The
silent, lightweight aircraft doesn’t depend on fossil fuels or batteries.
By Jennifer Chu |-- MIT News Office
By Jennifer Chu |-- MIT News Office
November 21, 2018 --
Since the first airplane took flight over 100 years ago, virtually
every aircraft in the sky has flown with the help of moving parts such as
propellers, turbine blades, and fans, which are powered by the combustion of
fossil fuels or by battery packs that produce a persistent, whining buzz.
Now MIT engineers have built and
flown the first-ever plane with no moving parts. Instead of propellers or
turbines, the light aircraft is powered by an “ionic wind” — a silent but
mighty flow of ions that is produced aboard the plane, and that generates
enough thrust to propel the plane over a sustained, steady flight.
Unlike turbine-powered planes, the
aircraft does not depend on fossil fuels to fly. And unlike propeller-driven
drones, the new design is completely silent.
“This is the first-ever sustained flight of a
plane with no moving parts in the propulsion system,” says Steven
Barrett, associate professor of aeronautics and astronautics at MIT. “This has
potentially opened new and unexplored possibilities for aircraft which are
quieter, mechanically simpler, and do not emit combustion emissions.”
He expects that in the near-term,
such ion wind propulsion systems could be used to fly less noisy drones.
Further out, he envisions ion propulsion paired with more conventional
combustion systems to create more fuel-efficient, hybrid passenger planes and
other large aircraft.
Barrett and his team at MIT have
published their results today in the journal Nature.
Hobby crafts
Barrett says the inspiration for
the team’s ion plane comes partly from the movie and television series, “Star
Trek,” which he watched avidly as a kid. He was particularly drawn to the
futuristic shuttlecrafts that effortlessly skimmed through the air, with
seemingly no moving parts and hardly any noise or exhaust.
“This made me think, in the
long-term future, planes shouldn’t have propellers and turbines,” Barrett says.
“They should be more like the shuttles in ‘Star Trek,’ that have just
a blue glow and silently glide.”
About nine years ago, Barrett
started looking for ways to design a propulsion system for planes with no
moving parts. He eventually came upon “ionic wind,” also known as
electroaerodynamic thrust — a physical principle that was first identified in
the 1920s and describes a wind, or thrust, that can be produced when a current
is passed between a thin and a thick electrode. If enough voltage is applied,
the air in between the electrodes can produce enough thrust to propel a small
aircraft.
For years, electroaerodynamic
thrust has mostly been a hobbyist’s project, and designs have for the most part
been limited to small, desktop “lifters” tethered to large voltage supplies
that create just enough wind for a small craft to hover briefly in the air. It
was largely assumed that it would be impossible to produce enough ionic wind to
propel a larger aircraft over a sustained flight.
“It was a sleepless night in a
hotel when I was jet-lagged, and I was thinking about this and started
searching for ways it could be done,” he recalls. “I did some
back-of-the-envelope calculations and found that, yes, it might become a viable
propulsion system,” Barrett says. “And it turned out it needed many years of
work to get from that to a first test flight.”
Ions take flight
The team’s final design resembles a
large, lightweight glider. The aircraft, which weighs about 5 pounds and has a
5-meter wingspan, carries an array of thin wires, which are strung like
horizontal fencing along and beneath the front end of the plane’s wing. The
wires act as positively charged electrodes, while similarly arranged thicker
wires, running along the back end of the plane’s wing, serve as negative
electrodes.
The fuselage of the plane holds a
stack of lithium-polymer batteries. Barrett's ion plane team included members
of Professor David Perreault’s Power Electronics Research Group in the Research
Laboratory of Electronics, who designed a power supply that would convert the
batteries’ output to a sufficiently high voltage to propel the plane. In this
way, the batteries supply electricity at 40,000 volts to positively charge the
wires via a lightweight power converter.
Once the wires are energized, they
act to attract and strip away negatively charged electrons from the surrounding
air molecules, like a giant magnet attracting iron filings. The air molecules
that are left behind are newly ionized, and are in turn attracted to the
negatively charged electrodes at the back of the plane.
As the newly formed cloud of ions
flows toward the negatively charged wires, each ion collides millions of times
with other air molecules, creating a thrust that propels the aircraft forward.
The team, which also included Lincoln Laboratory staff
Thomas Sebastian and Mark Woolston, flew the plane in multiple test flights
across the gymnasium in MIT’s duPont Athletic Center — the largest indoor space
they could find to perform their experiments. The team flew the plane a
distance of 60 meters (the maximum distance within the gym) and found the plane
produced enough ionic thrust to sustain flight the entire time. They repeated
the flight 10 times, with similar performance.
“This was the simplest possible
plane we could design that could prove the concept that an ion plane could
fly,” Barrett says. “It’s still some way away from an aircraft that could
perform a useful mission. It needs to be more efficient, fly for longer, and fly
outside.”
The new design is a “big step”
toward demonstrating the feasibility of ion wind propulsion, according to
Franck Plouraboue, senior researcher at the Institute
of Fluid Mechanics in Toulouse , France ,
who notes that researchers previously weren’t able to fly anything heavier than
a few grams.
“The strength of the results are a
direct proof that steady flight of a drone with ionic wind is
sustainable,” says Plouraboue, who was not involved in the research. “[Outside
of drone applications], it is difficult to infer how much it could influence
aircraft propulsion in the future. Nevertheless, this is
not really a weakness but rather an opening for future progress, in a
field which is now going to burst.”
Barrett’s team is working on
increasing the efficiency of their design, to produce more ionic wind with less
voltage. The researchers are also hoping to increase the design’s thrust
density — the amount of thrust generated per unit area. Currently, flying the
team’s lightweight plane requires a large area of electrodes, which essentially
makes up the plane’s propulsion system. Ideally, Barrett would like to design
an aircraft with no visible propulsion system or separate controls surfaces
such as rudders and elevators.
“It took a long time to get here,”
Barrett says. “Going from the basic principle to something that actually flies
was a long journey of characterizing the physics, then coming up with the
design and making it work. Now the possibilities for this kind of propulsion
system are viable.”
This research was supported, in
part, by MIT Lincoln Laboratory Autonomous Systems Line, the Professor Amar G.
Bose Research Grant, and the Singapore-MIT Alliance for Research and Technology
(SMART). The work was also funded through the Charles Stark Draper and Leonardo
career development chairs at MIT.
Link with video of test flights: http://news.mit.edu/2018/first-ionic-wind-plane-no-moving-parts-1121
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