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Propellant

A propellant (or propellent) is a mass that is expelled or expanded in such a way as to create a thrust or another motive force in accordance with Newton's third law of motion, and "propel" a vehicle, projectile, or fluid payload. In vehicles, the engine that expels the propellant is called a reaction engine. Although technically a propellant is the reaction mass used to create thrust, the term "propellant" is often used to describe a substance which contains both the reaction mass and the fuel that holds the energy used to accelerate the reaction mass. For example, the term "propellant" is often used in chemical rocket design to describe a combined fuel/propellant, although the propellants should not be confused with the fuel that is used by an engine to produce the energy that expels the propellant. Even though the byproducts of substances used as fuel are also often used as a reaction mass to create the thrust, such as with a chemical rocket engine, propellant and fuel are two distinct concepts.

Vehicles can use propellants to move by ejecting a propellant backwards which creates an opposite force that moves the vehicle forward. Projectiles can use propellants that are expanding gases which provide the motive force to set the projectile in motion. Aerosol cans use propellants which are fluids that are compressed so that when the propellant is allowed to escape by releasing a valve, the energy stored by the compression moves the propellant out of the can and that propellant forces the aerosol payload out along with the propellant. Compressed fluid may also be used as a simple vehicle propellant, with the potential energy that is stored in the compressed fluid used to expel the fluid as the propellant. The energy stored in the fluid was added to the system when the fluid was compressed, such as compressed air. The energy applied to the pump or thermal system that is used to compress the air is stored until it is released by allowing the propellant to escape. Compressed fluid may also be used only as energy storage along with some other substance as the propellant, such as with a water rocket, where the energy stored in the compressed air is the fuel and the water is the propellant.

In electrically powered spacecraft, electricity is used to accelerate the propellant. An electrostatic force may be used to expel positive ions, or the Lorentz force may be used to expel negative ions and electrons as the propellant. Electothermal engines use the electromagnetic force to heat low molecular weight gases (e.g. hydrogen, helium, ammonia) into a plasma and expel the plasma as propellant. In the case of a resistojet rocket engine, the compressed propellant is simply heated using resistive heating as it is expelled to create more thrust.

In chemical rockets and aircraft, fuels are used to produce an energetic gas that can be directed through a nozzle, thereby producing thrust. In rockets, the burning of rocket fuel produces an exhaust, and the exhausted material is usually expelled as a propellant under pressure through a nozzle. The exhaust material may be a gas, liquid, plasma, or a solid. In powered aircraft without propellers such as jets, the propellant is usually the product of the burning of fuel with atmospheric oxygen so that the resulting propellant product has more mass than the fuel carried on the vehicle.

Proposed photon rockets would use the relativistic momentum of photons to create thrust. Even though photons do not have mass, they can still act as a propellant because they move at relativistic speed, i.e., the speed of light. In this case Newton's third Law of Motion is inadequate to model the physics involved and relativistic physics must be used.

In chemical rockets, chemical reactions are used to produce energy which creates movement of a fluid which is used to expel the products of that chemical reaction (and sometimes other substances) as propellants. For example, in a simple hydrogen/oxygen engine, hydrogen is burned (oxidized) to create H2O and the energy from the chemical reaction is used to expel the water (steam) to provide thrust. Often in chemical rocket engines, a higher molecular mass substance is included in the fuel to provide more reaction mass.

Rocket propellant may be expelled through an expansion nozzle as a cold gas, that is, without energetic mixing and combustion, to provide small changes in velocity to spacecraft by the use of cold gas thrusters, usually as maneuvering thrusters.

To attain a useful density for storage, most propellants are stored as either a solid or a liquid.

Vehicle propellants edit

A rocket propellant is a mass that is expelled from a vehicle, such as a rocket, in such a way as to create a thrust in accordance with Newton's third law of motion, and "propel" the vehicle forward. The engine that expels the propellant is called a reaction engine. Although the term "propellant" is often used in chemical rocket design to describe a combined fuel/propellant, propellants should not be confused with the fuel that is used by an engine to produce the energy that expels the propellant. Even though the byproducts of substances used as fuel are also often used as a reaction mass to create the thrust, such as with a chemical rocket engine, propellant and fuel are two distinct concepts.

In electrically powered spacecraft, electricity is used to accelerate the propellant. An electrostatic force may be used to expel positive ions, or the Lorentz force may be used to expel negative ions and electrons as the propellant. Electothermal engines use the electromagnetic force to heat low molecular weight gases (e.g. hydrogen, helium, ammonia) into a plasma and expel the plasma as propellant. In the case of a resistojet rocket engine, the compressed propellant is simply heated using resistive heating as it is expelled to create more thrust.

In chemical rockets and aircraft, fuels are used to produce an energetic gas that can be directed through a nozzle, thereby producing thrust. In rockets, the burning of rocket fuel produces an exhaust, and the exhausted material is usually expelled as a propellant under pressure through a nozzle. The exhaust material may be a gas, liquid, plasma, or a solid. In powered aircraft without propellers such as jets, the propellant is usually the product of the burning of fuel with atmospheric oxygen so that the resulting propellant product has more mass than the fuel carried on the vehicle.

