The highest
specific impulse chemical rockets use liquid propellants (
liquid-propellant rocket
A liquid-propellant rocket or liquid rocket utilizes a rocket engine that uses liquid rocket propellant, liquid propellants. Liquids are desirable because they have a reasonably high density and high Specific impulse, specific impulse (''I''sp). T ...
s). They can consist of a single chemical (a monopropellant) or a mix of two chemicals, called
bipropellants
A liquid-propellant rocket or liquid rocket utilizes a rocket engine that uses liquid propellants. Liquids are desirable because they have a reasonably high density and high specific impulse (''I''sp). This allows the volume of the propellant ta ...
. Bipropellants can further be divided into two categories;
hypergolic propellant
A hypergolic propellant is a rocket propellant combination used in a rocket engine, whose components spontaneously ignite when they come into contact with each other.
The two propellant components usually consist of a fuel and an oxidizer. Th ...
s, which ignite when the fuel and
oxidizer make contact, and non-hypergolic propellants which require an ignition source.
About 170 different
propellants made of
liquid fuel have been tested, excluding minor changes to a specific propellant such as propellant additives, corrosion inhibitors, or stabilizers. In the U.S. alone at least 25 different propellant combinations have been flown. As of 2020, no completely new propellant has been used since the mid-1970s.
Many factors go into choosing a propellant for a liquid-propellant rocket engine. The primary factors include ease of operation, cost, hazards/environment and performance.
History
Development in early 20th century
Konstantin Tsiolkovsky proposed the use of liquid propellants in 1903, in his article ''Exploration of Outer Space by Means of Rocket Devices.''
On March 16, 1926,
Robert H. Goddard used
liquid oxygen (''LOX'') and
gasoline as
rocket fuels for his first partially successful
liquid-propellant rocket
A liquid-propellant rocket or liquid rocket utilizes a rocket engine that uses liquid rocket propellant, liquid propellants. Liquids are desirable because they have a reasonably high density and high Specific impulse, specific impulse (''I''sp). T ...
launch. Both propellants are readily available, cheap and highly energetic. Oxygen is a moderate
cryogen as air will not liquefy against a liquid oxygen tank, so it is possible to store LOX briefly in a rocket without excessive insulation.
In Germany, engineers and scientists became enthralled with liquid propulsion, building and testing them in the late 1920s within
Opel RAK in Rüsselsheim. According to
Max Valier's account, Opel RAK rocket designer,
Friedrich Wilhelm Sander launched two liquid-fuel rockets at Opel Rennbahn in
Rüsselsheim on April 10 and April 12, 1929. These Opel RAK rockets have been the first European, and after Goddard the world's second, liquid-fuel rockets in history. In his book “Raketenfahrt” Valier describes the size of the rockets as of 21 cm in diameter and with a length of 74 cm, weighing 7 kg empty and 16 kg with fuel. The maximum thrust was 45 to 50 kp, with a total burning time of 132 seconds. These properties indicate a gas pressure pumping. The first missile rose so quickly that Sander lost sight of it. Two days later, a second unit was ready to go, Sander tied a 4,000-meter-long rope to the rocket. After 2000 m or rope had been unwound, the line broke and this rocket also disappeared in the area, probably near the Opel proving ground and racetrack in Rüsselsheim, the "Rennbahn". The main purpose of these tests was to develop the propulsion system for the aircraft for crossing the English channel. Also spaceflight historian
Frank H. Winter
Frank H. Winter (born 1942) is an American historian and writer. He is the retired Curator of Rocketry of the National Air and Space Museum (NASM) of the Smithsonian Institution of Washington, D.C. Winter is also an internationally recognized hist ...
, curator at National Air and Space Museum in Washington, DC, confirms the Opel group was working, in addition to their solid-fuel rockets used for land-speed records and the world's first manned rocket-plane flights, on liquid-fuel rockets (SPACEFLIGHT, Vol. 21,2, Feb. 1979): In a cabled exclusive to The New York Times on 30 September 1929,
Fritz von Opel is quoted as saying: "Sander and I now want to transfer the liquid rocket from the laboratory to practical use. With the liquid rocket I hope to be the first man to thus fly across the English Channel. I will not rest until I have accomplished that." At a speech on the donation of a RAK 2 replica to the Deutsches Museum, von Opel mentioned also Opel engineer Josef Schaberger as a key collaborator. "He belonged," von Opel said, "with the same enthusiasm as Sander to our small secret group, one of the tasks of which was to hide all the preparations from my father, because his paternal apprehensions led him to believe that I was cut out for something better than being a rocket researchist. Schaberger supervised all the details involved in construction and assembly (of rocket cars), and every time I sat behind the wheel with a few hundred pounds of explosives in my rear, and made the first contact, I did so with a feeling of total security
..As early as 1928, Mr. Schaberger and I developed a liquid rocket, which was definitely the first permanently operating rocket in which the explosive was injected into the combustion chamber and simultaneously cooled using pumps.
