Honeywell will partner with Japanese automotive manufacturer Denso to develop hybrid-electric and electric powertrains, with an emphasis on the growing urban air mobility (UAM) market, the two companies announced Monday.
The companies will work together to build concepts and technology demonstrators of hybrid-electric and electric propulsion systems for aerospace applications, driven not only by the promise of the burgeoning UAM market but also concern for rising environmental impact as the aviation industry continues to grow.
"The pressure to mitigate the environmental and economic impact of aviation will only grow in the years ahead as air passenger traffic increases and urbanization continues," said Bryan Wood, senior director of Honeywell's hybrid-electric and electric propulsion programs. "Knowing the challenges we face, we're working with Denso to create a new future for aviation propulsion. Aircraft powered by hybrid-electric and electric architectures have incredible benefits; they're cleaner, quieter, more fuel-efficient, more reliable and easier to maintain."
"We believe that collaboration between the automotive and aerospace industries is crucial to achieve high-quality and mass-scale urban air mobility," said Kenichiro Ito, CEO of Denso's North American headquarters.
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This marks at least the fourth agreement Honeywell has signed moving into the UAM space; the other three are with German air taxi developers Pipistrel and Volocopter and UK air taxi maker Vertical Aerospace. The agreement with Vertical, which was announced earlier this month, provides for the Bristol-based developer to integrate Honeywell avionics, navigation and fly-by-wire systems into its future aircraft designs.
Earlier this year, Honeywell debuted its HTS900 hybrid-electric turbogenerator for UAM applications – an electrified version of its 1,100-shp HTS900 gas turbine engine used by Kopter's SH09 light turbine helicopter and Eagle Copters' Eagle 407HP conversion.