How Pangea Aerospace is reshaping rocket propulsion by reigniting the  aerospike design
Date:
Tue, 29 Jul 2025 15:35:46 +0000
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The Spanish and French company Pangea Aerospace is positioning itself as a  go-to propulsion company The post How Pangea Aerospace is reshaping rocket  propulsion by reigniting the aerospike design appeared first on  NASASpaceFlight.com .
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The Spanish and French company Pangea Aerospace is positioning itself as a  go-to propulsion company within the aerospace industry. It first drew  attention in 2021 with a successful demonstration of an aerospike engine in  Germany. Four years on, testing is already underway for its larger, reusable  Arcos engine, which is on course to become the first flight-ready aerospike  engine in the world. 
NSF spoke with Pangeas founder and CEO, Adri Argem, to learn more about the  technical journey and how the company is overcoming many historic hurdles to  turn this long theorized engine concept into reality. 
 
Aerospikes are considered by many to be the holy grail of propulsion. While  the aerospike concept promises to deliver greater performance than  conventional bell nozzles, designing one is not without its challenges, from  cooling the engine to reducing the cost of manufacturing to make it viable.  Whereas conventional engine nozzles are optimized for either sea-level or  vacuum, aerospikes adapt naturally to changing atmospheric pressure and  maintain efficiency at all altitudes. 
 
Theoretically offering efficiency benefits of up to 15% over traditional  rocket engines, aerospikes have been studied since the mid-20th century, when  they were seen as the future of highly efficient propulsion. Early designs,  however, were complex, costly, and didnt integrate well with the cylindrical  shape of most rockets. 
Lockheed Martins VentureStar program and X-33 prototype made notable progress  in the 1990s using a linear aerospike, but were cancelled amidst technical  issues and escalating costs. The wedge shape of the X-33s XRS-2200 engine is  an example of how aerospike designs dont all follow the classic toroidal  design with a central spike. More recent advances in materials, additive  manufacturing, and a growing demand for reusable, high-performance engines  have since revived interest and look set to give aerospikes a second wind. 
Reusability is key to the design of Pangeas flagship Arcos aerospike engine.  Its even reflected in the company logo, which uses the stylised A from the  Pangea name to suggest both an aerospike and the path to orbit and back.  Formed in 2018, the company takes its name from the ancient Greek word for 
the single landmass supercontinent of the late Paleozoic Era and roughly  translates to all lands. This interpretation also acknowledges the fact that  the six co-founders hail from different countries, and reflects the  multi-cultural nature of the company. Within its team of 70 people and  counting, Pangea currently employs talent from around 16 countries. Pangeas  Demonstrator Propulsion 1 aerospike engine, known as Demo P1. (Credit: Pangea  Aerospace) 
Argem draws his expertise from a wealth of experience, working previously at  Airbus and then Avio  the makers of the Vega rocket family. It was there that  he met some of Pangeas other co-founders, and a plan was forged to build a  reusable micro-launcher with a better propulsion system. Over time, the plan  was refined to specialise as a propulsion company, making highly efficient  products which could then be supplied to rocket manufacturers. 
Arcos will be the companys first commercial product and is designed for  upper-stage applications. It is significantly larger and more powerful than  the companys first Demonstrator Propulsion 1 engine  more commonly referred 
to as Demo P1. 
Many lessons were learnt with this first aerospike demonstrator, and, with no  playbook to refer to, new tools, software, and models had to be created. With  a toroidal design, the Demo P1 was the worlds first aerospike engine to use  liquid methane and liquid oxygen as propellants. 
We do believe its the propellant of the future, Argem notes, and were seeing 
a lot of companies now switching to it. For us, it was a no-brainer. Pangea  test fires the worlds first methalox aerospike engine, the Demo P1, in  November 2021. (Credit: Pangea Aerospace) 
The Demo P1 engine is capable of generating 20 kilonewtons of thrust and  successfully ignited on its first attempt in November 2021 at the German 
Space Agencys (DLR) Lampoldshausen test facility. The engine measured less  than 25 cm in diameter, or roughly the size of an outstretched hand. By  contrast, Arcos represents a massive scale-up from the Demo P1. Measuring  around 3.5 m in diameter  a little under the diameter of a Falcon 9  it is a  750 kilonewton engine with a mass of 75 tonnes 
Pangea has built reusability into the design of the Arcos from day one. Being  reusable is hard, Argem notes, there are so many things that you have to take  into account. In our case, we already introduced some variables to make sure,  for example, that the chambers could withstand several cycles, as the Merlin  on Falcon 9 is doing. Theres a lot of innovation in these engines. There were  a lot of challenges and a lot of firsts. 
