Skip to main content

Scientists discover method for making rocket fuel on Mars

This concept depicts astronauts and human habitats on Mars.
This concept depicts astronauts and human habitats on Mars. NASA’s Mars 2020 rover will carry a number of technologies that could make Mars safer and easier to explore for humans. NASA

One of the biggest limitations to space missions is weight. The more mass that is added to a rocket, the harder it is to get that payload to where it needs to go. So future crewed missions to Mars have a challenge in terms of how to transport essential but heavy resources like the fuel needed for the return journey to Earth. One approach to this problem is to say we shouldn’t carry fuel to Mars — instead, we should produce fuel from the resources that are available there.

Now, scientists at the University of California, Irvine have come up with a way to make methane-based rocket fuel from resources available on the Martian surface.

The method revolves around the use of a zinc catalyst used in a reaction called the Sabatier process. The zinc acts as a catalyst for carbon dioxide, which reacts with hydrogen to produce methane and water. While this process is well known and is used in current space missions like the life support system on the International Space Station, it has previously required large facilities to operate. The breakthrough use of the catalyst allows the process to be performed on a much smaller scale.

“The process we developed bypasses the water-to-hydrogen process, and instead efficiently converts CO2 [carbon dioxide] into methane with high selectivity,” lead author Houlin Xin, an assistant professor in physics & astronomy, said in a statement.

Carbon dioxide is plentifully available on Mars, as it makes up the majority of the martian atmosphere. And while this method would require astronauts to bring some of the catalyst with them, it would be a much smaller amount than the fuel it can make. It is also easy to transport: “The zinc is fundamentally a great catalyst,” Xin said. “It has time, selectivity, and portability — a big plus for space travel.”

Most rockets currently use hydrogen-based fuel, but there is research being performed into using methane-based fuel in the future. The SpaceX Raptor engine, which will be used in the company’s upcoming heavy launch vehicle Starship, uses methane-based fuel.

But there is still much research to be done into the creation and use of methane fuel before this technique can be used on Mars. “Lots of engineering and research is needed before this can be fully implemented,” Xin said. “But the results are very promising.”

Editors' Recommendations

Georgina Torbet
Georgina is the Digital Trends space writer, covering human space exploration, planetary science, and cosmology. She…
NASA has lost communication with the Ingenuity Mars helicopter
NASA’s Ingenuity Mars helicopter is seen here in a close-up taken by Mastcam-Z, a pair of zoomable cameras aboard the Perseverance rover. This image was taken on April 5, the 45th Martian day, or sol, of the mission.

The Mars helicopter Ingenuity has had a remarkable lifespan and has proven to be a greater success than anyone imagined. Originally designed to perform just five flights over the surface of Mars, the helicopter has now performed more than 70. However, NASA has now announced that it has lost contact with the helicopter, though it's unclear how serious this problem is.

The helicopter was performing its 72nd flight, which was an adjustment and correction to a previous flight that was cut short. Flight 71 was intended to be a journey of 1,175 feet (358 meters), but when the helicopter made this flight earlier in the month, it traveled just a third of that. The problem was related to its downward-facing camera, which uses surface indications for autonomous navigation. The helicopter was traveling over a particularly featureless expanse of the surface, and the lack of landmarks appeared to cause a problem with its navigation, forcing the flight to end early.

Read more
See the passing of a day on Mars with the Curiosity rover
Curiosity rover

While many of us are on vacation this week between Christmas and New Year, the Curiosity rover on Mars is getting back to work after taking time off last month. In November, NASA's Mars missions paused for two weeks during an event called the Mars solar conjunction, when the sun is directly between Earth and Mars.

That means that any communications signals passing between the two planets would have to pass close to the harsh solar environment, where they would likely be degraded. To avoid any risk of garbled communications sending dangerous signals to the rovers, NASA stopped sending commands to both its Curiosity and Perseverance rovers until the solar conjunction passed.

Read more
Jeff Bezos’ Blue Origin to make first rocket flight since 2022 explosion
New Shepard lifts off from Launch Site One in West Texas for the NS-16 mission on July 20, 2021.

New Shepard launches the first crew, including Blue Origin founder Jeff Bezos, in a flight to the edge of space in July 2021. Blue Origin / Blue Origin

Blue Origin is aiming to launch its New Shepard rocket as early as next week in what will be its first flight since September 2022, when the vehicle exploded in midair shortly after lift-off.

Read more