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New hydrogen planes will leave only water in their wake

For story suggestions or custom animation requests, contact tips@nextanimation.com.tw. Visit http://archive.nextanimationstudio.com to view News Direct's complete archive of 3D news animations. RESTRICTIONS: Broadcast: NO USE JAPAN, NO USE TAIWAN Digital: NO USE JAPAN, NO USE TAIWAN Airbus has unveiled a groundbreaking project to develop three new planes that will run on hydrogen and leave only water vapor in their wake. One of these zero-emission planes will also feature a revolutionary blended-wing design, while the other two would be conventionally shaped airplanes with game-changing hydrogen engines. RUNDOWN SHOWS: 1. Mechanical function of jet engines 2. Effects of engines: thrust and pollution 3. Similarity and differences of hydrogen jet engine 4. Zero emission results of hydrogen fuel 5. Technical challenges of hydrogen transport, storage 6. Technical challenges of hydrogen storage, flow in plane VOICEOVER (in English): "Currently, jet engines — like less powerful turboprop engines — use a highly flammable fossil fuel called kerosene. Kerosene is made from oil and is injected directly into jet engines, where it explodes, heating and expanding air that has been compressed by the engine." "This explosive process creates enormous thrust, which pushes huge airplanes forward at very high speeds. Unfortunately, kerosene is a fossil fuel, so it produces greenhouse gases like CO2 when it burns." "For its zero-emission planes, Airbus plans to develop a gas-turbine engine that can burn hydrogen in the same way. They also plan to use embedded electrical motors that are powered by hydrogen fuel cells." "The benefit of this is that hydrogen turns into water when it burns with oxygen, so these planes would emit zero pollution into Earth's atmosphere." "Unfortunately, this dream faces obstacles that Airbus will have to overcome before 2035, which is the ambitious deadline set for the project's completion." "Apart from the technical challenges of getting engines to work with only hydrogen, there is also the problem of safely storing and transporting hydrogen. Hydrogen is a gas and has to be cooled to minus 253 degrees Celsius to turn it into a liquid." "That means it has to be cooled to minus 253 degrees before it is pumped into the plane, and it has to be kept at this incredibly low temperature in the plane, and all the way into the engine." SOURCES: Airbus.com, BBC, Euronews https://www.airbus.com/newsroom/stories/these-new-Airbus-concept-aircraft-have-one-thing-in-common.html https://www.euronews.com/2020/09/21/airbus-unveils-concepts-for-zero-emission-planes-powered-by-hydrogen https://www.bbc.com/news/business-54242176 *** ----------------------------------------­­---------------------------------------­-­---------------- Next Animation Studio’s News Direct service provides daily, high-quality, informative 3D news animations that fill in for missing footage and help viewers understand breaking news stories or in-depth features on science, technology, and health. Sign up for a free trial of News Direct's news animations at http://newsdirect.nextanimationstudio.com/trial/ To subscribe to News Direct or for more info, please visit: http://newsdirect.nextanimationstudio.com

Видео New hydrogen planes will leave only water in their wake автора Радужный Автоцентр
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