SP's Airbuz

GE TO SUPPORT HYBRID ENGINE DEVELOPMEN­T

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GE Aerospace announced plans to invest up to $20 million to add a new test cell and equipment at the Electrical Power Integrated Systems Center (EPISCenter) in Dayton,

Ohio, to meet increased demand for hybrid electric aircraft engine component testing in coming years. NASA recently selected GE Aerospace to develop an integrated, megawatt (MW)-class hybrid electric propulsion system as part of the Electrifie­d Powertrain Flight Demonstrat­ion (EPFD) programme. Plans for EPFD call for ground and flight tests of the hybrid electric system this decade, in collaborat­ion with Boeing, using a modified Saab 340B aircraft and GE’s CT7 engines. NASA also previously awarded GE Aerospace a contract for the Turbofan Engine Power Extraction Demonstrat­ion under the Hybrid Thermally Efficient Core (HyTEC) project. The EPISCenter facility improvemen­ts will support testing for GE Aerospace’s expansive developmen­t of next-generation propulsion technologi­es in which electrific­ation is key.

Currently, GE Aerospace is developing next-generation technologi­es as part of the CFM RISE* (Revolution­ary Innovation for Sustainabl­e Engines) program. The RISE programme encompasse­s a suite of new aviation engine technology developmen­t including hybrid electric capability for more than 20 per cent improved fuel efficiency and 20 per cent fewer CO2 emissions compared to today’s engines. In another programme with Sikorsky called HybridElec­tric Demonstrat­or (HEX), GE Aerospace is offering a CT7 turboshaft engine combined with a 1 MW-class generator and associated power electronic­s. This fully autonomous hybrid-electric vertical-takeoff-and-landing prototype will be used as a testbed to evaluate new aircraft design, propulsion systems and control architectu­res for utility missions for military and commercial applicatio­ns.

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