HyPoint predicts fuel cell aircraft with 4 times range of conventional planes
The company expects that this will occur because of the ultra-light cryotank developed by GTL. HyPoint, a company specializing in hydrogen fuel cell aircraft, has entered into a deal with Gloyer-Taylor Laboratories (GLT) an aerospace engineering company. The deal will allow HyPoint to integrate GTL’s ultra-light carbon tanks into its aircraft designs. HyPoint will use the GTL ultra-light carbon tanks in its hydrogen aircraft designs, indicating that the combination could give the planes a substantial range boost, to the point that they will leave current conventional aircraft behind. This cou…
The company expects that this will occur because of the ultra-light cryotank developed by GTL.
HyPoint, a company specializing in hydrogen fuel cell aircraft, has entered into a deal with Gloyer-Taylor Laboratories (GLT) an aerospace engineering company.The deal will allow HyPoint to integrate GTL’s ultra-light carbon tanks into its aircraft designs.
HyPoint will use the GTL ultra-light carbon tanks in its hydrogen aircraft designs, indicating that the combination could give the planes a substantial range boost, to the point that they will leave current conventional aircraft behind. This could represent a substantial difference in the decarbonization of the aerospace industry. The reason is that GTL places the H2 rotation at 50 percent. That is the weight of the stored fuel when compared to the weight of the entire system. Fifty percent is as much as ten times higher than conventional fuel tanks. As a result, HyPoint and GTL expect that the tanks will be able to contain as much as ten times the liquid H2 without making the planes heavier than they already are.