4.7 Article

Evaluation of Series and Parallel Hybrid Propulsion Systems for UAVs Implementing Distributed Propulsion Architectures

Journal

AEROSPACE
Volume 9, Issue 2, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/aerospace9020063

Keywords

hybrid propulsion; unmanned areal vehicles; distributed propulsion; aircraft design

Funding

  1. Escuela Politecnica Nacional [PIMI 18-01]
  2. Cranfield University GCRF networking grant
  3. Waitt ROC
  4. VLIR-UOS [EC2020SIN278A101]

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Current environmental policies in the aviation sector aim to reduce CO2 emissions and noise pollution by encouraging the use of cleaner propulsion alternatives. Hybrid propulsion systems have emerged as a potential solution, with the study finding that a parallel hybrid system with three distributed propulsors showed the best performance in terms of fuel savings. This study contributes by developing a methodology for setting potential hybrid distributed propulsion configurations for UAVs targeting specific monitoring missions.
Current environmental policies for the aviation sector motivate the use of cleaner propulsion alternatives in order to reduce their CO2 footprint and noise pollution in the coming years. In this context, hybrid propulsion systems have emerged as a potential solution, as they have demonstrated a good trade-off between performance and low pollutant emissions. The present work carries out a comparison between parallel and series hybrid propulsion systems using heterogeneous and homogeneous distributed propulsion architectures. In order to highlight the opportunities of distributed propulsion systems and validate the methodology developed, a single propulsion hybrid configuration is used as baseline case for this study. For the propulsion system sizing, this work uses a parametric modelling tool, which includes a constraint analysis coupled with a weight estimation module to determine suitable configurations for a environmental monitoring mission. The latter module includes semi-empirical correlations to size the electric and mechanical components for each propulsion setup. From the results, it has been found that for the representative case of monitoring in the Galapagos Islands, which requires an endurance of approximate 7 h, the parallel hybrid system using three distributed propulsors presents the best performance features in terms of fuel savings, showing a 34% reduction compared with the baseline case. To summarize, the main contribution of this study lies on the development of a methodology to set potential hybrid distributed propulsion configurations for UAVs aimed for determined monitoring missions.

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