Could sharks hold the secret to cutting flight costs?
'We expect we'll have some initial results that look like they are performing better,' he said, but more testing is needed before they can be commercialised.
Bilinsky, with a background in physics and law, didn't start looking for technology based specifically on microgrooves before he founded MicroTau in 2016.
Applying for an open innovation challenge from the US Air Force, Bilinsky then consulted past work on drag reduction, and wondered if it could be adapted at the nanoscale, using photolithography machines, similar to those used in making microchips.
The company uses photolithography machines to produce the film which is applied to the outside of planes.
The concept of using microgrooves to cut drag in water has been around for some time. When the US won the America's Cup back from Australia in 1987, the hull of the American yacht, The Stars & Stripes, was coated with riblets, based on NASA research. The effect underwater and in the air is similar.
Loading
'Drag is,' according to NASA, 'the aerodynamic force that opposes an aircraft's motion through the air.' It's the aerodynamic friction. Trimming this down saves on the energy used to overcome drag.
The trick, Bilinsky says, is the 'scale' of the riblets needed to reduce drag on the plane: the tiny ribs must be microscopic for them to be effective. But the scale of the production of the riblets also must be large: hundreds of square meters of the material are needed to cover a single airplane.
Importantly, the technology can be applied to existing planes, allowing large fleets to trim fuel costs. Based on current savings applied to current commercial fuel burn across the industry, it could save about $US8 billion ($12 billion) a year, and 40 billion tonnes of carbon.
The US Air Force, for example, spends $US10 billion a year on jet fuel, saving a small per cent of that bill is worthwhile. But if MicroTau technology is widely adapted, it has potential to reduce fuel bills across commercial fleets too.
Vueling is the economy airline owned by Spain-based International Airlines Group, parent company of British Airways, Iberia, and Aer Lingus among others.
Microtau has worked with JetStar and partnered with Delta Airlines. Vueling is the first European airline customer of MicroTau's.
Vueling director of sustainability Franc Sanmarti said the 'possibility of implementing MicroTau's cutting-edge technology across our aircraft once it is certified marks an important milestone in Vueling's journey toward a more sustainable aviation'.
'The original work was research done by NASA decades ago showing that if you could replicate these riblet type microstructures that you find on shark skin that it reduces friction drag,' said Bilinsky. 'There are decades of research behind that principle.'
Australian made
MicroTau is opening a larger production facility that can provide the covering for dozens of aircraft a year, with plans for a new factory next year, which will increase production.
Asked about criticism that Australia is unfavourable for manufacturing, Bilinsky noted that the staff were 'highly skilled labour', the process doesn't involve a 'huge number of hands', Bilinsky said. Given the lightweight product, the cost of shipping is manageable.
The company has support from the NSW and federal governments through grant programs.
'I think it is still unusual to do advanced manufacturing in Australia at least in terms of the start-up world,' Bilinsky said. 'I think there's more of that happening in other countries, but I think we're pretty bullish on doing this in the near term.'
In the longer term, if MicroTau needed to massively ramp up production, it would be open to having manufacturing plants elsewhere. The company is backed by the Clean Energy Finance Corporation's Virescent Ventures.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


West Australian
39 minutes ago
- West Australian
Blue Danube waltzes into space to mark Strauss' 200th
Strauss' Blue Danube waltz has finally made it into space, nearly a half-century after missing a ride on NASA's twin Voyager spacecraft. The European Space Agency's big radio antenna in Spain beamed the famous waltz into the cosmos on Saturday. Operators aimed the dish at Voyager 1, the world's most distant spacecraft more than 24 billion kilometres away. Travelling at the speed of light, the music was expected to overtake Voyager 1 within 23 hours. The Vienna Symphony Orchestra performed the Blue Danube during the space transmission, which actually sent up a version from rehearsal. It's part of the yearlong celebration marking the 200th birthday of Johann Strauss II, who was born in Vienna in 1825. The Strauss space send-off also honours the 50th anniversary of ESA's founding. Launched in 1977 and now in interstellar space, each of the two Voyagers carries a Golden Record full of music but nothing from the waltz king. His Blue Danube holds special meaning for space fans: It's featured in Stanley Kubrick's 1968 sci-fi film 2001: A Space Odyssey.


Perth Now
40 minutes ago
- Perth Now
Blue Danube waltzes into space to mark Strauss' 200th
Strauss' Blue Danube waltz has finally made it into space, nearly a half-century after missing a ride on NASA's twin Voyager spacecraft. The European Space Agency's big radio antenna in Spain beamed the famous waltz into the cosmos on Saturday. Operators aimed the dish at Voyager 1, the world's most distant spacecraft more than 24 billion kilometres away. Travelling at the speed of light, the music was expected to overtake Voyager 1 within 23 hours. The Vienna Symphony Orchestra performed the Blue Danube during the space transmission, which actually sent up a version from rehearsal. It's part of the yearlong celebration marking the 200th birthday of Johann Strauss II, who was born in Vienna in 1825. The Strauss space send-off also honours the 50th anniversary of ESA's founding. Launched in 1977 and now in interstellar space, each of the two Voyagers carries a Golden Record full of music but nothing from the waltz king. His Blue Danube holds special meaning for space fans: It's featured in Stanley Kubrick's 1968 sci-fi film 2001: A Space Odyssey.

Sky News AU
5 hours ago
- Sky News AU
Australia increasing defence spending in ‘national interest'
Shadow Finance Minister James Paterson says Australia should increase defence spending as it is in the national interest and not because 'American friends' asked Australia to. US Secretary of Defence Pete Hegseth has urged Australia to lift defence spending to 3.5 per cent of GDP while participating in the Shangri-La Dialogue in Singapore. 'I certainly think we should be increasing our defence spending; I am very proud of the commitment we took to the last election to do so,' Mr Paterson told Sky News Australia. 'We should increase our defence spending not because our American friends asked us to do so, but because it is our national interest to do so.'