The propellant or fuel may also simply be a compressed fluid, with the potential energy that is stored in the compressed fluid used to expel the fluid as the propellant. The energy stored in the fluid was added to the system when the fluid was compressed, such as compressed air. The energy applied to the pump or thermal system that is used to compress the air is stored until it is released by allowing the propellant to escape. Compressed fluid may also be used only as energy storage along with some other substance as the propellant, such as with a water rocket, where the energy stored in the compressed air is the fuel and the water is the propellant.

Proposed photon rockets would use the relativistic momentum of photons to create thrust. Even though photons do not have mass, they can still act as a propellant because they move at relativistic speed, i.e., the speed of light. In this case Newton's third Law of Motion is inadequate to model the physics involved and relativistic physics must be used.

In chemical rockets, chemical reactions are used to produce energy which creates movement of a fluid which is used to expel the products of that chemical reaction (and sometimes other substances) as propellants. For example, in a simple hydrogen/oxygen engine, hydrogen is burned (oxidized) to create H2O and the energy from the chemical reaction is used to expel the water (steam) to provide thrust. Often in chemical rocket engines, a higher molecular mass substance is included in the fuel to provide more reaction mass.

Rocket propellant may be expelled through an expansion nozzle as a cold gas, that is, without energetic mixing and combustion, to provide small changes in velocity to spacecraft by the use of cold gas thrusters, usually as maneuvering thrusters.

To attain a useful density for storage, most propellants are stored as either a solid or a liquid.

Propellants may be energized by chemical reactions to expel solid, liquid or gas. Electrical energy may be used to expel gases, plasmas, ions, solids or liquids. Photons may be used to provide thrust via relativistic momentum.

Chemically powered edit

Solid propellant edit

Propellants that explode in operation are of little practical use currently, although there have been experiments with Pulse Detonation Engines. Also the newly synthesized bishomocubane based compounds are under consideration in the research stage as both solid and liquid propellants of the future.[1][2]

Grain edit

Solid fuel/propellants are used in forms called grains. A grain is any individual particle of fuel/propellant regardless of the size or shape. The shape and size of a grain determines the burn time, amount of gas, and rate of produced energy from the burning of the fuel and, as a consequence, thrust vs time profile.

There are three types of burns that can be achieved with different grains.

Progressive burn
Usually a grain with multiple perforations or a star cut in the center providing a lot of surface area.
Degressive burn
Usually a solid grain in the shape of a cylinder or sphere.
Neutral burn
Usually a single perforation; as outside surface decreases the inside surface increases at the same rate.
Composition edit

There are four different types of solid fuel/propellant compositions:

Single-based fuel/propellant
A single based fuel/propellant has nitrocellulose as its chief explosives ingredient. Stabilizers and other additives are used to control the chemical stability and enhance its properties.
Double-based fuel/propellant
Double-based fuel/propellants consist of nitrocellulose with nitroglycerin or other liquid organic nitrate explosives added. Stabilizers and other additives are also used. Nitroglycerin reduces smoke and increases the energy output. Double-based fuel/propellants are used in small arms, cannons, mortars and rockets.
Triple-based fuel/propellant
Triple-based fuel/propellants consist of nitrocellulose, nitroguanidine, nitroglycerin or other liquid organic nitrate explosives. Triple-based fuel/propellants are used in cannons.
Composite
Composites do not utilize nitrocellulose, nitroglycerin, nitroguanidine or any other organic nitrate as the primary constituent. Composites usually consist of a fuel such as metallic aluminum, a combustible binder such as synthetic rubber or HTPB, and an oxidizer such as ammonium perchlorate. Composite fuel/propellants are used in large rocket motors. In some applications, such as the US SLBM Trident II missile, nitroglycerin is added to the aluminum and ammonium perchlorate composite as an energetic plasticizer.

Liquid propellant edit

In rockets, three main liquid bipropellant combinations are used: cryogenic oxygen and hydrogen, cryogenic oxygen and a hydrocarbon, and storable propellants.[3]

Cryogenic oxygen-hydrogen combination system
Used in upper stages and sometimes in booster stages of space launch systems. This is a nontoxic combination. This gives high specific impulse and is ideal for high-velocity missions
Cryogenic oxygen-hydrocarbon propellant system
Used for many booster stages of space launch vehicles as well as a smaller number of second stages. This combination of fuel/oxidizer has high density and hence allows for a more compact booster design.
Storable propellant combinations
Used in almost all bipropellant low-thrust, auxiliary or reaction control rocket engines, as well as in some in large rocket engines for first and second stages of ballistic missiles. They are instant-starting and suitable for long-term storage.

Propellant combinations used for liquid propellant rockets include:

Common monopropellant used for liquid rocket engines include:

  • Hydrogen peroxide
  • Hydrazine
  • Red fuming nitric acid (RFNA)

Electrically powered edit

Electrically powered reactive engines use a variety of usually ionized propellants, including atomic ions, plasma, electrons, or small droplets or solid particles as propellant.

