窪蹋勛圖厙

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flyingtaxi

Flying Taxicabs?

FEATURED | November 6, 2017
STORY BY: EDITORIAL STAFF

窪蹋勛圖厙 researcher working with NASA, other partners to build small, battery-powered aircraft in next several years

Need to catch a fast ride from Cleveland to Pittsburgh? Get ready to hail your first air taxiand maybe sooner than you think. Vikas Prakash, a 窪蹋勛圖厙 professor of mechanical and aerospace engineering, is helping to create the light-weight, fully electric air vehicles that could make personal air travel for-hire a reality. I dont have any doubt, he said. In a few years, you will be able to call an air taxi from Uber or someone else to travel maybe 100 miles in a vehicle with two other people. Im very excited about this. Indeed, flying cars, now commonly known as Personal Air Vehicles or PAVs by the engineers designing them, have a and are hardly the stuff of cartoons, science fiction or Hollywood movies anymore. (Were looking at you .) Small personal aircraft already are in the early stages of production, and numerous investorsfrom the ride-sharing company Uber to the federal government and multinational companiesare lining up to be part of the next revolution in human transportation. In late September, the German drone company Volocopter staged a test flight that it said "would soon be the worlds first drone taxi service, under an ambitious plan by the United Arab Emirates city to lead the Arab world in innovation, Earlier this year, Uber hired a 30-year NASA advanced aircraft engineer to lead its flying car initiative, dubbed Uber Elevate, and in July, a a prototype of its flying taxi at a popular airshow near Moscow. Even DeLorean is in on the game, forming in 2012 to research flying cars. Others are working on more drone-like, . NASA believes there will be an explosion of these electric personal air vehicles in the next five years, Prakash said. They are motivated by the need to switch from jet fuel-propelled aircraft to electric planes, which will be quieter and dont add carbon to the atmosphere. Prakash said, however, that it will be up to the Federal Aviation Administration to deal with questions about who should be flying, and when and where. And because for now most existing small, personal-sized flying vehicles are either hybrids or electric-powered planes with limited range and most people dont have a pilots license, he asserts that the revolution will likely begin with air taxis and not personal aircraft.

NASA grants aim to change air travel

Vikas Prakash Vikas Prakash With a $1.3 million grant from NASA, Prakash will develop high-performance and safe, multifunctional structural battery systems for next generation electric air-vehicles as part of a $10 million grant shared by a consortium of U.S. universities, including lead partner Ohio State University. GE and Boeing are serving as industrial advisory board members on the project. Fully electric airplanes have limited range in time (a few hours) and distance (about 50 miles). Thats because loading up a flying machine with lithium batteries makes it too heavy to make more than marginal improvement in its flight endurance, Prakash said. Todays battery components have poor load-bearing capacity, he said. But if some of the parasitic materials of the structure are strategically replaced with active battery materials, one can add useful energy to the system and at the same time achieve considerable mass and volume savings. So, its the high-performance, multi-functional structural part that makes the work on next generation of electric vehicles by Prakash so important. In short, it means using the structure of the airplane to store energy or building batteries that can also serve a structural function. The project falls under NASAs Transformative Aeronautics Concepts Program, which aims to bring electric machines to the commercial aircraft fleet. It may take 25 years or more to reach that goal, but in the end, youll have commercial airplanes as well that wont have thrusters or turbo engines making noise and contributing to climate change because of burning fossil fuels, he said.

Partners focus on different pieces

While Prakash, along with team members from OSU, take the lead on energy storage, the other project partners will focus on:
  • Power and propulsion in an electric machine (Ohio State and University of Wisconsin);
  • Thermal, or heat, management (University of Maryland and North Carolina A&T State University);
  • System integration and the overall design of the plane (Georgia Institute of Technology).
  • Oversight (U.S. Air Force Research Laboratory, GE and Boeing)
Prakashs project at 窪蹋勛圖厙 is an extension of his current research and commercialization efforts under the Partnership for Research in Energy Storage and Integration for Defense and Space Exploration, part of 窪蹋勛圖厙s Great Lakes Energy Institute. The performance of the multifunctional battery pack will be evaluated at NASA Glenns electric aircraft testing facility in Sandusky, Ohio.   For more information, contact Mike Scott at mike.scott@case.edu or 216.368.1004. This article was originally published Oct. 12, 2017.