Amid talk of sustainable aviation fuel and electric flights, there's another form of air travel currently being mooted as a green alternative to flying: the airship.
The onboard electrolysis isn’t as useful as you’d think - electrolysis is energy-intensive, you need water, acquiring water is energy a intensive, and water is heavy. Like, 8/9 of the weight of water is oxygen.
With current tech it doesn’t make sense, but in a more sci-fi sense I think it does - the sky is full of dense patches of gaseous water, commonly known as “clouds”, and if going through a cloud wasn’t incredibly dangerous for airships then they could just do that, catch handfuls of cloud, then condense it and electrolyze it. That way the airship doesn’t need to lift huge amounts of oxygen from lakes then dump it.
And if we’re speaking sci-fi, making airships stormproof is basically mandatory, they can’t outrun storms and due to their long flight-times (due to low speed), they’re more likely to encounter them mid-flight.
The onboard electrolysis isn’t as useful as you’d think - electrolysis is energy-intensive, you need water, acquiring water is energy a intensive, and water is heavy. Like, 8/9 of the weight of water is oxygen.
With current tech it doesn’t make sense, but in a more sci-fi sense I think it does - the sky is full of dense patches of gaseous water, commonly known as “clouds”, and if going through a cloud wasn’t incredibly dangerous for airships then they could just do that, catch handfuls of cloud, then condense it and electrolyze it. That way the airship doesn’t need to lift huge amounts of oxygen from lakes then dump it.
And if we’re speaking sci-fi, making airships stormproof is basically mandatory, they can’t outrun storms and due to their long flight-times (due to low speed), they’re more likely to encounter them mid-flight.