As part of Siemens Innovation Day held
recently in Chicago – created, in part, to highlight the company’s progress to
date in the world of electric and hybrid electric aircraft – the German
industrial giant offered a first U.S. look at its electric GA aircraft, a
Magnus LSA fitted with a 55-kW Siemens electric motor.
Siemens vice president of electric and
hybrid-electric propulsion Terry Hamlin said the company has no intention of
becoming an OEM but wants to be part of the electric solution to the aviation
industry by partnering with other companies to demonstrate its expertise in
designing and building electric propulsion systems. Siemens is currently
working closely with Airbus and Rolls-Royce on the eFan regional airplane.
Hamlin said Siemens believes “the
aviation industry is on the verge of a major shift in propulsion,” focused
around three main drivers. “One is a reduction in [fossil] fuel consumption.
Another is a significant reduction in emissions that can only be met by really
disruptive technologies. Finally, there’s the needed reduction in aircraft
noise.”
Greg Bowles agrees too that a
significant change is coming to aircraft propulsion. As the General Aviation
Manufacturers Association’s vice president of global innovation and policy, he
manages the association’s electric propulsion and innovation committee.
Siemens says electric will become an
industry standard by 2050 with a move to electrification already moving along
much faster than the company expected.
“We might have a market ramp-up to a
certified electric system by 2021, possibly before the end of 2020. We’ll be
partnering with OEMs to help them integrate and maintain these electric
systems,” Hamlin said.
The Chicago event also focused on how
Siemens is currently working to bring electric aircraft to the marketplace,
beginning with small aircraft like the Magnus and the Extra 330LE. Siemens used
the Extra in 2017 to set a world speed and climb record in electric airplanes.
The electrically powered Extra achieved a top speed of 211 mph and a climb
record to 9,800 feet in four minutes 22 seconds.
Siemens is also blending the cyber and
the physical worlds into its production process to reduce time to market for
new products like a bearing shield displayed in Chicago. The shield is used in
the Extra 330LE’s electric motor. When the original bearing shield was created,
Siemens team created a digital twin that allowed them to continue redesigning,
testing and optimizing a new version in a virtual reality world. Results were
impressive as the original part was reduced in weight from 25 pounds to just 9
pounds.
“With every R&D dollar we’re moving
toward increased power density and reduce weight on battery,” Hamlin said. She
spoke to one of the newest frontiers in aviation, urban mobility concepts like
electrically powered air taxis where the demand is for quiet VTOL aircraft
capable of spanning intra-city distances. “Battery power is also expected to
change flight training, Hamlin added.
Bowles reminds the naysayers of electric
power plants about earlier days in aviation when people said jet engines
weren’t going to be all that useful.
“People wondered what good jet engines
would be on straight wing aircraft or an aircraft that only flew at low
altitudes demanded where jet power plants were quite inefficient. We simply
designed aircraft that could take advantage of those new technologies. We need
to think of battery power the same way. What additional advantages might
electric offer us? Although electric motors become less efficient at very low
speeds, they can make torque down to nearly zero RPM.”
(Evangle Luo of TTFLY shared with you)
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