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Can China’s ‘CO2 rocket’ launch cold on the same gas that carbonates Coca-Cola?

Novel approach would ‘fundamentally change’ model for small liquid-fuel launch vehicles, including ending reliance on fixed launch pads

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A Chinese aerospace start-up plans to launch a rocket using carbon dioxide, the same compound that gives Coca-Cola its fizz and bite. Photo: Shutterstock
Dannie Pengin Beijing

A Chinese aerospace start-up plans to launch a rocket using carbon dioxide, the same compound that gives Coca-Cola its fizz and bite.

Hunan-based commercial space firm Zhiyu Aerospace Technology announced on Monday that it was collaborating with another local tech company to apply “supercritical carbon dioxide cold-launch” technology to small launch vehicle systems.

Z-Trak Space, as the company is also known, said the cutting-edge method could “truly achieve low-cost, high-frequency, fast-response commercial launches”.

The new technology uses supercritical carbon dioxide – a fluid state of the gas held at or above its critical temperature and pressure – to generate high-pressure gas that expands instantaneously, effectively ejecting the rocket into the air.

Once the rocket reaches a designated altitude, its engines ignite in mid-air to begin normal flight, ensuring that scorching exhaust fumes never come into contact with the ground platform.

Currently, most commercial rockets around the world employ “hot” launches in which the rocket ignites directly on the pad to take off. Photo: Xinhua
Currently, most commercial rockets around the world employ “hot” launches in which the rocket ignites directly on the pad to take off. Photo: Xinhua

The partnership brings together Z-Trak Space – founded last year in the prefecture-level city Zhuzhou in China’s central Hunan province – and Chiyang Space Power Technology Company, according to a statement by Z-Trak on Tuesday.

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