| LIVERMORE,
CALIF. — Sandia National Laboratories and Boeing are collaborating
on a project looking at the feasibility of using a hydrogen-powered fuel
cell for providing backup power in aircraft.
Commercial and military aircraft
use a variety of techniques for providing backup electrical power to critical
subsystems during emergency scenarios. Depending on the aircraft, these
may include dedicated battery power, in-flight operation of the auxiliary
power unit, a ram
air turbine, or other technologies.
The project is a new task under an
umbrella cooperative research and development agreement signed between
the two organizations in 2002.
Sandia is a National Nuclear Security
Administration (NNSA) laboratory.
The project focuses on the use of
a polymer electrolyte membrane (PEM) fuel cell for backup power. Sandia
is leading investigations looking at electrical and environmental requirements,
storage issues, and efficiency.
“Fuel cell technology represents
a straightforward and innovative approach to gaining experience with alternative
energy sources for airplane electrical power,” says Joe Breit, project
manager and an associate technical fellow at the Boeing Systems Concept
Center. “A
significant part of our focus at
Boeing Commercial Airplanes is looking at environmentally progressive technologies
that can further reduce dependencies on oil-driven power sources. Our collaborative
work with Sandia on this application is a step forward in that regard.”
The project taps Sandia’s 60 years
of experience in hydrogen storage for weapons applications and more recent
R&D in materials science and hydrogen storage engineering through its
DOE-sponsored Metal Hydride Center of Excellence, said project manager
Lennie
Klebanoff of Sandia’s
Livermore, Calif., site.
Sandia PEM researcher Chris Cornelius
will evaluate fuel cell requirements, implementation and efficiency; Klebanoff
will provide analysis of hydrogen storage options and issues.
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