman) - By 2035, new designs and technologies could help commercial aircraft burn 70% less fuel than today, according to researchers at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Armed with a $2.1 million NASA grant, MIT is studying a "radical change" to the aircraft design used for the past 50 years. Instead of an "easily recognizable 'tube and wing' structure," MIT researchers are promoting a "double bubble" design or an integrated wing concept.  Hat Tip: AIA dailyLead