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MAAT high altitude cruiser feeder airship concept

conference contribution
posted on 2024-02-09, 19:02 authored by Richard Allarton, Chris BinghamChris Bingham, Tim SmithTim Smith, Jill Stewart, Paul Stewart
<p>The paper presents results of preliminary investigations in the development of a new class of airship. Specific focus is given to photo-electric harvesting as a primary energy source, power architectures and energy audits for life support, propulsion and ancillary loads to support the continuous daily operation of the primary airship (cruiser) at stratospheric altitudes (~15km). The results are being used to drive the requirements of the FP7 Multibody Advanced Airship for Transport (MAAT) programme, which is to globally transport both passengers and freight using a 'feeder- cruiser' concept. It is shown that there is a potential trade off to traditional cost and size limits and, although potentially very complex, a first order approximation is used to demonstrate sensitivities to the economics of the lifting gas. This presented concept is substantially different to those of conventional aircraft due to the airship size and the inherent requirement to harvest and store sufficient energy during daylight operation to guarantee safe operation during dark hours. This is particularly apparent when the sizing of the proposed electrolyser is considered, as its size and mass increases nonlinearly with decreasing daylight duty. The study also considers the integration of photo voltaics with various electrical architectures, in safety critical environments. A mass audit is also included that shows that if the electrolyser were omitted in such systems, the overall impact will be small compared to structural and propulsion masses.It should be noted that although the technology bias is application specific, the underlying principles are much widely applicable to other energy harvesting and power management sectors.</p>

History

School affiliated with

  • School of Engineering (Research Outputs)

Publisher

IEEE

ISSN

2165-9400

ISBN

9781467313711

Date Submitted

2013-01-09

Date Accepted

2013-01-09

Date of First Publication

2013-01-09

Date of Final Publication

2013-01-09

Event Name

Electrical Systems for Aircraft, Railway and Ship Propulsion (ESARS), 2012

Event Dates

16-18 October 2012

ePrints ID

7223

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