Electrostatic edit

If the acceleration is caused mainly by the Coulomb force (i.e. application of a static electric field in the direction of the acceleration) the device is considered electrostatic. The types of electrostatic drives and their propellants:

Electrothermal edit

These are engines that use electromagnetic fields to generate a plasma which is used as the propellant. They use a nozzle to direct the energized propellant. The nozzle itself may be composed simply of a magnetic field. Low molecular weight gases (e.g. hydrogen, helium, ammonia) are preferred propellants for this kind of system.[6]

Electromagnetic edit

Electromagnetic thrusters use ions as the propellant, which are accelerated by the Lorentz force or by magnetic fields, either of which is generated by electricity:

Nuclear edit

Nuclear reactions may be used to produce the energy for the expulsion of the propellants. Many types of nuclear reactors have been used/proposed to produce electricity for electrical propulsion as outlined above. Nuclear pulse propulsion uses a series of nuclear explosions to create large amounts of energy to expel the products of the nuclear reaction as the propellant. Nuclear thermal rockets use the heat of a nuclear reaction to heat a propellant. Usually the propellant is hydrogen because the force is a function of the energy irrespective of the mass of the propellant, so the lightest propellant (hydrogen) produces the greatest specific impulse.

Photonic edit

A photonic reactive engine uses photons as the propellant and their discrete relativistic energy to produce thrust.

Projectile propellants edit

Compressed fluid propellants edit

Compressed fluid or compressed gas propellants are pressurized physically, by a compressor, rather than by a chemical reaction. The pressures and energy densities that can be achieved, while insufficient for high-performance rocketry and firearms, are adequate for most applications, in which case compressed fluids offer a simpler, safer, and more practical source of propellant pressure.

A compressed fluid propellant may simply be a pressurized gas, or a substance which is a gas at atmospheric pressure, but stored under pressure as a liquid.

Compressed gas propellants edit

In applications in which a large quantity of propellant is used, such as pressure washing and airbrushing, air may be pressurized by a compressor and used immediately. Additionally, a hand pump to compress air can be used for its simplicity in low-tech applications such as atomizers, plant misters and water rockets. The simplest examples of such a system are squeeze bottles for such liquids as ketchup and shampoo.

However, compressed gases are impractical as stored propellants if they do not liquify inside the storage container, because very high pressures are required in order to store any significant quantity of gas, and high-pressure gas cylinders and pressure regulators are expensive and heavy.

Liquified gas propellants edit

Principle edit

Liquified gas propellants are gases at atmospheric pressure, but become liquid at a modest pressure. This pressure is high enough to provide useful propulsion of the payload (e.g. aerosol paint, deodorant, lubricant), but is low enough to be stored in an inexpensive metal can, and to not pose a safety hazard in case the can is ruptured.

The mixture of liquid and gaseous propellant inside the can maintains a constant pressure, called the liquid's vapor pressure. As the payload is depleted, the propellant vaporizes to fill the internal volume of the can. Liquids are typically 500-1000x denser than their corresponding gases at atmospheric pressure; even at the higher pressure inside the can, only a small fraction of its volume needs to be propellant in order to eject the payload and replace it with vapor.

Vaporizing the liquid propellant to gas requires some energy, the enthalpy of vaporization, which cools the system. This is usually insignificant, although it can sometimes be an unwanted effect of heavy usage (as the system cools, the vapor pressure of the propellant drops). However, in the case of a freeze spray, this cooling contributes to the desired effect (although freeze sprays may also contain other components, such as chloroethane, with a lower vapor pressure but higher enthalpy of vaporization than the propellant).

Propellant compounds edit

Chlorofluorocarbons (CFCs) were once often used as propellants,[7] but since the Montreal Protocol came into force in 1989, they have been replaced in nearly every country due to the negative effects CFCs have on Earth's ozone layer. The most common replacements of CFCs are mixtures of volatile hydrocarbons, typically propane, n-butane and isobutane.[8] Dimethyl ether (DME) and methyl ethyl ether are also used. All these have the disadvantage of being flammable. Nitrous oxide and carbon dioxide are also used as propellants to deliver foodstuffs (for example, whipped cream and cooking spray). Medicinal aerosols such as asthma inhalers use hydrofluoroalkanes (HFA): either HFA 134a (1,1,1,2,-tetrafluoroethane) or HFA 227 (1,1,1,2,3,3,3-heptafluoropropane) or combinations of the two. More recently, liquid hydrofluoroolefin (HFO) propellants have become more widely adopted in aerosol systems due to their relatively low vapor pressure, low global warming potential (GWP), and nonflammability.[9]

