º£½ÇÊÓÆµ

Oops.

Our website is temporarily unavailable in your location.

We are working hard to get it back online.

PRIVACY
Manufacturing

GKN Aerospace working with Bristol firm on liquid hydrogen fuel tests

Filton Systems Engineering and New Zealand firm Fabrum are developing new technology as part of efforts to decarbonise aviation

Liquid hydrogen unit developed by Fabrum.(Image: Filton Systems Engineering/Fabrum)

An engineering partnership involving a Bristol-based consultancy has announced it is collaborating with aerospace giant GKN on efforts to decarbonise aviation.

Filton Systems Engineering (FSE), based in Bradley Stoke, and New Zealand firm Fabrum are developing new liquid hydrogen technology which is being trialled at the former’s recently upgraded fuel testing site, for potential use in future test flights.

A ground-based demonstrator of a 2.4 kW liquid hydrogen system has been jointly designed with GKN, and built by FSE, under the Innovate º£½ÇÊÓÆµ-funded Safe Flight project.

The end-to-end system will aim to demonstrate the feasibility of liquid hydrogen as an aircraft fuel source as well as address potential safety concerns.

The project will address how the hydrogen fuel could be dispensed and stored in simulations designed to be representative of a typical flight.

Fabrum chief executive Dr Ojas Mahapatra explained: “The successful adoption of zero-emission fuels requires both ground-based infrastructure development for liquid hydrogen provisioning at airports and aircraft that will use it. Point-of-use liquid hydrogen production is the most economical short to medium-term solution to enable zero emission flight.

“We’ve already proven our ground hydrogen fuel solutions for small and medium-scale hydrogen production. Now, with FSE, we’re taking these refuelling solutions to the aviation industry - right through to the onboard fuel cell.”

Ben Richardson, FSE commercial director, said the partnership’s “world first” solutions were helping make aviation’s hydrogen future a “reality”.