Initially, Pangea will target 10 missions for its reusable Arcos engine, 
which will introduce a number of challenges. You have to do a lot of material  characterization, a lot of analysis on low-cycle fatigue and how it would  behave, Argem says. 
Demo P1 has a single-chamber design, whereas Arcos has multiple chambers  around its perimeter. The current design layout has 20 thrusters in a circle,  which compromises a little efficiency but delivers a performance thats close  to the ideal aerospike concept. Of course, you want to augment the number of  chambers you have, Argem points out. The more uniform the flow would be, the  more like the theoretical perfect one [chamber design] you would actually get  to. Render of the Arcos engine design (Credit: Pangea Aerospace) 
The Arcos engine uses differential throttling across the ring for thrust  vectoring, which could allow the engine to throttle down to around 50%.  Differential throttling also avoids heavy gimballing hardware or moving parts  in the design. Its directly attached to the second stage, Argem points out,  adding that the thrust loads go directly to the stage, rather than through 
the gimbal and thrust mount first. This interface ring could be more or less  adaptable to be as plug and play as possible because not every rocket has the  same diameter, he adds. 
Stoke Space similarly arrived at an aerospike-like design for its Nova upper  stage, which powered the first hop of the companys Hopper 2 in September 
2023. The design doesnt adopt a continuous plug or toroidal shape, using a  ring of around 30 thrust chambers around the perimeter of the full-size  design. On Stokes design, exhaust from these chambers expands inward and  downward along the actively cooled heat shield base, producing an  altitude-compensating effect similar to an aerospike, without the need for 
the full plug. 
While Pangeas initial focus is on successfully sending the engines to orbit  and validating their performance, the company is already testing the engines  ability to also act as a heat shield for re-entry. From the outset, the 
design has accounted for many re-entry loads using computational fluid  dynamics (CFD), simulations, and, more recently, tests in a supersonic wind  tunnel. Testing the 3D-printed combustion chamber and injection heads for the  Arcos engine components in Germany in 2023. (Credit: Pangea Aerospace) 
Because aerospikes adapt to ambient pressure, they are efficient at a wide  range of altitudes. Argem points out that the Arcos aerospike nozzle has a  high expansion ratio of around 180:1. This would give very high performance 
in a vacuum, even more so than the Merlin vacuum engine, which has an  expansion ratio of around 165:1. For comparison, a sea-level Merlin 1D would  perform at around 16:1. 
 
Pangea is targeting 360 seconds of specific impulse in vacuum  a standard  measure of engine efficiency also known as ISP. This would compare favorably  against the Falcon 9s Merlin Vacuum engines, which are understood to have an  ISP of 348. Compared to the classical two-stage to orbit design, the more  vacuum-optimized you want to be, the longer your vacuum nozzle. With our  engines, you could get very compact and still retain all the performance.  Argem adds. 
He describes the aerospike as a performance generator rather than a thrust  generator, emphasizing that on conventional two-stage orbital vehicles, the  focus on the first stage is thrust. You just want to cluster bell engines, 
and its way better because the thrust density  the amount of kilonewtons per  square meter  is larger, he explained. 
The aerospike, by comparison, places thrust generation only around the 
engines perimeter, thus making a lower thrust density. This makes the engine  more appropriate for a micro-launchers first stage but less so for larger  vehicles, where Argem notes it would be better to cluster more traditional  bell engines and let the aerospike shine on the upper stage. You could 
cluster aerospikes, he adds, but then the diameter of the full rocket would  become gargantuous! Side view of Pangeas October 2023 tests of the 
bi-material combustion chamber at DLR Lampoldshausen. (Credit: Pangea  Aerospace) 
A key design challenge with aerospikes is cooling them down. The throat of an  aerospike is the large circumference, whereas on a traditional bell shape, 
its a far smaller circle, Argem explained. The throat is where you have the  largest heat flux, and combining this with a large diameter means that a high  mass flow rate will be needed to actively cool the central plug. 
Pangeas solution to this thermal management is to implement a dual  regenerative cooling system. Were using both propellants to cool it down  because, historically, rocket engines are just cooled with fuel, Argem said.  Normally, you have way more oxidizer  which is not the best coolant in the  world  but you have a lot, so lets use it. The Arcos inherited this learning  from the P1 and cools several parts of the engine using both propellants. 