Payloads edit

The practicality of liquified gas propellants allows for a broad variety of payloads. Aerosol sprays, in which a liquid is ejected as a spray, include paints, lubricants, degreasers, and protective coatings; deodorants and other personal care products; cooking oils. Some liquid payloads are not sprayed due to lower propellant pressure and/or viscous payload, as with whipped cream and shaving cream or shaving gel. Low-power guns, such as BB guns, paintball guns, and airsoft guns, have solid projectile payloads. Uniquely, in the case of a gas duster ("canned air"), the only payload is the velocity of the propellant vapor itself.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Lal, Sohan; Rajkumar, Sundaram; Tare, Amit; Reshmi, Sasidharakurup; Chowdhury, Arindrajit; Namboothiri, Irishi N. N. (December 2014). "Nitro-Substituted Bishomocubanes: Synthesis, Characterization, and Application as Energetic Materials". Chemistry: An Asian Journal. 9 (12): 3533–3541. doi:10.1002/asia.201402607. PMID 25314237.
  2. ^ Lal, Sohan; Mallick, Lovely; Rajkumar, Sundaram; Oommen, Oommen P.; Reshmi, Sasidharakurup; Kumbhakarna, Neeraj; Chowdhury, Arindrajit; Namboothiri, Irishi (2015). "Synthesis and energetic properties of high-nitrogen substituted bishomocubanes". J. Mater. Chem. A. 3 (44): 22118–22128. doi:10.1039/C5TA05380C.
  3. ^ Sutton, George; Biblarz, Oscar (2001). Rocket Propulsion Elements. Willey. ISBN 9781601190604. OCLC 75193234.
  4. ^ Hutchinson, Lee (2013-04-14). "New F-1B rocket engine upgrades Apollo-era design with 1.8 M lbs of thrust". ARS technica. Retrieved 2013-04-15. The most efficient fuel and oxidizer combination commonly used today for chemical liquid rockets is hydrogen (fuel) and oxygen (oxidizer)," continued Coates. The two elements are relatively simple and they burn easily when combined—and even better, the result of their reaction is simple water.
  5. ^ Hutchinson, Lee (2013-04-14). "New F-1B rocket engine upgrades Apollo-era design with 1.8 M lbs of thrust". ARS technica. p. 2. Retrieved 2013-04-15. Refined petroleum is not the most efficient thrust-producing fuel for rockets, but what it lacks in thrust production it makes up for in density. It takes less volume of RP-1 to impart the same thrust force on a vehicle, and less volume equates to reduced stage size. ... A smaller booster stage means much less aerodynamic drag as the vehicle lifts off from near sea-level and accelerates up through the more dense (thicker) part of the atmosphere near the earth. The result of a smaller booster stage is it allows a more efficient ascent through the thickest part of the atmosphere, which helps improve the net mass lifted to orbit.
  6. ^ (in Russian). Novosti Kosmonavtiki. 1999. Archived from the original on 6 June 2011.
  7. ^ "Fires Halted Quickly by "Lazy" Freon Gas". Popular Mechanics. Vol. 87. Hearst Magazines. April 1947. p. 115. Retrieved June 7, 2019. Freon chemical compounds in household refrigerators, air-cooling systems and as a DDT carrier in aerosol insect bombs have been found to be more effective in extinguishing fires than carbon dioxide.
  8. ^ Yeoman, Amber M.; Lewis, Alastair C. (2021-04-22). "Global emissions of VOCs from compressed aerosol products". Elementa: Science of the Anthropocene. 9 (1): 00177. doi:10.1525/elementa.2020.20.00177. ISSN 2325-1026.
  9. ^ "Solstice® Propellant Technical Bulletin" (PDF). Honeywell. 2017.

Bibliography edit

External links edit

  • Rocket propulsion elements, Sutton, George.P, Biblarz, Oscar 7th Ed
  • Understanding and Predicting Gun Barrel Erosion – Weapons Systems Division Defence Science and Technology Organisation by Ian A. Johnston 2013-07-10 at the Wayback Machine

