DLR Research Aircraft takes off using hydrogen fuel cell technology
It has been reported that the German Federal Ministry of Economics and Technology (Bundesministeriums fur Wirtschaft und Technologie has looked at fuel cell technology as a means to reduce fuel consumption and pollutant emissions from air traffic.
In the context of its aeronautics research programme Lufo IV, the Ministry has commissioned the German Aerospace Center (Deutsches Zentrum fur Luft- und Raumfahrt; DLR) to conduct the required development activities. The goal of the research is to develop fuel cells for a reliable on-board power supply for wide-body airliners.
Developing a high-tech aircraft to qualify fuel cells for aviation
The Antares DLR-H2 research aircraft, developed in cooperation with Lange Aviation GmbH, and its propulsion system, are substantially based on the Antares 20E self-launching motorglider, which has been in production for several years already.
Two additional external pods, housing the fuel cell system and the hydrogen tanks, are added underneath the wings, which have been strengthened for this purpose. In the future, the performance of the aircraft may be increased substantially by using up to four external pods, or by using fuel cells of an improved design. For the first time, DLR-H2 is able to take off using the energy from fuel cells.
As a first step, the DLR in cooperation with Airbus Germany successfully implemented a fuel cell system as the auxiliary power supply for the hydraulic pumps of the steering system of the DLR's research aircraft Airbus A320 ATRA. As a second step, the permanent deployment of a fuel cell system as on-board power supply in wide-body airliners is envisioned.
The Antares DLR-H2 flying test bed provides a cost-efficient test environment for developing fuel cell systems for this purpose, optimising the test time of the DLR's research aircraft Airbus A320 ATRA.
Partnership between DLR and Lange Aviation
The flying high-tech test bed is developed and built by project partner Lange Aviation in Zweibrucken. A fuel cell system, specially prepared for this purpose by the DLR Institute of Technical Thermodynamics (DLR-Institut fur Technische Thermodynamik), is used as the primary propulsive energy source.
This system is almost identical to the fuel cell system to be used in wide-body aircraft for on-board energy supply, and it supplies the electrical energy for the powertrain developed by Lange Aviation, which consists of power electronics, motor, and propeller.
The cooperation between DLR and Lange Aviation has been set up as a long-term partnership between equals, so that the research aircraft are available to the DLR until 2017. The DLR defines and evaluates the research assignments and provides the primary power sources.
Lange Aviation GmbH builds the Antares research aircraft and operates it for the DLR. In doing so, the company can build upon many years of experience in developing and building aircraft with electrical propulsion.
Further applications may arise from the combination of fuel cell systems and other regenerative energy sources as propulsive power sources for so-called HALE (High Altitude Long Endurance) aircraft. According to the current state of knowledge, these HALE aircraft will be equipped with electrical propulsion.
Source: Fuel Cell Today