Thermal management aside, another key challenge is to reduce the 
manufacturing cost of an aerospike engine to make it commercially attractive.  Using 3D printing, the Demo P1 was constructed using just two parts. Scaling  up to a commercial engine with several tonnes of thrust added manufacturing  complications, however. Despite this, 60% to 70% of the Arcos engine still  benefits from combining certain parts into single units. Demo P1 engine 
during its testing campaign. (Credit: Pangea Aerospace) 
One of the advantages of the aerospike is [that] its so big but its hollow  inside, so you have a lot of space where you put stuff, Argem explains. In 
our case, all the engine control unit (ECU), the valves, and, of course, the  power pack. Its a conventional gas-generator cycle to start with. We have  plans to close the cycle later on Arcos, but  one thing at a time  we already  have several products ongoing in parallel! See Also Commercial spaceflight  section European spaceflight articles NSF Shop Click here to join L2 
For now, there are no plans to explore a different propellant mix, such as  hydrogen and oxygen, which offers even greater performance, but also presents  challenges. 
One distinct advantage of aerospikes is that ground testing can serve as a  good indicator of later performance in a vacuum, thereby saving the effort of  shipping and testing it in a more expensive vacuum test facility. The real  test, of course, will be onboard an upper stage while in flight. 
Were targeting our first flight before the end of this decade, Argem 
announced as Pangeas more conservative goal. He emphasized that the company  hopes to move to an integrated test with an undisclosed client by the end of  next year, with a first flight sometime after that on the roadmap. 
The company continues to test the Arcos engine at the Lampoldshausen facility  in Germany. Early testing in October 2023 verified the regeneratively cooled  combustion chambers that were constructed using additive manufacturing to 
bond two different materials together  the first demonstration of its kind in  Europe. It also tested two different 3D-printed single-piece injector heads  designed for rapid reusability, easy inspection, and minimal refurbishment.  Pangea logo on the casing of the Demo P1 aerospike engine. (Credit: Pangea  Aerospace) 
We do not currently have our own cryogenic test facilities, Argem explains.  Pangea has its own infrastructure for other aspects of testing, and while 
such facilities can be expensive to build, it considers it a no-brainer for a  propulsion company to eventually develop its own. Using the German DLR site  enabled the company to more quickly conduct the month-long test campaign for  its Demo P1 in the early days of development. The final test was intended to  push the engine to destruction in order to discover its limits, but in a  testament to its robust design, the engine outlasted the remaining propellant  supply and survived. 
Pangea is set on becoming the go-to company for a range of propulsion  solutions, offering rocket and spacecraft developers an alternative to the  cost and time required to design and build their own engines. The product  range also covers in-space propulsion, with additional products suitable for  cubesats, orbital transfer vehicles, or even landers. U-Nyx will provide  in-space mobility and began as a tiny thumb-sized one-newton engine for  cubesats. This uses a more conventional bell nozzle, as there would not be  enough mass flow rate to cool down an aerospike design, Argem notes. 
The U in the name alludes to the cubesat standards of 1U and so on, while the  Nyx part, like other Pangea product lines, draws inspiration from the names 
of creatures from that supercontinental era. U-Nyx bipropellant cubesat  thruster during testing, April 2023. (Credit: Pangea Aerospace) 
The engine burns High-Test Peroxide (HTP), a concentrated form of hydrogen  peroxide, and Jet 1A, a grade of aviation kerosene. Whereas other companies  might use the more traditional hydrazine or even hall-effect thrusters, 
Pangea decided to capitalise on its expertise in liquid propellants. HTP has 
a very good performance and is scalable, Argem notes, adding that the main  desire was to remove the toxicity of hydrazine and align with the European  Space Agencys (ESA) desire to move its ecosystem away from it. While 
hydrazine is proven and well-known, teams are required to suit up to handle  it, such as loading it into satellites, whereas using HTP will simplify 
ground operations and therefore reduce costs. 
Just over a year ago, Pangea was awarded several contracts to work with ESA  and the French space agency, CNES, to begin the process of developing Europes  first full-flow stage combustion engine. Kronos, as the project is nicknamed,  will be similar to SpaceXs Raptor engine when the project is finally 
realized. 
Until then, Arcos continues its journey to disrupt our assumptions about  reusable propulsion, combining high efficiency, reusability, and  sustainability in one product. For its customers, this could mean ultimately  more payload into orbit, with a simpler and less costly route to market. 
 (Lead image: Successful test of a bi-material combustion chamber with  bio-methane and oxygen in Lampoldshausen, October 2023. Credit: Pangea  Aerospace) 
 
The post How Pangea Aerospace is reshaping rocket propulsion by reigniting 
the aerospike design appeared first on NASASpaceFlight.com .
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Link to news story: 
https://www.nasaspaceflight.com/2025/07/pangea-aerospace-efis/
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