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This article includes a list of general references but it lacks sufficient corresponding inline citations Please help to improve this article by introducing more precise citations May 2023 Learn how and when to remove this message A propellant or propellent is a mass that is expelled or expanded in such a way as to create a thrust or another motive force in accordance with Newton s third law of motion and propel a vehicle projectile or fluid payload In vehicles the engine that expels the propellant is called a reaction engine Although technically a propellant is the reaction mass used to create thrust the term propellant is often used to describe a substance which contains both the reaction mass and the fuel that holds the energy used to accelerate the reaction mass For example the term propellant is often used in chemical rocket design to describe a combined fuel propellant although the propellants should not be confused with the fuel that is used by an engine to produce the energy that expels the propellant Even though the byproducts of substances used as fuel are also often used as a reaction mass to create the thrust such as with a chemical rocket engine propellant and fuel are two distinct concepts Vehicles can use propellants to move by ejecting a propellant backwards which creates an opposite force that moves the vehicle forward Projectiles can use propellants that are expanding gases which provide the motive force to set the projectile in motion Aerosol cans use propellants which are fluids that are compressed so that when the propellant is allowed to escape by releasing a valve the energy stored by the compression moves the propellant out of the can and that propellant forces the aerosol payload out along with the propellant Compressed fluid may also be used as a simple vehicle propellant with the potential energy that is stored in the compressed fluid used to expel the fluid as the propellant The energy stored in the fluid was added to the system when the fluid was compressed such as compressed air The energy applied to the pump or thermal system that is used to compress the air is stored until it is released by allowing the propellant to escape Compressed fluid may also be used only as energy storage along with some other substance as the propellant such as with a water rocket where the energy stored in the compressed air is the fuel and the water is the propellant In electrically powered spacecraft electricity is used to accelerate the propellant An electrostatic force may be used to expel positive ions or the Lorentz force may be used to expel negative ions and electrons as the propellant Electothermal engines use the electromagnetic force to heat low molecular weight gases e g hydrogen helium ammonia into a plasma and expel the plasma as propellant In the case of a resistojet rocket engine the compressed propellant is simply heated using resistive heating as it is expelled to create more thrust In chemical rockets and aircraft fuels are used to produce an energetic gas that can be directed through a nozzle thereby producing thrust In rockets the burning of rocket fuel produces an exhaust and the exhausted material is usually expelled as a propellant under pressure through a nozzle The exhaust material may be a gas liquid plasma or a solid In powered aircraft without propellers such as jets the propellant is usually the product of the burning of fuel with atmospheric oxygen so that the resulting propellant product has more mass than the fuel carried on the vehicle Proposed photon rockets would use the relativistic momentum of photons to create thrust Even though photons do not have mass they can still act as a propellant because they move at relativistic speed i e the speed of light In this case Newton s third Law of Motion is inadequate to model the physics involved and relativistic physics must be used In chemical rockets chemical reactions are used to produce energy which creates movement of a fluid which is used to expel the products of that chemical reaction and sometimes other substances as propellants For example in a simple hydrogen oxygen engine hydrogen is burned oxidized to create H2O and the energy from the chemical reaction is used to expel the water steam to provide thrust Often in chemical rocket engines a higher molecular mass substance is included in the fuel to provide more reaction mass Rocket propellant may be expelled through an expansion nozzle as a cold gas that is without energetic mixing and combustion to provide small changes in velocity to spacecraft by the use of cold gas thrusters usually as maneuvering thrusters To attain a useful density for storage most propellants are stored as either a solid or a liquid Contents 1 Vehicle propellants 1 1 Chemically powered 1 1 1 Solid propellant 1 1 1 1 Grain 1 1 1 2 Composition 1 1 2 Liquid propellant 1 2 Electrically powered 1 2 1 Electrostatic 1 2 2 Electrothermal 1 2 3 Electromagnetic 1 3 Nuclear 1 4 Photonic 2 Projectile propellants 3 Compressed fluid propellants 3 1 Compressed gas propellants 3 2 Liquified gas propellants 3 2 1 Principle 3 2 2 Propellant compounds 3 2 3 Payloads 4 See also 5 References 6 Bibliography 7 External linksVehicle propellants editMain articles Rocket propellant and Jet propulsion A rocket propellant is a mass that is expelled from a vehicle such as a rocket in such a way as to create a thrust in accordance with Newton s third law of motion and propel the vehicle forward The engine that expels the propellant is called a reaction engine Although the term propellant is often used in chemical rocket design to describe a combined fuel propellant propellants should not be confused with the fuel that is used by an engine to produce the energy that expels the propellant Even though the byproducts of substances used as fuel are also often used as a reaction mass to create the thrust such as with a chemical rocket engine propellant and fuel are two distinct concepts In electrically powered spacecraft electricity is used to accelerate the propellant An electrostatic force may be used to expel positive ions or the Lorentz force may be used to expel negative ions and electrons as the propellant Electothermal engines use the electromagnetic force to heat low molecular weight gases e g hydrogen helium ammonia into a plasma and