Zhang, JinningRoumeliotis, IoannisZolotas, Argyrios2022-01-242022-01-242022-01-20Zhang J, Roumeliotis I, Zolotas A. (2022) Model-based fully coupled propulsion-aerodynamics optimization for hybrid electric aircraft energy management strategy. Energy, Volume 245, April 2022, Article number 1232390360-5442https://doi.org/10.1016/j.energy.2022.123239https://dspace.lib.cranfield.ac.uk/handle/1826/17488Hybrid electric aircraft concepts are high in future aviation agenda to enabling reduced fuel consumption and emissions. However, the additional weight of the introduced battery and electrical components and sizing cascading effects will impact aircraft mission analysis performance. Therefore, the potential benefit of adopting hybrid electric aircraft will highly depend on the applied energy management strategy (EMS). This paper presents a three-layer propulsion-mission analysis-EMS integrated multi-objective optimization scheme for hybrid electric aircraft identifying feasible design aspects considering fully coupled propulsion-aerodynamics effects. The ‘propulsion’ layer comprises the propulsion system modelling, integration approaches, and performance synthesis using an Artificial Neural Network (ANN)-based gas turbine surrogate model. The ‘mission-analysis’ layer is designed for multi-energy sources hybrid electric aircraft mission analysis considering fully coupled propulsion-aerodynamic effects. The ‘EMS’ layer utilizes non-dominated sorting genetic algorithm II (NSGA-II) addressing the design trade-off, i.e., block fuel burn, energy consumption, emissions. The proposed scheme is applied to a typical narrow-body aircraft, Boeing 737–800, equipped with mechanically integrated hybrid electric parallel propulsion configuration to explore flight electrification in civil aviation. Moreover, sensitivity analysis of battery technology level and flight mission definition is followed providing insights to hybrid electric aircraft application scenarios. The EMS optimization results indicate that for short/medium haul aircrafts which operate in high altitude with long flight durations, fuel as consumable energy source is prone to be used in initial stages to reduce aircraft weight and lift-dependent drag, while battery as non-consumable energy is optimally allocated in final flight stages of descent and landing. The design of hybrid electric aircraft is highly sensitive to both flight mission definition and battery specific energy projections. With battery specific energy projections of 1500 Wh/kg for the year 2035, optimal block fuel burn reduction by −44.62%, −31.47% and −21.86% can be obtained at the flight range design of 1000 nmi, 1250 nmi and 1500 nmi respectively.enAttribution 4.0 InternationalHybrid electric aircraftEnergy management strategyMission analysisFully coupled propulsion-aerodynamic optimizationModel-based fully coupled propulsion-aerodynamics optimization for hybrid electric aircraft energy management strategyArticle