Definition of Minimum Design Requirements for Hydrogen Aircraft from an Air Transportation Network Perspective

被引:0
作者
Rau, A. [1 ]
Stumpf, E. [1 ]
Gelhausen, M. [2 ]
机构
[1] Rhein Westfal TH Aachen, Inst Aerosp Syst ILR, Wuellnerstr 7, D-52062 Aachen, Germany
[2] German Aerosp Ctr DLR, Inst Air Transport, Air Transport Dev, D-51147 Cologne, Germany
来源
AIAA AVIATION FORUM AND ASCEND 2024 | 2024年
关键词
AVIATION; FUTURE;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
V [航空、航天];
学科分类号
08 ; 0825 ;
摘要
In comparison to other sectors, the global aviation industry faces a pronounced challenge to mitigate its contribution to anthropogenic climate change. A recently highlighted avenue is the development of aircraft powered by green hydrogen. Although promising concepts for such aircraft exist, persistent technological and economic hurdles remain. This study aims to address the technological barriers from a new angle by examining performance requirements for a first-generation hydrogen aircraft from an air transportation network perspective. It employs network modeling and linear optimization methods to determine minimum Top-Level Aircraft Requirements (TLAR) to meet specific carbon emissions reduction targets. It shows that passenger capacity and design range are the most important TLAR variables and that a 140-seat, 2,000-km range hydrogen aircraft would be able to reduce up to 56 % of CO2 emissions caused by intra-European passenger flights by 2050. Combined with flights within the US & Canada, the reduction potential can reach up to 12-18 % of global carbon emissions from aviation, depending on the TLAR configuration. This emissions reduction potential is additional to the introduction of new zero-emission battery-electric regional aircraft below 100 seats. The study also examines minimum requirements for a second, long-haul hydrogen aircraft before discussing limitations and pathways for future research.
引用
收藏
页数:23
相关论文
共 64 条
[41]   Hydrogen powered aircraft : The future of air transport [J].
Khandelwal, Bhupendra ;
Karakurt, Adam ;
Sekaran, Paulas R. ;
Sethi, Vishal ;
Singh, Riti .
PROGRESS IN AEROSPACE SCIENCES, 2013, 60 :45-59
[42]   The contribution of global aviation to anthropogenic climate forcing for 2000 to 2018 [J].
Lee, D. S. ;
Fahey, D. W. ;
Skowron, A. ;
Allen, M. R. ;
Burkhardt, U. ;
Chen, Q. ;
Doherty, S. J. ;
Freeman, S. ;
Forster, P. M. ;
Fuglestvedt, J. ;
Gettelman, A. ;
De Leon, R. R. ;
Lim, L. L. ;
Lund, M. T. ;
Millar, R. J. ;
Owen, B. ;
Penner, J. E. ;
Pitari, G. ;
Prather, M. J. ;
Sausen, R. ;
Wilcox, L. J. .
ATMOSPHERIC ENVIRONMENT, 2021, 244
[43]   Refueling of LH2 Aircraft-Assessment of Turnaround Procedures and Aircraft Design Implication [J].
Mangold, Jonas ;
Silberhorn, Daniel ;
Moebs, Nicolas ;
Dzikus, Niclas ;
Hoelzen, Julian ;
Zill, Thomas ;
Strohmayer, Andreas .
ENERGIES, 2022, 15 (07)
[44]  
Martins J. R. R. A., 2022, Engineering design optimization, P637
[45]   Conceptual design and optimization of a general aviation aircraft with fuel cells and hydrogen [J].
Nicolay, Sebastian ;
Karpuk, Stanislav ;
Liu, Yaolong ;
Elham, Ali .
INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF HYDROGEN ENERGY, 2021, 46 (64) :32676-32694
[46]  
NLR-Royal Netherlands Aerospace Centre, 2021, Destination 2050: A Route To Net Zero Aviation
[47]  
Peteilh N, 2020, AIAA AVIATION 2020 FORUM
[48]   Recent advances, unsolved deficiencies, and future perspectives of hydrogen fuel cells in transportation and portable sectors [J].
Rath, Rosalin ;
Kumar, Piyush ;
Mohanty, Smita ;
Nayak, Sanjay Kumar .
INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF ENERGY RESEARCH, 2019, 43 (15) :8931-8955
[49]  
Risse K., 2015, CEAS AERONAUT J, V7, P121, DOI [DOI 10.1007/S13272-015-0177-9, /10.1007 /s13272 -015 -0177 -9]
[50]   How to make climate-neutral aviation fly [J].
Sacchi, Romain ;
Becattini, Viola ;
Gabrielli, Paolo ;
Cox, Brian ;
Dirnaichner, Alois ;
Bauer, Christian ;
Mazzotti, Marco .
NATURE COMMUNICATIONS, 2023, 14 (01)