Artist’s concept of a future airliner based on the
NASA Advanced Aircraft Concepts for Environmental Sustainability 2050
submission from awardee Electra. The team’s project focuses on electric
propulsion, integrated aircraft technologies, and vehicle design.
Electra
Picture yourself at an airport a few decades from now. What does your
airliner look like? It’s more efficient, with lower emissions than today’s
aircraft – what kinds of designs or technology make that possible? NASA is
working to answer those questions by commissioning five new design studies
looking to push the boundaries of possibility for sustainable aircraft.
Through NASA’s Advanced Aircraft
Concepts for Environmental Sustainability (AACES) 2050 initiative, the agency
asked industry and academia to come up with studies looking at aircraft
concepts, key technologies, and designs that could offer the transformative
solutions needed to secure commercial aviation’s sustainable future by 2050.
NASA issued five awards, worth a total of $11.5 million, to four companies and
one university. These new NASA-funded studies will help the agency identify and
select promising aircraft concepts and technologies for further
investigations.
Artist’s concept of a future airliner based on the
NASA Advanced Aircraft Concepts for Environmental Sustainability 2050
submission from awardee Georgia Institute of Technology. The team’s project
focuses on exploring scenarios and technologies based on an aircraft concept
the institute has developed, known as ATH2ENA.
Georgia Institute of Technology
“Through initiatives like AACES, NASA is positioned to harness a broad set
of perspectives about how to further increase aircraft efficiency, reduce
aviation’s environmental impact and enhance U.S. technological competitiveness
in the 2040s, 2050s, and beyond,” said Bob Pearce, NASA associate administrator
for the Aeronautics Research Mission Directorate. “As a leader in U.S.
sustainable aviation research and development, these awards are one example of
how we bring together the best ideas and most innovative concepts from the
private sector, academia, research agencies, and other stakeholders to pioneer
the future of aviation.”
For decades, NASA has connected
government agencies, industry, and academia to develop sustainable aviation
technologies. In 2021, NASA launched its Sustainable Flight National
Partnership, focused on technologies that could be incorporated into aircraft
by the 2030s. The partnership’s research and development led to current NASA
work including the experimental X-66 Sustainable Flight Demonstrator aircraft, its Electrified Powertrain Flight Demonstration project, and the development of more efficient engine cores and processes for the rapid manufacturing
of lightweight composite materials.
Artist’s concept of a Pratt & Whitney advanced
propulsion concept for the NASA Advanced Aircraft Concepts for Environmental
Sustainability 2050 initiative. The Pratt & Whitney project focuses on
commercial aviation propulsion technologies targeting thermal and propulsive
efficiency improvements to reduce fuel consumption and greenhouse gas
emissions.
Pratt & Whitney
The new AACES awards are initiating a similar process, but on a longer
timeline, focusing on technologies to help transform aviation beyond SFNP with
aircraft that could enter service by 2050. The kinds of partnerships NASA
develops through SFNP and AACES are critical for the agency to support the U.S.
goal of net-zero aviation emissions by 2050 and to help put aviation on a path
toward energy-resilience.
“The AACES 2050 solicitation drew
significant interest from the aviation community and as a result the award
process was highly competitive,” said Nateri Madavan, director for NASA’s
Advanced Air Vehicles Program. “The proposals selected come from a diverse set
of organizations that will provide exciting and wide-ranging explorations of
the scenarios, technologies, and aircraft concepts that will advance aviation
towards its transformative sustainability goals.”
An artist’s concept of JetZero’s blended wing body,
which the company’s team will use to evaluate technologies for the NASA
Advanced Aircraft Concepts for Environmental Sustainability 2050 initiative.
JetZero’s project will explore technologies that enable cryogenic, liquid
hydrogen to be used as a fuel for commercial aviation to reduce greenhouse gas
emissions.
JetZero
The AACES 2050 awards went to organizations that will form networks of
university and corporate partners to advance their studies. NASA expects the
awardees to complete their studies by mid-2026. The new awardee institutions are:
- Aurora Flight
Sciences, a Boeing
Company, whose team will perform a comprehensive, “open-aperture”
exploration of technologies and aircraft concepts for the 2050 timeframe.
This will include examining new alternative aviation fuels, propulsion
systems, aerodynamic technologies, and aircraft configurations along with
other technology areas that arise throughout the study.
- The Electra-led
team will explore extending Electra’s novel distributed electric
propulsion and its unique aerodynamic design capabilities to develop
innovative wing and fuselage integrations that deliver sustainable
aviation focused on enabling community-friendly emission reduction, noise
reduction, and improved air travel access. The company’s existing small
aircraft prototype has been flying for over a year, demonstrating
Electra’s technology that aims to transform air travel with reduced
environmental impact and improved operational efficiency.
- Georgia Institute of
Technology will perform a
comprehensive exploration of sustainability technologies, including
alternative fuels, propulsion systems, and aircraft configurations. The
institute’s team will then explore new aircraft concepts incorporating the
selected technologies with their Advanced Technology Hydrogen Electric
Novel Aircraft (ATH2ENA) as a starting point.
- JetZero will explore technologies that enable
cryogenic, liquid hydrogen to be used as a fuel for commercial aviation to
reduce greenhouse gas emissions. These technologies will be evaluated on
both tube-and wing and JetZero’s blended wing body – an airplane shape
that provides more options for larger hydrogen fuel tanks within the
aircraft.
- Pratt and Whitney a division of RTX Corporation, will
explore a broad suite of commercial aviation propulsion technologies
targeting thermal and propulsive efficiency improvements to reduce fuel
consumption and greenhouse gas emissions. The Pratt & Whitney team will
then down-select high-priority and alternative propulsion concepts for
potential integration studies with various airframe concepts for aircraft
in 2050 and beyond.
Artist’s concept of a 50-60 passenger electric plane
created by Boeing through its future flight concept efforts. Aurora Flight
Sciences, a Boeing Company, received an award through NASA’s Advanced
Aircraft Concepts for Environmental Sustainability (AACES) 2050
initiative to examine new alternative aviation fuels propulsion
systems, aerodynamic technologies, and aircraft configurations, along with
other technology areas.
Boeing
AACES 2050 is part of NASA’s Advanced Air Transport Technology project, which explores and develops technology to further NASA’s vision for the future development of fixed-wing transport aircraft with revolutionary energy efficiency. The project falls under NASA’s Advanced Air Vehicles Program, which evaluates and develops technologies for new aircraft systems and explores promising air travel concepts.
By: Robert Margetta, Public Affairs Speciailst
Source: NASA Funds New Studies Looking at Future of Sustainable Aircraft





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