expel the plasma as propellant In the case of a resistojet rocket engine the compressed propellant is simply heated using resistive heating as it is expelled to create more thrust In chemical rockets and aircraft fuels are used to produce an energetic gas that can be directed through a nozzle thereby producing thrust In rockets the burning of rocket fuel produces an exhaust and the exhausted material is usually expelled as a propellant under pressure through a nozzle The exhaust material may be a gas liquid plasma or a solid In powered aircraft without propellers such as jets the propellant is usually the product of the burning of fuel with atmospheric oxygen so that the resulting propellant product has more mass than the fuel carried on the vehicle The propellant or fuel may also simply be a compressed fluid with the potential energy that is stored in the compressed fluid used to expel the fluid as the propellant The energy stored in the fluid was added to the system when the fluid was compressed such as compressed air The energy applied to the pump or thermal system that is used to compress the air is stored until it is released by allowing the propellant to escape Compressed fluid may also be used only as energy storage along with some other substance as the propellant such as with a water rocket where the energy stored in the compressed air is the fuel and the water is the propellant Proposed photon rockets would use the relativistic momentum of photons to create thrust Even though photons do not have mass they can still act as a propellant because they move at relativistic speed i e the speed of light In this case Newton s third Law of Motion is inadequate to model the physics involved and relativistic physics must be used In chemical rockets chemical reactions are used to produce energy which creates movement of a fluid which is used to expel the products of that chemical reaction and sometimes other substances as propellants For example in a simple hydrogen oxygen engine hydrogen is burned oxidized to create H2O and the energy from the chemical reaction is used to expel the water steam to provide thrust Often in chemical rocket engines a higher molecular mass substance is included in the fuel to provide more reaction mass Rocket propellant may be expelled through an expansion nozzle as a cold gas that is without energetic mixing and combustion to provide small changes in velocity to spacecraft by the use of cold gas thrusters usually as maneuvering thrusters To attain a useful density for storage most propellants are stored as either a solid or a liquid Propellants may be energized by chemical reactions to expel solid liquid or gas Electrical energy may be used to expel gases plasmas ions solids or liquids Photons may be used to provide thrust via relativistic momentum Chemically powered edit Solid propellant edit Further information Solid fuel and Solid fuel rocket Composite propellants made from a solid oxidizer such as ammonium perchlorate or ammonium nitrate a synthetic rubber such as HTPB PBAN or Polyurethane or energetic polymers such as polyglycidyl nitrate or polyvinyl nitrate for extra energy optional high explosive fuels again for extra energy such as RDX or nitroglycerin and usually a powdered metal fuel such as aluminum Some amateur propellants use potassium nitrate combined with sugar epoxy or other fuels and binder compounds Potassium perchlorate has been used as an oxidizer paired with asphalt epoxy and other binders Propellants that explode in operation are of little practical use currently although there have been experiments with Pulse Detonation Engines Also the newly synthesized bishomocubane based compounds are under consideration in the research stage as both solid and liquid propellants of the future 1 2 Grain edit Solid fuel propellants are used in forms called grains A grain is any individual particle of fuel propellant regardless of the size or shape The shape and size of a grain determines the burn time amount of gas and rate of produced energy from the burning of the fuel and as a consequence thrust vs time profile There are three types of burns that can be achieved with different grains Progressive burn Usually a grain with multiple perforations or a star cut in the center providing a lot of surface area Degressive burn Usually a solid grain in the shape of a cylinder or sphere Neutral burn Usually a single perforation as outside surface decreases the inside surface increases at the same rate Composition edit There are four different types of solid fuel propellant compositions Single based fuel propellant A single based fuel propellant has nitrocellulose as its chief explosives ingredient Stabilizers and other additives are used to control the chemical stability and enhance its properties Double based fuel propellant Double based fuel propellants consist of nitrocellulose with nitroglycerin or other liquid organic nitrate explosives added Stabilizers and other additives are also used Nitroglycerin reduces smoke and increases the energy output Double based fuel propellants are used in small arms cannons mortars and rockets Triple based fuel propellant Triple based fuel propellants consist of nitrocellulose nitroguanidine nitroglycerin or other liquid organic nitrate explosives Triple based fuel propellants are used in cannons Composite Composites do not utilize nitrocellulose nitroglycerin nitroguanidine or any other organic nitrate as the primary constituent Composites usually consist of a fuel such as metallic aluminum a combustible binder such as synthetic rubber or HTPB and an oxidizer such as ammonium perchlorate Composite fuel propellants are used in large rocket motors In some applications such as the US SLBM Trident II missile nitroglycerin is added to the aluminum and ammonium perchlorate composite as an energetic plasticizer Liquid propellant edit Further information liquid fuel and liquid propellant rocket In rockets three main liquid bipropellant combinations are used cryogenic oxygen and hydrogen cryogenic oxygen and a hydrocarbon and storable propellants 3 Cryogenic oxygen hydrogen combination system Used in upper stages and sometimes in booster stages of space launch systems This is a nontoxic combination This gives high specific impulse and is ideal for high velocity missions Cryogenic oxygen hydrocarbon propellant system Used