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Hydrogen-powered drone stays aloft for a day

By | November 23, 2009, 10:19 AM PST

Unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs) better known as drones proved themselves several years ago, but how about a aircraft with propulsion that doesn’t require fossil fuel. No, I’m not talking about a rubber band.

The Ion Tiger is small prop driven plane that promises to carry a five pound payload and stay aloft for more than 24 hours. The power source is series of hydrogen fuel cells that crank out 500 watts, which is enough to the power the three quarter horsepower prop motor (some coverage said its was three quarter horsepower fuel cell, but I wonder if it was a fuel cell producing 500 watts to power a three quarter horsepower motor to turn the prop).

On Oct. 9-10, the 37-pound Ion Tiger stayed aloft for 23 hours and 17 minutes at the Aberdeen Proving Ground in Maryland, just missing its 24 hour goal because of rough flight conditions, according to earth.stream.com. The project is being run by the Office of Naval Research (ONR).

Ion Tiger:seemingly the size of a supersized model plane...

Ion Tiger:seemingly the size of a supersized model plane...

But it set the record for electrically-powered flight, according to several stories. The ONR can make a plane like this, but this morning when I called a project spokesman this morning, ONR’s phones didn’t work so my questions have been submitted by e-mail which at the moment feels like snail mail. A spokesman responded right away, but said my timing to reach the scientists involved was bad because this is a holiday week (we should all be so lucky…). I wanted to know or confirm among other things five hows and a when: how fast, how high, how does the remote control work, how much does it weigh, how much money to develop it and when such a craft might enter service. Also, did it land safely during the test?

There are several advantages to a hydrogen-powered craft like Ion Tiger. The obvious ones are cheaper and fuel (water!) and zero emissions assuming the hydrogen comes from a non-polluting source which today is rarely the case. Hydrogen is largely made through electrically-powered electrolyzers or is a byproduct of gasoline refining or chemical manufacturing.

However, as a surveillance craft, for example, perhaps its biggest advantage is the absence of heat and noise generated by an internal combustion engine which makes the Ion Tiger is hard to detect. The extended length of the time it can stay in the air is impressive, too. Let’s face it: Big Brother will soon be watching 24×7, but that’s an issue much more complex than the technology that can pull it off.

The video below is worth watching and shows how warfare and surveillance are being revolutionized by such marvels as the Ion Tiger, a very clever name by the way. If you catch it, there’s a glimpse of one of GM’s Chevy Equinox’s adapted to run on hydrogen. I spent a morning driving one 18 months ago and it made me a hydrogen fan despite the challenges for this fuel source to become economic.

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John Dodge

About John Dodge

John Dodge was a contributing editor for SmartPlanet from 2009 to 2010.

John Dodge

John Dodge

Contributing Editor

John Dodge has written for the Wall Street Journal, Boston Globe, PC Week (now eWeek), EDN, Design News, Electronic Business, Bio-IT World, Health-IT World, Lowell Sun, Haverhill Gazette and Newburyport Daily News. He is based in Massachusetts.

Follow him on Twitter.

John Dodge

John Dodge

John Dodge prides himself on completely independent journalism. His opinions, observations and reporting are not influenced by any financial holdings. He holds no shares in computer, electronics, software or Internet companies. He also has no business affiliations with organizations except with those for which he creates content as a freelancer.

He writes for SmartPlanet and is not an employee of CBS.

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RE: Hydrogen-powered drone stays aloft for a day
Impressive stuff.
Posted by ITOdeed
24th Nov 2009
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RE: Hydrogen-powered drone stays aloft for a day
Something was dropped after take-off. Was this a booster of some sort, to save hydrogen fuel during the take-off? This of course would help set a flight-time record by not expending hydrogen to get off the ground.
Posted by jimgoda@...
24th Nov 2009
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Hydrogen is a dumb fuel
The best way to use hydrogen is in hydrocarbons, far more energy density, far safer, no specialized equipment. The energy delivery system of the future will be nuclear energy used as heat to synthesize hydrocarbons. We can build the nuclear powerplant thousands of miles away from cities, synthesize natural gas, oil, kerosene, etc, and deliver it to be burned where needed. It will be cheaper than drilling for oil.
Posted by Brad Jensen
24th Nov 2009
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RE: Hydrogen-powered drone stays aloft for a day
sixty years ago i worked at the direct energy conversion operation at GE. then our hydrogen fuel cells were the power for the gemini craft. similar fuel cells have been used in spacecraft ever since. so what is the big deal here. it took 60 years, actually quite a few more, for a GE practical invention to actually run a plane.
Posted by stilt21
24th Nov 2009
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RE: Hydrogen-powered drone stays aloft for a day
I think hydrogen power is the way to go. Lots of folks saying that it is too volatile and that it is not safe - that was what they said about gasoline and AC current in their early stages too. Emerson ("Big Money")even went as far as using AC current to electrocute a dog to 'prove it's dangerousness' I think hydrogen's biggest is that the Shells and Exxons ("Big Money")can't limit the supply of it like they do with gasoline (crude oil) to increase their revenue by 1 billion per hour because anybody can generate hydrogen and it is not proprietary. Forger bio-fuels - it is a flawed source because it will either deplete already scarce food stocks and/or cause the use of more polluting fertilizers. Hydrogen can be burned for needs as demanding as powering a rocket or converted for uses as delicate as powering motor. It begs only one question... WHY NOT?
Posted by gsam01@...
24th Nov 2009
0 Votes
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RE: Hydrogen-powered drone stays aloft for a day
I think hydrogen power is the way to go. Lots of folks saying that it is too volatile and that it is not safe - that was what they said about gasoline and AC current in their early stages too. Emerson ("Big Money")even went as far as using AC current to electrocute a dog to 'prove it's dangerousness' I think hydrogen's biggest flaw is that the Shells and Exxons ("Big Money")can't limit the supply of it like they do with gasoline (crude oil) to increase their revenue by 1 billion per hour because anybody can generate hydrogen and it is not proprietary. Forget bio-fuels - it is a flawed source because it will either deplete already scarce food stocks and/or cause the use of more polluting fertilizers. Hydrogen can be burned for needs as demanding as powering a rocket or converted for uses as delicate as powering motor. It begs only one question... WHY NOT?
Posted by gsam01@...
24th Nov 2009
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