Boeing is to run 36 different tests on its ecoDemonstrator flying testbed aircraft this year, while the annual R&D program’s focus will be on strengthening operational efficiency and sustainability in cabin interiors
The company will begin testing this month using a 777-200ER (Extended Range).
The Boeing ecoDemonstrator projects include:
- Airport operations: Testing to enable single-engine taxi and digital taxi clearances to reduce fuel use and enhance safety by reducing pilot workload
- Airport noise: Quantifying the benefits of flight operation procedures, like steeper glide slope and continuous descent approach, to reduce community noise, fuel use and emissions
- Waste-reducing materials: Lighter, recyclable and more durable floor coverings and recycled carbon fiber ceiling panels – both made with 25% bio-based resin
- Noise and weight reduction: Cabin insulation to better reduce noise and regulate humidity and temperature, and fabric-covered acoustic panels for the bulkhead and galley
- Future cabin concepts: Economy and business class seats with sensors that detect if someone is seated during taxi, takeoff and landing which can improve safety, and reduce crew workload and downtime for maintenance; a touchless water conservation lavatory; and galley technologies to make cabin service more efficient and reduce food waste
Stephanie Pope, president and CEO of Boeing Commercial Airplanes said, “The Boeing ecoDemonstrator program helps us make tangible improvements to our products – allowing us to reduce the environmental impacts of flying, improve the in-flight experience and strengthen the safety of our airplanes.
“We’re grateful for the many partnerships within aviation and beyond who help us turn the seemingly impossible into reality.”
Brian Moran, Chief Sustainability Officer of Boeing said, “The ecoDemonstrator program is among our most iconic flight demonstrators, having tested 250 technologies since it first took flight in 2012.
“This year’s testing of various cabin interiors aims to help solve for the portion of our airplanes that is not reusable or recyclable while also reducing fuel use and crew workload.”
Boeing has run an ecoDemonstrator program annually since 2012, to test and demonstrate technologies which improve aviation’s sustainability and reduce its impact on the environment. Almost every used in the program has flown using sustainable aviation fuel (SAF), and this year, the flagship aircraft will fly on a 30/70 blend of SAF and conventional jet fuel.