it might work for short flights (energy density) but this isn’t going to replace jet fuel any time soon because the resultant aircraft will have very little fuel/endurance/range.
Wings aren’t designed for high pressures like CNG - so, where do you put the fuel? Fuselage tank?
Or do you strengthen the wing to handle the pressure, adding weight and reducing range every further?
Either way, for anything beyond a Husky, you’re talking a clean-sheet airplane or a very short range demonstrator. Certainly nothing commercially viable.
Cryogenic fuels are a pipe dream. Handling, boil off, etc. make them impractical for aircraft - you lose too much fuel as the aircraft flies. This isn’t a Saturn V that has fuel hoses hooked up until seconds before liftoff and burns out minutes later. The fuel needs to work for a long taxi and long flight.
Wings aren’t designed for high pressures like CNG - so, where do you put the fuel? Fuselage tank?
Or do you strengthen the wing to handle the pressure, adding weight and reducing range every further?
Either way, for anything beyond a Husky, you’re talking a clean-sheet airplane or a very short range demonstrator. Certainly nothing commercially viable.
Cryogenic fuels are a pipe dream. Handling, boil off, etc. make them impractical for aircraft - you lose too much fuel as the aircraft flies. This isn’t a Saturn V that has fuel hoses hooked up until seconds before liftoff and burns out minutes later. The fuel needs to work for a long taxi and long flight.