Cryogenic Propulsion with Hydrogen-Cooled Heat Shield
A unified architecture where the same fuel cools the nozzle, shields the vehicle, and drives the future of reusable access to orbit.
Rendering: Hydrogen-cooled orbital stage reentering with regeneratively cooled heat shield
Unified Propulsion + Protection System
Gatkulβs cryogenic propulsion system leverages liquid hydrogen not only as a high-efficiency fuel but also as a working fluid for regenerative cooling during reentry.
This architecture enables ultra-lightweight stages, rapid reuse, and eliminates traditional ablative thermal protection systems. Hydrogen absorbs heat at the nozzle throat,
cooling the engines and shield structure before being expelled as part of the thrust stream.
π¨ Vapor Layer Creation: Hydrogen boil-off forms a plasma-suppressing gas film along the shield surface
π‘ Smart Flow Control: Onboard logic adjusts cooling flow dynamically based on reentry conditions
Why Hydrogen-Cooled Cryoprop?
β Eliminates Tiles: No fragile ablative or ceramic shields to inspect or replace
β One Fuel, Multiple Roles: Propulsion, cooling, and plasma flow control in one integrated system
β Rapid Reuse: Designed for daily or weekly reuse with minimal pad-side servicing
β Deep-Space Capable: Supports reentry from orbital velocity and lunar return with proper insulation
System Deployments
π°οΈ PADMA Upper Stage: Hydrogen-cooled shield integrated into crew-rated orbital return stage
π§βπ LEO Shuttle Variants: Cryo-cooled heat shield tested in Trishul-class upper stages
π Depot Return Systems: Cryo stages that can reenter, refuel, and redeploy
Technical Snapshot (Public)
Parameter
Value
Propellants
LOX / LHβ
Engine Cycle
Expander + Pump Fed (Vacuum Optimized)
Nozzle Cooling
Regenerative LHβ (throat to skirt)
Shield Cooling
LHβ through carbon-carbon microchannels
TPS Reusability
10+ reentries (target)
Vehicle Integration
Trishul, PADMA, LEO Shuttle
Development Timeline
2024: Engine test stand trials with regenerative heat rejection
2025: First flight demo using dual-use hydrogen circuit on subscale reentry shell
2026: Orbital stage integrated with Hβ-cooled TPS on PADMA mission
Fueling the Future β Inside and Out
By merging propulsion and protection into a single system, Gatkul's cryogenic hydrogen architecture
reduces mass, increases stage life, and simplifies reentry operations. It is a cornerstone
in our journey toward aircraft-like spaceflight β clean, fast, and frequent.