..We used benzol as the fuel," von Opel continued, "and nitrogen tetroxide as the oxidizer. This rocket was installed in a Mueller-Griessheim aircraft and developed a thrust of 70 kg (154 lb.)." By May 1929, the engine produced a thrust of 200 kg (440 lb.) "for longer than fifteen minutes and in July 1929, the Opel RAK collaborators were able to attain powered phases of more than thirty minutes for thrusts of 300 kg (660-lb.) at Opel's works in Rüsselsheim," again according to Max Valier's account. The Great Depression brought an end to the Opel RAK activities. Valier's, who died while experimenting in 1930, and Sander's work on liquid-fuel rockets was confiscated by the German military, the
Heereswaffenamt and integrated into the activities under General
Walter Dornberger in the early and mid-1930s in
a field near Berlin. An amateur rocket group, the
VfR, co-founded by Max Valier, included
Wernher von Braun, who eventually became the head of the army research station that designed the
V-2 rocket weapon for the Nazis. Sander was arrested by Gestapo in 1935, when private rocket-engineering became forbidden in Germany, was convicted of treason to 5 years in prison and forced to sell his company, he died in 1938.
World War II era
Germany had very active rocket development before and during
World War II, both for the strategic
V-2 rocket and other missiles. The V-2 used an alcohol/LOX
liquid-propellant engine, with
hydrogen peroxide to drive the fuel pumps.
The alcohol was mixed with water for engine cooling. Both Germany and the United States developed reusable liquid-propellant rocket engines that used a storeable liquid oxidizer with much greater density than LOX and a liquid fuel that
ignited spontaneously on contact with the high density oxidizer. The major manufacturer of German rocket engines for military use, the
HWK firm, manufactured the
RLM-numbered 109-500-designation series of rocket engine systems, and either used
hydrogen peroxide as a monopropellant for
''Starthilfe'' rocket-propulsive assisted takeoff needs; or as a
form of thrust for
MCLOS-guided air-sea glide bombs; and used in a bipropellant combination of the same oxidizer with a
fuel mixture of hydrazine hydrate and methyl alcohol for
rocket engine systems intended for manned combat aircraft propulsion purposes. The U.S. engine designs were fueled with the bipropellant combination of
nitric acid as the oxidizer; and
aniline as the fuel. Both engines were used to power aircraft, the
Me 163 Komet interceptor in the case of the Walter 509-series German engine designs, and
RATO units from both nations (as with the ''Starthilfe'' system for the Luftwaffe) to assist take-off of aircraft, which comprised the primary purpose for the case of the U.S. liquid-fueled rocket engine technology - much of it coming from the mind of U.S. Navy officer
Robert Truax.
1950s and 1960s
During the 1950s and 1960s there was a great burst of activity by propellant chemists to find high-energy liquid and solid propellants better suited to the military. Large strategic missiles need to sit in land-based or submarine-based silos for many years, able to launch at a moment's notice. Propellants requiring continuous refrigeration, which cause their rockets to grow ever-thicker blankets of ice, were not practical. As the military was willing to handle and use hazardous materials, a great number of dangerous chemicals were brewed up in large batches, most of which wound up being deemed unsuitable for operational systems. In the case of
nitric acid, the acid itself () was unstable, and corroded most metals, making it difficult to store. The addition of a modest amount of
nitrogen tetroxide, , turned the mixture red and kept it from changing composition, but left the problem that nitric acid corrodes containers it is placed in, releasing gases that can build up pressure in the process. The breakthrough was the addition of a little
hydrogen fluoride
Hydrogen fluoride (fluorane) is an inorganic compound with the chemical formula . This colorless gas or liquid is the principal industrial source of fluorine, often as an aqueous solution called hydrofluoric acid. It is an important feedstock i ...
(HF), which forms a self-sealing metal fluoride on the interior of tank walls that ''Inhibited'' Red Fuming Nitric Acid. This made "IRFNA" storeable. Propellant combinations based on IRFNA or pure as oxidizer and kerosene or
hypergolic (self igniting)
aniline,
hydrazine
Hydrazine is an inorganic compound with the chemical formula . It is a simple pnictogen hydride, and is a colourless flammable liquid with an ammonia-like odour. Hydrazine is highly toxic unless handled in solution as, for example, hydrazine ...
or
unsymmetrical dimethylhydrazine (UDMH) as fuel were then adopted in the United States and the Soviet Union for use in strategic and tactical missiles. The self-igniting storeable liquid bi-propellants have somewhat lower specific impulse than LOX/kerosene but have higher density so a greater mass of propellant can be placed in the same sized tanks. Gasoline was replaced by different
hydrocarbon fuels,
for example
RP-1 a highly refined grade of
kerosene. This combination is quite practical for rockets that need not be stored.
