(27 May 2022, 11:10 +07)
Airbus is strengthening its presence in the UK
with the launch of a Zero Emission Development Centre (ZEDC) for
hydrogen technologies.
The centre, located in Filton near Bristol, will be charged with developing
a cost-competitive cryogenic fuel system required for the
successful entry-into-service of Airbus’ ZEROe passenger aircraft
by 2035, and to accelerate UK skills and know-how on
hydrogen-propulsion technologies.
The ZEDC will benefit from a recent
commitment by the UK Government to guarantee £685 million of
funding to the Aerospace Technology Institute (ATI) over the next
three years to support the development of zero-carbon and
ultra-low-emission aircraft technologies.
Airbus ZEROe aircraft
“Establishing the ZEDC in the UK expands Airbus’
in-house industrial capabilities to design, develop, test and
manufacture cryogenic hydrogen storage tanks and related systems
for the ZEROe project across Airbus’ four home countries,” said
Sabine Klauke, Airbus Chief Technical Officer. “This,
coupled with our partnership with ATI, will allow us to leverage
our respective expertise to realise the potential of hydrogen
technology to support the decarbonisation of the aviation
industry.”
Technology development at the centre has already started and will cover the
full product and industrial capabilities from components up to
whole system and cryogenic testing.
End-to-end fuel systems
development, a speciality of Airbus in the UK, is one of the most
complex technologies crucial to the performance of a future
hydrogen aircraft.
The ZEDC complements Airbus’ existing Research and
Technology footprint in the UK, as well as the work on cryogenic
liquid hydrogen tanks being done at Airbus’ existing ZEDCs in
Madrid, Spain and Stade, Germany (composite structure
technologies) and in Nantes, France and Bremen, Germany (metallic
structural technologies).
All Airbus ZEDCs are expected to be
fully operational and ready for ground testing with the first
fully functional cryogenic hydrogen tank during 2023 and with
flight testing starting in 2026.
The new centre follows the opening of
the £40 million AIRTeC research and testing facility in Filton in
June 2021, jointly funded by the ATI and Airbus, to deliver the
next generation of aircraft wings, landing-gear systems and fuel
system designs.
Headlines: |
|
|