South China Morning Post

FIRST METHANE-FUELLED ROCKET SET FOR LAUNCH

Beijing start-up Landspace in race with US rivals to pioneer more efficient fuel that is also easier to produce and less polluting than alternativ­es

- Ling Xin ling.xin@scmp.com

China is aiming to send the world’s first methane-fuelled rocket into space, with a launch planned in the next two weeks, according to a source with knowledge of the matter.

The rocket – known as the Zhuque-2 and developed by Beijing-based start-up Landspace – is expected to blast-off between December 4 and 15 from the Gobi Desert in Inner Mongolia, the source told the Post.

Landspace is in a race with US rivals SpaceX and Relativity Space, which are also hoping to launch methane rockets soon.

Methane is the primary component of natural gas. As a rocket fuel, it is more efficient, easier to produce and more environmen­tally friendly than traditiona­l fuels such as refined kerosene.

Seen by many as the go-to fuel for next-generation rockets, methane has a higher “specific impulse” than kerosene – meaning how efficientl­y the engine can turn the propellant into thrust, similar to miles per gallon for a car. A higher specific impulse means less propellant is needed, so it is cheaper to launch.

Methane also has the advantage of being technicall­y easier to produce than it is to refine kerosene. It could also be extracted and made on the moon, Mars and many other places in the solar system.

Some scientists have proposed that the regolith – rocks and dust on the moon’s surface that contain traces of carbon and hydrogen – be heated to produce methane.

But there are many challenges to building a methane engine, such as the difficulty involved in igniting the fuel – especially in a low-temperatur­e environmen­t such as on a space mission.

The Zhuque-2 – a two-stage rocket standing nearly 50 metres tall and more than 3 metres wide – burns a mix of liquid methane and liquid oxygen.

With a mass of 219 tonnes and thrust of 268 tonnes at lift-off, it will be able to send 6 tonnes of cargo into low-Earth orbit, according to Landspace.

It will use four 80-tonne-thrust engines – known as Tianque-12 – in the first stage, and one more as the main engine in the second stage, along with four 10-tonnethrus­t vernier engines.

In terms of scale, the Chinese rocket sits between SpaceX’s huge

Starship and the smaller Terran 1 developed by Relativity Space. The 120-metre-tall Starship will have capacity to deliver 100 tonnes to low-Earth orbit, while the 35-metre Terran 1 will be able to deliver 1.5 tonnes.

A key difference between the Zhuque-2 and its US counterpar­ts is that the Chinese rocket is not reusable at the moment. Landspace said it was developing new, reusable models of the Tianque-12 engines for future use.

While the Zhuque-2 has yet to be launched, its developer is building rockets for planned second and third flights at its manufactur­ing base in Jiaxing, Zhejiang province. Those could be ready for launch within six months.

Landspace was founded in 2015 by Tsinghua University alumnus Zhang Changwu and is one of the best funded space companies in China. The company has said it secured 1.2 billion yuan (HK$1.3 billion) in investment in September 2020 to develop the Zhuque-2 rockets.

It has attempted only one previous launch, in 2018, when its small, solid-fuelled Zhuque-1 rocket failed to reach orbit due to an altitude control problem in the third stage.

The Zhuque-2 was originally expected to be launched in 2020, but the plan was delayed by the Covid-19 pandemic. The coming launch will be the first attempt by a Chinese company to send a liquid-fuelled rocket into space.

 ?? Photo: Handout ?? An artist’s impression of Landspace’s Zhuque-2.
Photo: Handout An artist’s impression of Landspace’s Zhuque-2.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from China