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The NASA Puffin is a concept for a single person, electrically powered vertical takeoff and landing () aircraft designed by engineers from , MIT, , and other research institutions. First introduced in 2009, Puffin was a critical project to test the feasibility and capabilities of electric propulsion. The design features a lightweight carbon-fiber frame, a system, and a fully electric allowing it to be nearly silent. The concept design was projected to be capable of flying a single person at a cruise speed of 150 miles per hour (241 km/h), with range expected to be less than 50 miles (80 km) with 2010-vintage Lithium-iron-phosphate technology. The design specified a 14.5 foot (4.4196 m) , standing 12 feet (3.65 m) tall on the ground in its .

A one-third scale model was built in 2010, and was briefly displayed including appearing in one episode of a Discovery Channel series on .


Development
While at , Mark Moore developed the Puffin as part of his doctoral program and achieved the first flight of a one-third scale, hover-capable Puffin technology demonstrator by March 2010 as the first (electric Vertical Takeoff and Landing) aircraft concept. By mid-summer 2010, they hoped to "begin investigating how well it transitions from cruise to hover flight". , the one-third scale model of the Puffin was briefly on display at the NASA Langley campus for the filming of the Discovery Channel series Dean of Invention. The Puffin was also demonstrated. The Puffin was slated to appear in the eighth and final episode of the show. NASA TV's This Week @NASA, August 13 , 2010-08-13, accessed 2010-09-10. The aircraft was never built at full-scale nor extensively tested. The Puffin project was worked on by several research institutions. Each institution's major contributions to the Puffin are listed below.

:

  • Spearheaded the Puffin project and provided coordination among institutions.
  • Developed the Puffin’s design to achieve , and a transition to horizontal flight.
  • Contributed to the Puffin’s testing and evaluation.

Massachusetts Institute of Technology:

  • Contributed to the analysis of the Puffin’s performance.
  • Contributed to the analysis of the Puffin’s electric systems.

Georgia Institute of Technology:

  • Contributed to the analysis of the Puffin’s performance.
  • Conducted sub-scale testing of low tip-speed to achieve NASA’s goal of reducing noise production to one-tenth of a conventional helicopter.

National Institute of Aerospace:

  • Contributed to the Puffin’s design through computational fluid dynamics simulations.
  • Contributed to the analysis of the Puffin’s structural integrity.

:

  • Contributed to the Puffin’s design validation.

The design was announced in November 2009, and a third-scale was made and flown in February 2010. Despite never manufacturing a full-scale Puffin, this project has significantly advanced research for the one-passenger aircraft.


Impact on eVTOL Industry
The Puffin has significantly influenced the development of personal air mobility and electronic aviation.  By being the first (scale) aircraft to take flight, the Puffin demonstrated the feasibility of electric propulsion in vertical flight, paving the way for subsequent advancements in the eVTOL industry.


Concept specifications

See also

Moore, Mark D. "NASA Puffin Electric Tailsitter VTOL Concept." Conference paper presented at the 10th AIAA Aviation Technology, Integration, and Operations (ATIO) Conference, Fort Worth, TX, September 13–15, 2010. NASA Technical Reports Server. Accessed March 21, 2025. https://ntrs.nasa.gov/api/citations/20110011311/downloads/20110011311.pdf.


External links

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