Aircraft

ZeroAvia celebrates maiden flight of world's largest hydrogen aircraft

ZeroAvia celebrates maiden flight of world's largest hydrogen aircraft
ZeroAvia has now flown its 19-seat demonstrator, the largest aircraft yet to run (partially) on hydrogen-powered propulsion
ZeroAvia has now flown its 19-seat demonstrator, the largest aircraft yet to run (partially) on hydrogen-powered propulsion
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ZeroAvia has now flown its 19-seat demonstrator, the largest aircraft yet to run (partially) on hydrogen-powered propulsion
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ZeroAvia has now flown its 19-seat demonstrator, the largest aircraft yet to run (partially) on hydrogen-powered propulsion

ZeroAvia's 19-seat Dornier 228 has taken its first test flight in the UK. It's a testbed for the company's clean aviation technology, using a zero-emissions hydrogen-electric powertrain that's slated for certification and commercial flights by 2025.

Announced in June 2021, the HyFlyer II program continues ZeroAvia's aggressive push to prove hydrogen is the path forward in aviation. The original HyFlyer program put a six-seater in the air back in 2020, and it was the biggest hydrogen-powered plane ever to fly at the time. It has now completed more than 30 flights

In 2021, the company made headlines when a two-seat test plane lost power and made a forced landing in a field, losing its left wing in a hedge before coming to an "abrupt stop" in a ditch. Thankfully, nobody was injured, and a subsequent AAIB investigation found the hydrogen powertrain was not responsible for the incident, but it was certainly a wake-up call and a cautionary tale for other companies hoping to take a fast-paced startup mindset into the aviation world.

Now, one of the company's two 19-seaters has entered the test flight phase for the first time – albeit with a more cautious implementation of the technology. ZeroAvia has left the standard Honeywell TPE-331 combustion engine on the right wing, while fitting the left wing with a 600-kW electric motor.

For this test machine, the hydrogen tanks, fuel cell stacks and lithium-ion buffer batteries are all inside the cabin, where they can easily be monitored and accessed. ZeroAvia says it hopes to have a fully commercial-ready configuration ready to submit for certification later this year, in which the whole powertrain will be kept outside the cabin, presumably in the wing. The company hopes to have this 600-kW powertrain fully certified and running commercial flights for nine-to-19-seat aircraft by 2025.

The company estimates this powertrain will deliver a range around 345 miles (556 km), making it relevant to regional flights. A standard Dornier 228, for reference, can fly 19 passengers up to 702 miles (1,130 km), according to Simple Flying. The only battery-electric 19-seater we can find for comparison is the ES-19 from Sweden's Heart Aerospace, which promised 250 miles (402 km) of range before it was abandoned in favor of a 40-seat hybrid design with fossil fuel reserves.

The hydrogen powertrain's range figures might not seem very impressive for a clean fuel touted for its energy density advantages, but the next step up is already underway; ZeroAvia is working on a 2.5-MW powertrain for 2026, designed for airliners between 40-80 seats, with a projected 1,150-mile (1,852-km) range. Things will continue to scale up from there.

See the HyFlyer II's maiden flight in the video below.

ZeroAvia Dornier228 - First Flight

Source: ZeroAvia

4 comments
4 comments
Spud Murphy
Hey Dave, what's that hissing sou...KERBOOM!
aksdad
World's largest hydrogen aircraft is a flea compared to hydrogen aircraft a century ago. The Hindenburg, for example.
FB36
Our world already always have countless people keep burning to death alive (after traffic accidents), because of using gasoline (which easily starts fires) as fuel!
(Diesel fuel, for example, does NOT easily starts fires (& that is why POTUS car is specifically chosen to be a diesel, for example)!)
Hydrogen, on the other hand, does NOT start fires but EXPLODES like a bomb!!!
If there are hydrogen vehicles around, do you seriously think their tanks would never leak or rapture, because of a traffic accident, for example???
Not to mention, there is actually no need at all to use hydrogen as fuel!
All light/small vehicles are already becoming fully electric & all heavy/big land/sea/air vehicles just need us to start producing biodiesel/biofuel at large scales!
(From all possible industrial/agricultural/forestry waste/biomass & trash & sewage!)
TomLeeM
I think hydrogen is the future. It is both green and abundant. I have read of much development in the production and storage of hydrogen and in the development of the fuel cell plus work on burning it in other vehicles - diesels can be converted to run hydrogen or other fuels.

some think hydrogen is a bomb. it leaks and goes upward. if it burns, it goes up. gasoline spreads and covers everything and burns everything.