From the Wired Autopia blog:
AeroVironment has successfully flown its Global Observer unmanned aircraft for the first time powered by a hydrogen-fueled propulsion system. With a wingspan of 175 feet, the Global Observer is a long-endurance UAV that could stay aloft up to a week at a time according to the company.
The first hydrogen fueled flight lasted four hours and was at lower altitudes above Edwards Air Force Base in California. But the company says the aircraft would fly missions at 65,000 feet making it an observation platform and communications link over a very wide area approximately 600 miles in diameter. By combining a pair of Global Observers, each of which could fly for up to a week at a time, operators could provide continuous coverage over any part of the earth’s surface for “as long as needed” according to AeroVironment.
A liquid hydrogen powered internal combustion engine drives a generator that powers the four propellers as well as batteries and operational payloads. At the high altitudes the Global Observer is expected to fly, it would be flying above most weather and other air traffic, possibly simplifying the use of the aircraft in existing airspace.
Comments
Ok, I was going to say nice looking "little" airframe. then I read it has a 175ft wingspan. Kinda hard to scale that down, isn't it?
Is it using Hydrogen because of the altitude or just because Hydrogen is lighter? Is Hydrogen lighter than other fuels when it is a liquid? Do they discuss where they get the hydrogen from? Portable Hydrogen plants?
I do not doubt AeroEnvironment's competency in engineering, just find it funny something so cutting edge uses tech that's more than 200 years old. I agree with the "use what works" philosophy.
"1807 - Francois Isaac de Rivaz of Switzerland invented an internal combustion engine that used a mixture of hydrogen and oxygen for fuel."
@Martin
It (the tech) is most defiantly not. Very close though. Just the fact an average Joe like myself can plop down $500 and buy a production PEM fuel cell is kinda neat.
"A liquid hydrogen powered internal combustion engine drives a generator"
Seems a little "Old Tech", I've been waiting for about 8 years for PEM cells to get affordable.
Seems I won't have to wait much longer, check these out!
http://www.horizonfuelcell.com/store/hcell.htm
Just need to work out some kind of electrolysis system rather than pure H.
Cheers!