The National Composites Centre (NCC) has announced the creation of a unique concept design tool that optimises hydrogen cryogenic tank designs according to a customer’s specific requirements.
To achieve its goal of introducing zero-emission aircraft to the market by 2035, Airbus is developing ways to store hydrogen at an extremely low -253°C. This innovation prompts the creation of ...
fueling and simulated launch cycles. The nine-month, 40-cycle series of tests, concluded Aug. 9, is part of Northrop Grumman’s ongoing partnership with NASA to help mature space technologies required ...
Determined to deliver the first zero-emission commercial aircraft on the market by 2035, Airbus continues to take important steps that help develop hydrogen-propulsion technologies. Next on the ...
OEG has made a major investment in its first-ever fleet of cryogenic ISO tanks in North America, now located at its Houston facility. This milestone marks the company’s official expansion of its ...
The 4.3-meter (14 foot) diameter composite tank is similar in size to the fuel tanks intended for use in the upper stage of NASA’s Space Launch System (SLS) rocket, which is the foundational ...
ATLANTA, July 31, 2023 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- Chart Industries, Inc. (NYSE: GTLS) (“Chart”), a leading global engineering design and manufacturer of highly engineered equipment servicing multiple ...
A key component in the success of the reusable launch vehicle program is the development of a reusable cryogenic tank system (RCTS) that can withstand the environments of launch and reentry and can ...
The National Composites Centre has announced that it has successfully tested a range of composite cryogenic storage tanks with liquid hydrogen that it has designed and manufactured. Considered one of ...
Cryogenic storage tanks, employed for liquefied gases such as hydrogen, natural gas and oxygen, rely on precise control of internal pressure to ensure operational safety and mitigate product loss.
Until something better and too far-fetched for us to consider at this time comes along, things leaving our planet will need rockets to do so. And those rockets will need fuel, which has to be stored ...