Kerosene
The V-2 rockets developed by Nazi Germany used LOX and ethyl alcohol. One of the main advantages of alcohol was its water content which provided cooling in larger rocket engines. Petroleum-based fuels offered more power than alcohol, but standard gasoline and kerosene left too much silt and combustion by-products that could clog engine plumbing. In addition they lacked the cooling properties of ethyl alcohol.
During the early 1950s, the chemical industry in the US was assigned the task of formulating an improved petroleum-based rocket propellant which would not leave residue behind and also ensure that the engines would remain cool. The result was
RP-1, the specifications of which were finalized by 1954. A highly refined form of jet fuel, RP-1 burned much more cleanly than conventional petroleum fuels and also posed less of a danger to ground personnel from explosive vapours. It became the propellant for most of the early American rockets and ballistic missiles such as the Atlas, Titan I, and Thor. The Soviets quickly adopted RP-1 for their R-7 missile, but the majority of Soviet launch vehicles ultimately used storable hypergolic propellants. , it is used in the
first stages of many orbital launchers.
Hydrogen
Many early rocket theorists believed that
hydrogen would be a marvelous propellant, since it gives the highest
specific impulse. It is also considered the cleanest when oxidized with
oxygen because the only by-product is water. Steam reforming of
natural gas is the most common method of producing commercial bulk hydrogen at about 95% of the world production
of 500 billion m
3 in 1998. At high temperatures (700–1100 °C) and in the presence of a
metal-based
catalyst (
nickel), steam reacts with methane to yield
carbon monoxide and hydrogen.
Hydrogen in any state is very bulky; it is typically stored as a deeply cryogenic liquid, a technique mastered in the early 1950s as part of the
hydrogen bomb development program at
Los Alamos.
Liquid hydrogen is stored and transported without boil-off, because
helium, which has a lower boiling point than hydrogen, acts as cooling refrigerant. Only when hydrogen is loaded on a launch vehicle, where no refrigeration exists, it vents to the atmosphere.
In the late 1950s and early 1960s it was adopted for hydrogen-fuelled stages such as
Centaur
A centaur ( ; grc, κένταυρος, kéntauros; ), or occasionally hippocentaur, is a creature from Greek mythology with the upper body of a human and the lower body and legs of a horse.
Centaurs are thought of in many Greek myths as being ...
and
Saturn
Saturn is the sixth planet from the Sun and the second-largest in the Solar System, after Jupiter. It is a gas giant with an average radius of about nine and a half times that of Earth. It has only one-eighth the average density of Earth; h ...
upper stages. Even as a liquid, hydrogen has low density, requiring large tanks and pumps, and the extreme cold requires tank insulation. This extra weight reduces the mass fraction of the stage or requires extraordinary measures such as pressure stabilization of the tanks to reduce weight. Pressure stabilized tanks support most of the loads with internal pressure rather than with solid structures, employing primarily the
tensile strength of the tank material.
The Soviet rocket programme, in part due to a lack of technical capabilities, did not use as a propellant until the 1980s when it was used for the
Energia
Energia or Energiya may refer to:
* Energia (corporation), or S. P. Korolev Rocket and Space Corporation Energia, a Russian design bureau and manufacturer
** Energia (rocket), a Soviet rocket designed by the company
*Energia (company), a company th ...
core stage.
Upper stage use
The liquid-rocket engine propellant combination of
liquid oxygen and hydrogen offers the highest specific impulse of currently used conventional rockets. This extra performance largely offsets the disadvantage of low density. Low density of a propellant leads to larger fuel tanks. However, a small increase in specific impulse in an upper stage application can have a significant increase in payload to orbit capability.
Comparison to kerosene
Launch pad fires due to spilled kerosene are more damaging than hydrogen fires, primarily for two reasons. First, kerosene burns about 20% hotter in absolute temperature than hydrogen. The second reason is its buoyancy. Since hydrogen is a deep cryogen it boils quickly and rises due to its very low density as a gas. Even when hydrogen burns, the
gaseous that is formed has a molecular weight of only 18
u compared to 29.9
u for air, so it rises quickly as well. Kerosene on the other hand falls to the ground and burns for hours when spilled in large quantities, unavoidably causing extensive heat damage that requires time-consuming repairs and rebuilding. This is a lesson most frequently experienced by test stand crews involved with firings of large, unproven rocket engines. Hydrogen-fuelled engines have special design requirements such as running propellant lines horizontally, so traps do not form in the lines and cause ruptures due to boiling in confined spaces. These considerations apply to all cryogens, such as liquid oxygen and
liquid natural gas (LNG) as well. Use of liquid hydrogen fuel has an excellent safety record and superb performance that is well above that of all other practical chemical rocket propellants.
