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Abstract

Since the first aeroplane flight more than 100 years ago, aeroplanes have been propelled using moving surfaces such as propellers and turbines. Most have been powered by fossil-fuel combustion. Electroaerodynamics, in which electrical forces accelerate ions in a fluid, has been proposed as an alternative method of propelling aeroplanes-without moving parts, nearly silently and without combustion emissions. However, no aeroplane with such a solid-state propulsion system has yet flown. Here we demonstrate that a solid-state propulsion system can sustain powered flight, by designing and flying an electroaerodynamically propelled heavier-than-air aeroplane. We flew a fixed-wing aeroplane with a five-metre wingspan ten times and showed that it achieved steady-level flight. All batteries and power systems, including a specifically developed ultralight high-voltage (40-kilovolt) power converter, were carried on-board. We show that conventionally accepted limitations in thrust-to-power ratio and thrust density, which were previously thought to make electroaerodynamics unfeasible as a method of aeroplane propulsion, are surmountable. We provide a proof of concept for electroaerodynamic aeroplane propulsion, opening up possibilities for aircraft and aerodynamic devices that are quieter, mechanically simpler and do not emit combustion emissions.

Details

Title
Flight of an aeroplane with solid-state propulsion
Author
Xu, Haofeng 1 ; He, Yiou 2 ; Strobel, Kieran L 1 ; Gilmore, Christopher K 1 ; Kelley, Sean P 1 ; Hennick, Cooper C; Sebastian, Thomas; Woolston, Mark R; Perreault, David J; Barrett, Steven R H

 Department of Aeronautics and Astronautics, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, MA, USA 
 Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, MA, USA 
Pages
532-535,535A-535D
Section
LETTER
Publication year
2018
Publication date
Nov 22, 2018
Publisher
Nature Publishing Group
ISSN
00280836
e-ISSN
14764687
Source type
Scholarly Journal
Language of publication
English
ProQuest document ID
2148961547
Copyright
Copyright Nature Publishing Group Nov 22, 2018