for many booster stages of space launch vehicles as well as a smaller number of second stages This combination of fuel oxidizer has high density and hence allows for a more compact booster design Storable propellant combinations Used in almost all bipropellant low thrust auxiliary or reaction control rocket engines as well as in some in large rocket engines for first and second stages of ballistic missiles They are instant starting and suitable for long term storage Propellant combinations used for liquid propellant rockets include Liquid oxygen and liquid hydrogen 4 Liquid oxygen and kerosene or RP 1 5 Liquid oxygen and ethanol Liquid oxygen and methane Hydrogen peroxide and mentioned above alcohol or RP 1 Red fuming nitric acid RFNA and kerosene or RP 1 RFNA and Unsymmetrical dimethylhydrazine UDMH Dinitrogen tetroxide and UDMH MMH and or hydrazine Common monopropellant used for liquid rocket engines include Hydrogen peroxide Hydrazine Red fuming nitric acid RFNA Electrically powered edit Main article Electrically powered spacecraft propulsion Electrically powered reactive engines use a variety of usually ionized propellants including atomic ions plasma electrons or small droplets or solid particles as propellant Electrostatic edit Main article Ion thruster If the acceleration is caused mainly by the Coulomb force i e application of a static electric field in the direction of the acceleration the device is considered electrostatic The types of electrostatic drives and their propellants Gridded ion thruster using positive ions as the propellant accelerated by an electrically charged grid NASA Solar Technology Application Readiness NSTAR positive ions accelerated using high voltage electrodes HiPEP using positive ions as the propellant created using microwaves Radiofrequency ion thruster generalization of HiPEP Hall effect thruster including its subtypes Stationary Plasma Thruster SPT and Thruster with Anode Layer TAL use the Hall effect to orient electrons to create positive ions for propellant Colloid ion thruster electrostatic acceleration of droplets of liquid salt as the propellant Field emission electric propulsion using electrodes to accelerate ionized liquid metal as a propellant Nano particle field extraction thruster using charged cylindrical carbon nanotubes as propellant Electrothermal edit These are engines that use electromagnetic fields to generate a plasma which is used as the propellant They use a nozzle to direct the energized propellant The nozzle itself may be composed simply of a magnetic field Low molecular weight gases e g hydrogen helium ammonia are preferred propellants for this kind of system 6 Resistojet using a usually inert compressed propellant that is energized by simple resistive heating Arcjet uses usually hydrazine or ammonia as a propellant which is energized with an electrical arc Microwave a type of Radiofrequency ion thruster Variable specific impulse magnetoplasma rocket VASIMR using microwave generated plasma as the propellant and magnetic field to direct its expulsion Electromagnetic edit Main article Plasma propulsion engine Electromagnetic thrusters use ions as the propellant which are accelerated by the Lorentz force or by magnetic fields either of which is generated by electricity Electrodeless plasma thruster a complex system that uses cold plasma as a propellant that is accelerated by ponderomotive force Magnetoplasmadynamic thruster propellants include xenon neon argon hydrogen hydrazine or lithium expelled using the Lorentz force Pulsed inductive thruster because this reactive engine uses a radial magnetic field it acts on both positive and negative particles and so it may use a wide range of gases as a propellant including water hydrazine ammonia argon xenon and many others Pulsed plasma thruster uses a Teflon plasma as a propellant which is created by an electrical arc and expelled using the Lorentz force Helicon Double Layer Thruster a plasma propellant is generated and excited from a gas using a helicon induced by high frequency band radiowaves which form a magnetic nozzle in a cylinder Nuclear edit Nuclear reactions may be used to produce the energy for the expulsion of the propellants Many types of nuclear reactors have been used proposed to produce electricity for electrical propulsion as outlined above Nuclear pulse propulsion uses a series of nuclear explosions to create large amounts of energy to expel the products of the nuclear reaction as the propellant Nuclear thermal rockets use the heat of a nuclear reaction to heat a propellant Usually the propellant is hydrogen because the force is a function of the energy irrespective of the mass of the propellant so the lightest propellant hydrogen produces the greatest specific impulse Photonic edit See also Laser propulsion and Photon rocket A photonic reactive engine uses photons as the propellant and their discrete relativistic energy to produce thrust Projectile propellants editSee also Gunpowder Smokeless powder and Firearm propellant This section needs expansion You can help by adding to it November 2021 Compressed fluid propellants editCompressed fluid or compressed gas propellants are pressurized physically by a compressor rather than by a chemical reaction The pressures and energy densities that can be achieved while insufficient for high performance rocketry and firearms are adequate for most applications in which case compressed fluids offer a simpler safer and more practical source of propellant pressure A compressed fluid propellant may simply be a pressurized gas or a substance which is a gas at atmospheric pressure but stored under pressure as a liquid Compressed gas propellants edit In applications in which a large quantity of propellant is used such as pressure washing and airbrushing air may be pressurized by a compressor and used immediately Additionally a hand pump to compress air can be used for its simplicity in low tech applications such as atomizers plant misters and water rockets The simplest examples of such a system are squeeze bottles for such liquids as ketchup and shampoo However compressed gases are impractical as stored propellants if they do not liquify inside the storage container because very high pressures are required in order to store any significant quantity of gas and high pressure gas cylinders and pressure regulators are expensive and