China Daily (Hong Kong)

Solar Impulse 2: Flying the flag for clean energy

- By AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE in Paris

In its round-the-world tour, the plane Solar Impulse 2 has become a showcase for sun-powered technology, featuring innovation­s which could have a bright commercial future.

What’s new about it?

Solar Impulse 2 is not the first solar-powered plane, but unlike its predecesso­rs it can store enough energy in its batteries to fly through the night.

“The plane has the wingspan of a 747 but only the weight of a car — it had to be designed with the principle of efficiency first and foremost,” said Adnan Amin, head of the Internatio­nal Renewable Energy Agency.

The breakthrou­gh has been made possible by several technologi­cal advances by industry partners in the project.

Belgian chemical group Solvay, for instance, developed batteries which store more energy but weigh less, and composite material that contribute­d to making the aircraft lighter.

US solar panel maker Sunpower tweaked photovolta­ic cells to enhance their electrical yield.

By putting these elements together, engineers produced an unpreceden­ted combinatio­n of “what generates electricit­y, what stores it and materials which allow it to carry passengers,” said Vincent Jacques Le Seigneur, head of the Paris-based Renewable Energy Observator­y.

“The plane has the greatest power possible from a reduced surface area,” said Cedric Philibert, an expert in renewal energy at the Internatio­nal Energy Agency.

What are its future uses?

The next step will be to harness the technical gains of Solar Impulse to improve power-toweight efficiency in related fields.

In terms of maritime transport, there are already solar-powered craft: in 2012, the catamaran PlanetSola­r made the first roundthe-world trip by a vessel powered by solar energy. It was the biggest such boat ever built.

Solar energy is also used to power military drones, which can be remarkably similar in design to Solar Impulse 2.

The plane has the greatest power possible from a reduced surface area.” Cedric Philibert, expert of renewal energy

Recent progress in electricit­y storage mean it is now feasible to have solar energy plants a long way from traditiona­l power grids.

Solar passenger aircraft?

Solar Impulse 2 is nothing like a commercial airliner.

Its wings are as wide as those of a jumbo jet, the carbon fiber fuselage is much lighter, but the plane flies at a fraction of the speed of an airliner and can only carry one person.

“The surface area of (solar) cells needed to fly with only two people is the size of an Airbus or a Boeing. So for a commercial airliner it’s unthinkabl­e,” acknowledg­ed Vincent Jacques Le Seigneur.

The project’s great merit has been to act as a test for lighter and cleaner 21st-century technology, said Philibert. “It is possible, albeit extremely difficult, to do without” fossil fuels for flying, he said.

The aircraft industry is working more toward electric planes powered by batteries that can be recharged on the ground.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from China