Prometheus development
accelerates with new contract from ESA
The European Space Agency
(ESA) has awarded ArianeGroup a new 135 million
euro contract to continue the development of a
set of reusable, very low cost Prometheus engine
demonstrators.
Building on the results
already achieved, the purpose of this new
contract is to finalize the demonstration phase
with hot-fire tests of the first two prototypes
on the DLR site in Lampoldshausen, Germany, and
to design an improved version of the engine,
capable of delivering a thrust of 120 metric
tons, compared with the current 100 tons, as
well as a liquid hydrogen version. Initially
designed to run on a mixture of methane and
liquid oxygen, the liquid hydrogen-oxygen
version of Prometheus could be used as early as
2025 on an Ariane 6 upgrade. The contract also
calls for the production of a pre-series of
engines to begin the pre-industrialization
phase, while continuing to test new series
production processes. This will enable
Prometheus to meet the needs of all applications
and all missions.
“This new contract
validates the quality of the work already done
by our Franco-German teams in developing a new
family of very low cost engines in a totally
innovative way. The thrust control feature of
these engines paves the way for reusable
launchers,” said André-Hubert Roussel, CEO of
ArianeGroup. “With the first Prometheus
prototype now being assembled at our Vernon
site, the knowledge we have acquired will enable
us to develop lighter, much less expensive
engines, making European launchers ever more
competitive and environmentally friendly.”
These will be the first
European engines with controlled combustion,
enabling them to adapt to launcher flight
conditions during the various phases of the
mission. A digital system will provide control
over a range from 30 to 100% maximum thrust.
Prometheus will also be equipped with Artificial
Intelligence and a Health Monitoring system that
will enable a diagnostic of the engine’s
operation at any time.
The Prometheus
demonstrators will benefit from the latest
additive manufacturing technologies, with the
parts produced in this way accounting for 70% of
the total mass of the engine, including the
combustion chamber, which is entirely built
using 3D printing at the ArianeGroup site in
Ottobrunn, Germany.
Prometheus was initiated in
2015 with the French space agency CNES and
covered by an ESA contract since 2017. Its
production costs in the 100-ton thrust class
will be 10 times lower than that of the current
Vulcain 2 engine for Ariane 5.