heavy Liquified gas propellants edit See also Aerosol spray Aerosol propellants Principle edit Liquified gas propellants are gases at atmospheric pressure but become liquid at a modest pressure This pressure is high enough to provide useful propulsion of the payload e g aerosol paint deodorant lubricant but is low enough to be stored in an inexpensive metal can and to not pose a safety hazard in case the can is ruptured The mixture of liquid and gaseous propellant inside the can maintains a constant pressure called the liquid s vapor pressure As the payload is depleted the propellant vaporizes to fill the internal volume of the can Liquids are typically 500 1000x denser than their corresponding gases at atmospheric pressure even at the higher pressure inside the can only a small fraction of its volume needs to be propellant in order to eject the payload and replace it with vapor Vaporizing the liquid propellant to gas requires some energy the enthalpy of vaporization which cools the system This is usually insignificant although it can sometimes be an unwanted effect of heavy usage as the system cools the vapor pressure of the propellant drops However in the case of a freeze spray this cooling contributes to the desired effect although freeze sprays may also contain other components such as chloroethane with a lower vapor pressure but higher enthalpy of vaporization than the propellant Propellant compounds edit Chlorofluorocarbons CFCs were once often used as propellants 7 but since the Montreal Protocol came into force in 1989 they have been replaced in nearly every country due to the negative effects CFCs have on Earth s ozone layer The most common replacements of CFCs are mixtures of volatile hydrocarbons typically propane n butane and isobutane 8 Dimethyl ether DME and methyl ethyl ether are also used All these have the disadvantage of being flammable Nitrous oxide and carbon dioxide are also used as propellants to deliver foodstuffs for example whipped cream and cooking spray Medicinal aerosols such as asthma inhalers use hydrofluoroalkanes HFA either HFA 134a 1 1 1 2 tetrafluoroethane or HFA 227 1 1 1 2 3 3 3 heptafluoropropane or combinations of the two More recently liquid hydrofluoroolefin HFO propellants have become more widely adopted in aerosol systems due to their relatively low vapor pressure low global warming potential GWP and nonflammability 9 Payloads edit The practicality of liquified gas propellants allows for a broad variety of payloads Aerosol sprays in which a liquid is ejected as a spray include paints lubricants degreasers and protective coatings deodorants and other personal care products cooking oils Some liquid payloads are not sprayed due to lower propellant pressure and or viscous payload as with whipped cream and shaving cream or shaving gel Low power guns such as BB guns paintball guns and airsoft guns have solid projectile payloads Uniquely in the case of a gas duster canned air the only payload is the velocity of the propellant vapor itself See also editCartridge firearms Explosive material Fuel Propellant depot Spacecraft propulsion Specific impulseReferences edit Lal Sohan Rajkumar Sundaram Tare Amit Reshmi Sasidharakurup Chowdhury Arindrajit Namboothiri Irishi N N December 2014 Nitro Substituted Bishomocubanes Synthesis Characterization and Application as Energetic Materials Chemistry An Asian Journal 9 12 3533 3541 doi 10 1002 asia 201402607 PMID 25314237 Lal Sohan Mallick Lovely Rajkumar Sundaram Oommen Oommen P Reshmi Sasidharakurup Kumbhakarna Neeraj Chowdhury Arindrajit Namboothiri Irishi 2015 Synthesis and energetic properties of high nitrogen substituted bishomocubanes J Mater Chem A 3 44 22118 22128 doi 10 1039 C5TA05380C Sutton George Biblarz Oscar 2001 Rocket Propulsion Elements Willey ISBN 9781601190604 OCLC 75193234 Hutchinson Lee 2013 04 14 New F 1B rocket engine upgrades Apollo era design with 1 8 M lbs of thrust ARS technica Retrieved 2013 04 15 The most efficient fuel and oxidizer combination commonly used today for chemical liquid rockets is hydrogen fuel and oxygen oxidizer continued Coates The two elements are relatively simple and they burn easily when combined and even better the result of their reaction is simple water Hutchinson Lee 2013 04 14 New F 1B rocket engine upgrades Apollo era design with 1 8 M lbs of thrust ARS technica p 2 Retrieved 2013 04 15 Refined petroleum is not the most efficient thrust producing fuel for rockets but what it lacks in thrust production it makes up for in density It takes less volume of RP 1 to impart the same thrust force on a vehicle and less volume equates to reduced stage size A smaller booster stage means much less aerodynamic drag as the vehicle lifts off from near sea level and accelerates up through the more dense thicker part of the atmosphere near the earth The result of a smaller booster stage is it allows a more efficient ascent through the thickest part of the atmosphere which helps improve the net mass lifted to orbit Native Electric Propulsion Engines Today in Russian Novosti Kosmonavtiki 1999 Archived from the original on 6 June 2011 Fires Halted Quickly by Lazy Freon Gas Popular Mechanics Vol 87 Hearst Magazines April 1947 p 115 Retrieved June 7 2019 Freon chemical compounds in household refrigerators air cooling systems and as a DDT carrier in aerosol insect bombs have been found to be more effective in extinguishing fires than carbon dioxide Yeoman Amber M Lewis Alastair C 2021 04 22 Global emissions of VOCs from compressed aerosol products Elementa Science of the Anthropocene 9 1 00177 doi 10 1525 elementa 2020 20 00177 ISSN 2325 1026 Solstice Propellant Technical Bulletin PDF Honeywell 2017 Bibliography editClark John D 1972 Ignition An Informal History of Liquid Rocket Propellants Rutgers University Press ISBN 0 8135 0725 1 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Propellants nbsp Look up propellant in Wiktionary the free dictionary Rocket Propellants Rocket propulsion elements Sutton George P Biblarz Oscar 7th Ed Understanding and Predicting Gun Barrel Erosion Weapons Systems Division Defence Science and Technology Organisation by Ian A Johnston Archived 2013 07 10 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Propellant amp oldid 1217992606, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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