Submitted by tooch_my_gooch t3_11grxfj in news
MightyH20 t1_jaqk2c6 wrote
Reply to comment by hiles_adam in Universal Hydrogen Successfully Completes First Flight of Hydrogen Regional Airliner by tooch_my_gooch
Thanks for looking it up! Usefull information that this article has left out imo.
>Today’s 15-minute flight used about 16kg of gaseous hydrogen — half the amount stored in two motorbike-sized tanks within the passenger compartment.
That is interesting. 1 kilograms of hydrogen equals to 33.33 kWh of useable energy. This means the entire flight consumed only 533.28 kWh.
I wonder under what pressure the hydrogen was stored given the relatively small size of the tanks with the total capacity to hold 30 kilograms.
>for 15 minutes of flight a 747 burns 3600L of aviation fuel, or 2880kg
This could be correct though. I know that a 747 uses around 3 to 4 liters of kerosine every second! And shows the massive efficiency difference between both technologies. 3600 L of kerosine equals to 37,564 kWh.
However, the major difference is probably the weight of the planes and that a 747 uses jet engines whereas this was a smaller prop-plane.
Perhaps a better comparison would be a comparison to a standard propellor plane. According to "the internet" a standard propellor plane uses 900 gallons of kerosine an hour or 225 gallons per 15 minutes. That equals to 8888 kWh.
Conclusion
Hydrogen prop plane 15 minutes flight: 533 kWh energy (16kg of hydrogen) consumption.
Standard fossil prop plane 15 minutes flight: 8888 kWh energy (225 gallons of kerosine) consumption
tantricengineer t1_jarnif0 wrote
These systems must store hydrogen at thousands of PSI for the energy density to rival petrol based fuels. The ideal storage state is nearer to 10,000 PSI where hydrogen becomes slurpy-like in composition.
The material science is coming along. One challenge with hydrogen fuel tanks is if a tank is punctured in an accident, you have rapid expansion of hydrogen gas as it equalizes to atmospheric pressure, and a likely fire which has little color. (Look at the FLIR view here: https://youtu.be/0aDC2ZmikRE )
This makes it difficult to determine where flames are.
Still rooting for this tech though since it gives us amazing possibilities.
kyckling666 t1_jarrzfd wrote
Guys I grew up with in oil and gas used straw brooms for invisible fire detection.
tantricengineer t1_jas91dt wrote
I love smart, low tech solutions like this.
jawshoeaw t1_jasas4x wrote
in an aircraft I'm guessing explosive decompression is the bigger problem, seeing as visualizing a fire on your wing really isn't changing your plan in the short term lol
tantricengineer t1_jat4mfi wrote
I don't expect these tanks to blow up in flight. I expect them to blow up when most commercial aircraft accidents happen: on the ground / takeoff / landing.
jawshoeaw t1_jat9lnt wrote
Ohhh gotcha. But sadly that’s rarely survivable with current fuels. I could see some edge case where there’s a survivable landing but here’s the actual advantage of hydrogen, the high pressure vessels are necessarily quite strong and might do better in a crash even if the broke open compared to avgas
InsuranceToTheRescue t1_jasszm4 wrote
I believe since the tanks are pressurized that they would likely explosively ignite instead of making a sustained flame. Then these vehicles really could blow up like in the movies.
razorirr t1_jarg2c5 wrote
Its quite a bit more than that. It takes 55kwh to crack the water to get that h2 using hydrolosis
A question becomes then if planes are 10% of us transit emissions, all other large transit 10%, and our personal cars are 45% and semis are 35%. Should we be using energy to do this? That same solar would most likely reduce emissions more if you put it directly into cars / busses / semis as battery electric. You dont have the conversion loss, and BEV is 10-15% more efficent than FCEV
jschubart t1_jas8dvl wrote
You sure your numbers for prop planes are for 15 minutes and not an hour? This looks similar to the size of a Saab 340 which burns about 119 gallons/hr.
empireofjade t1_jaut5t4 wrote
During the test flight of this aircraft only one prop was hydrogen powered. The aircraft was also powered by a conventional turboprop for safety reasons, so your numbers are not right.
MightyH20 t1_jav2d1b wrote
Aah that makes sense. In that case it would be too complex to calculate it.
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