ROCKET SCIENCE
Greener way to get satellites moving
by Staff Writers
Paris (ESA) Feb 25, 2021

illustration only

A sustained test firing of a 'green' satellite thruster at Poland's Institute of Aviation, intended as a future alternative to today's hydrazine-based apogee engines, typically used by telecommunication satellites to manoeuvre into their final geostationary orbits.

Today hydrazine is the most common propellant employed by thrusters aboard satellites: it is highly energetic in nature but also toxic and corrosive, as well as dangerous to handle and store.

ESA initiated the Green Liquid Apogee Engine for Future Spacecraft project, GRACE, to evaluate more environmentally friendly thruster options, with testing culminating in a sustained 60-second thruster firing.

GRACE assessed various options, finding the most effective bipropellant combination used 'high test peroxide' (HTP) as oxidiser - a much purer version of the same chemical used to bleach hair, which is split into oxygen and water steam using a catalyst - plus TMPDA fuel.

This was a nearly all-Polish project, supported through ESA's Polish Industry Incentive. Poland's Institute of Aviation oversaw management, design and testing, with Jakusz providing the HTP, WB Electronics, represented by Flytronic manufacturing most thruster components. Thales Alenia Space in the UK provided requirements and guidelines for design and testing - including the provision of a 500 Newton kerosene-powered thruster, used as a model for the GRACE demonstrator.

"The programme successfully demonstrated a robust catalyst bed capable of sustaining a minute's continuous firing," notes ESA propulsion engineer Ferran Valencia Bel.

"GRACE's success demonstrates Poland's technical excellence in the area of rocket propulsion, part of a larger ESA effort to put the space industry onto a more sustainable footing, finding non-toxic alternatives to legacy chemicals and materials."


Related Links
Poland's Institute of Aviation
Rocket Science News at Space-Travel.Com

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Benchmark Space Systems and Orbit Fab Breaking Ground on Mobile Refueling Stations in Space
San Francisco CA (SPX) Feb 24, 2021
Orbit Fab, the Gas Stations in Space company, and Benchmark Space Systems (BSS), a leading provider of in-space mobility solutions, has announced a green, hydrogen-peroxide based refueling and servicing infrastructure partnership to extend satellite missions and provide the essential fuel for the evolving ecosystem in space. As part of the teaming, Orbit Fab will bundle its RAFTI fluid transfer interface with Benchmark's Halcyon thruster system to offer an integrated refillable, non-toxic propulsi ... read more

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