Brisbane start-up company Valiant Space is sending locally-made components into orbit, onboard SpaceX, from the Kennedy Space Center at Cape Canaveral.
The company has been supported by the Advanced Robotics for Manufacturing (ARM) Hub, which is funded by the Queensland Government, Queensland University of Technology (QUT), the Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation (CSIRO), Urban Arts Project and the Innovation Manufacturing Cooperative Research Centre (IMCRC).
Minister for regional development and manufacturing Glenn Butcher said the components going into space were a first for an Australian company.
“Our Government provides support in many ways and in this instance, the Queensland Government-funded ARM Hub, at Northgate, helped these young entrepreneurs out by providing a workspace to start this fantastic business, as well as assistance in applying for the critical grants that have made this SpaceX opportunity a reality,” Butcher said.
Valiant Space co-founder and CEO Andrew Uscinski said one of the challenges for new businesses in the space industry was the need to validate their products by successfully launching it into space.
“We’ve developed Australia’s first in-space chemical thruster for satellites made with non-toxic propellants, and right now our focus is proving it can withstand orbit,” Uscinski said.
The first step in this validation process will occur on a valve that is an integral part of Valiant’s 3D-printed thruster, which will be sent into orbit with SpaceX on board Australian space services company Skykraft’s rideshare service.
Once the valve demonstrates it can survive a violent launch, 6-G gravitational force, extreme vibrations, and a wide range of temperatures on its journey into space, Valiant Space’s full thruster will be launched on a subsequent orbital mission in mid-2023.
Valiant’s team of three – Uscinski, fellow co-founder and chief technical officer, Michael Douw, and lead engineer Benjamin Dodd – are mechanical and aerospace engineers who met at the University of Queensland and started their company while they were students.
The Valiant team identified a gap in the market for space propulsion options that used non-toxic propellants.
“Existing options are made from very carcinogenic and difficult-to-handle chemicals which makes them very expensive because of all the development costs,” Uscinski explained..
“Our thruster runs on nitrous oxide and propane – like what you would use in a barbecue, but slightly more pure – which gives a comparable performance to the toxic options, but without the need for high-cost handling infrastructure.
“Our solutions will save money at every step of the mission lifecycle, by leveraging a simplified design, rapid manufacturing methods and low-cost propellants.”
The thruster is mounted on the spacecraft to provide the main propulsion system for the satellite and enables companies to perform fast-acting orbit raising and collision avoidance manoeuvres.
“It means satellites can come online quickly, and they stay in their optimal orbit and last longer in space,” Uscinski added.
The Valiant Space team started their operation at the ARM Hub workshop in Northgate, Brisbane. They recently secured $750,000 funding from the Australian Government’s Moon to Mars Initiative supply chain grant, administered by the Australian Space Agency.
The team previously won a Moon to Mars Initiative demonstrator feasibility grant in 2021, to mature their non-toxic thruster technology.
“The first grant helped us to prototype and test our product, which has been instrumental in gaining market traction and momentum,” Mr Uscinski said.
“With this second grant, we will be getting flight validation on our product, build the supply chain, and upscale our propulsion technologies to domestic and international customers.”