The National - News

French start-up operator Ascendance unveils hybrid-electric aircraft design set for 2025

- Alvin R Cabral

French aviation start-up Ascendance Flight Technologi­es has unveiled the design of the Atea, its five-seater vertical take-off and landing (VTOL) aircraft, in a push to accelerate the transition towards green aviation.

Production and certificat­ion of the VTOL aircraft, designed to reduce carbon emissions by 80 per cent and reduce noise pollution by 75 per cent, is scheduled for 2025. The aircraft will come in a full-scale prototype and will go into a testing phase in 2023, said Jean-Christophe Lambert, co-founder and chief executive of Ascendance.

Atea was conceived after three years of research and developmen­t, and is designed to operate in peri-urban areas – zones that transition from rural to urban land uses – and in regions with a range of 400 kilometres.

“The aircraft is the result of huge efforts by our R&D department, tests and trials on four prototypes and a great deal of thought on costs and the ease of flying such an aircraft. Its characteri­stics provide all the performanc­es expected by a sector that the ongoing transition has made more demanding,” Mr Lambert said.

Hybrid-electric aircraft use battery powered electric powertrain­s, similar to what Tesla uses in its vehicles. There is consistent increase in the electrific­ation of aircraft systems, research on electrical propulsion and investment­s in electric or hybrid aircraft designs, according to the Internatio­nal Civil Aviation Organisati­on.

Icao has identified ongoing projects around the world, ranging from general aviation or recreation­al aircraft, business and regional aircraft, large commercial aircraft and VTOL aircraft, which are also called electric urban air taxis. “Significan­t progress” has been made in the VTOL category in recent years, with seat capacities having increased from one to five, maximum take-off weights now between 450kg and 2,200kg, and projected flight ranges from 16km to 300km, it said.

Most of these projects are expected to enter service between 2020 and 2030, with some already commercial­ly available. Four projects made their first flights in 2019, including the Lilium, CityAirbus, Boeing Aurora eVTOL and Bye Aerospace Sun Flyer 2, Icao said.

In September, the CityAirbus modified design was revealed. The European aircraft manufactur­er aims to fly a prototype in 2023 and expects certificat­ion to come by 2025.

Getting these aircraft into service can significan­tly contribute to climate change goals. Engineers from the Massachuse­tts Institute of Technology, after coming up with a propulsion concept earlier this year, estimate the technology would eliminate 95 per cent of the aviation industry’s nitrogen oxide emissions, thereby reducing the number of associated early deaths by 92 per cent.

Atea’s configurat­ion has a patented integrated hybrid system called Sterna, devised on an electric engine powered by the merging of two energy sources: combustion and electric (battery). Ascendance is planning to phase out the combustion energy source and replace it with new sources of cleaner energy, such as hydrogen or sustainabl­e aviation fuel.

Meeting the goal of net zero carbon emissions by 2050 is a challenge for the industry, but it also offers a huge opportunit­y for the sustainabl­e aviation fuel sector, an Energy Intelligen­ce Forum conference said.

 ?? Ascendance ?? Ascendance Flight Technologi­es’ Atea VTOL aircraft was designed to reduce noise pollution
Ascendance Ascendance Flight Technologi­es’ Atea VTOL aircraft was designed to reduce noise pollution

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