Fri, Jun 24, 2011
Diamond Aircraft First Flew The Two-Place Motor Glider June
8th
Billed as the world’s first aircraft with a serial hybrid
electric drive system, Diamond Aircraft, Siemens, Austro Engine and
EADS have been flying the DA36 E-Star this week at the Paris Air
Show Le Bourget 2011.
The two-place motor glider, built by the four partners to test
the hybrid electric drive concept, successfully completed its
maiden flight on June 8 at the Wiener Neustadt airfield in Vienna,
Austria. “A serial hybrid electric drive can be scaled for a
wide range of uses, making it highly suitable for aircraft,”
said Dr. Frank Anton, the initiator of electric aircraft
development at Siemens. “The first thing we want to do is
test the technology in small aircraft. In the long term, however,
the drive system will also be used in large-scale aircraft. We want
to cut fuel consumption and emissions by 25 percent, compared to
today’s most efficient technologies.”
The motor glider, which is based on Diamond Aircraft’s HK36
Super Dimona, is the only aircraft of its kind in the world. It is
the first to use a so-called serial hybrid electric drive, which
has been utilized to date only in cars, as an integrated drive
train. The plane’s propeller is powered by a 70kW electric
motor from Siemens. Electricity is supplied by a small Wankel
engine from Austro Engine with a generator that functions solely as
a power source. A Siemens converter supplies the electric motor
with power from the battery and the generator. Fuel consumption is
very low since the combustion engine always runs with a constant
low output of 30kW. A battery system from EADS provides the
increased power required during takeoff and climb. The accumulator
is recharged during the cruising phase. “The serial hybrid
electric drive concept makes possible a quiet electric takeoff and
a considerable reduction in fuel consumption and emission,”
said Christian Dries, the owner of Diamond Aircraft. “It also
enables aircraft to cover the required long distances.”
The group says the next development step will be to further
optimize the entire drive train. Siemens scientists are currently
working on a new electric motor that is expected to be five times
lighter than conventional drives. In two years, another aircraft is
expected to be equipped with an ultra-light electric drive.
Siemens’ Drive Technologies Division has already used
integrated drive trains in other applications like marine drives.
The knowhow gained in these areas has now been applied in the
aviation industry as well. Combined with the corresponding product
portfolio, the components of the drive train can be optimally
adjusted to one another.
The DA36 E-Star is being exhibited at the Paris Air Show Le Bourget
in a flight demonstration every day through June 26th.
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