Lithium and fluorine
The highest specific impulse chemistry ever test-fired in a rocket engine was
lithium and
fluorine
Fluorine is a chemical element with the symbol F and atomic number 9. It is the lightest halogen and exists at standard conditions as a highly toxic, pale yellow diatomic gas. As the most electronegative reactive element, it is extremely reacti ...
, with hydrogen added to improve the exhaust thermodynamics (all propellants had to be kept in their own tanks, making this a
tripropellant). The combination delivered 542 s specific impulse in a vacuum, equivalent to an exhaust velocity of 5320 m/s. The impracticality of this chemistry highlights why exotic propellants are not actually used: to make all three components liquids, the hydrogen must be kept below –252 °C (just 21 K) and the lithium must be kept above 180 °C (453 K). Lithium and fluorine are both extremely corrosive, lithium ignites on contact with air, fluorine ignites on contact with most fuels, including hydrogen. Fluorine and the hydrogen fluoride (HF) in the exhaust are very toxic, which makes working around the launch pad difficult, damages the environment, and makes getting a
launch license that much more difficult. Both lithium and fluorine are expensive compared to most rocket propellants. This combination has therefore never flown.
During the 1950s, the Department of Defense initially proposed lithium/fluorine as ballistic missile propellants. A 1954 accident at a chemical works where a cloud of fluorine was released into the atmosphere convinced them to instead use LOX/RP-1.
Methane
In NASA's
Design Reference Mission 5.0 documents (between 2009 and 2012),
liquid methane/
LOX is the chosen propellant mixture for the lander module.
,
SpaceX
Space Exploration Technologies Corp. (SpaceX) is an American spacecraft manufacturer, launcher, and a satellite communications corporation headquartered in Hawthorne, California. It was founded in 2002 by Elon Musk with the stated goal of ...
uses
Raptor
Raptor or RAPTOR may refer to:
Animals
The word "raptor" refers to several groups of bird-like dinosaurs which primarily capture and subdue/kill prey with their talons.
* Raptor (bird) or bird of prey, a bird that primarily hunts and feeds on v ...
methalox bipropellant rocket engines in
test flights for its
Starship
A starship, starcraft, or interstellar spacecraft is a theoretical spacecraft designed for interstellar travel, traveling between planetary systems.
The term is mostly found in science fiction. Reference to a "star-ship" appears as early as 188 ...
super-heavy-lift launch vehicle. In November 2012, CEO
Elon Musk announced plans to develop
liquid methane/
LOX rocket engines.
SpaceX had previously used only
RP-1/LOX in
SpaceX rocket engines.
Although it has a lower specific impulse than liquid hydrogen, liquid methane can be produced on Mars via the
Sabatier reaction and is easier to store than liquid hydrogen due to its higher boiling point and density, as well as its lack of
hydrogen embrittlement. It also leaves less residue in the engines compared to kerosene, which is beneficial for reusability.
In July 2014,
Firefly Space Systems
Firefly Alpha (Firefly α) is a two-stage orbital expendable launch vehicle developed by the American company Firefly Aerospace to compete in the commercial small satellite launch market. Alpha is intended to provide launch options for both ...
announced their plans to use methane fuel for their small satellite launch vehicle,
Firefly Alpha
Firefly Alpha (Firefly α) is a two-stage orbital expendable launch vehicle developed by the American company Firefly Aerospace to compete in the commercial small satellite launch market. Alpha is intended to provide launch options for both ...
with an
aerospike engine design.
In September 2014,
Blue Origin
Blue Origin, LLC is an American private spaceflight, privately funded aerospace manufacturer and sub-orbital spaceflight services company headquartered in Kent, Washington. Founded in 2000 by Jeff Bezos, the founder and executive chairman of Am ...
and
United Launch Alliance announced the joint development of the
BE-4 LOX/LNG engine. The BE-4 will provide of thrust.
Monopropellants
;
High-test peroxide
High-test peroxide (HTP) is a highly concentrated (85 to 98%) solution of hydrogen peroxide, with the remainder consisting predominantly of water. In contact with a catalyst, it decomposes into a high-temperature mixture of steam and oxygen, with n ...
: High test peroxide is concentrated
Hydrogen peroxide, with around 2% to 30% water. It decomposes to steam and oxygen when passed over a catalyst. This was historically used for reaction control systems, due to being easily storable. It is often used to drive
Turbopumps, being used on the
V2 rocket, and modern
Soyuz.
;
Hydrazine
Hydrazine is an inorganic compound with the chemical formula . It is a simple pnictogen hydride, and is a colourless flammable liquid with an ammonia-like odour. Hydrazine is highly toxic unless handled in solution as, for example, hydrazine ...
: decomposes energetically to nitrogen, hydrogen, and ammonia (2N
2H
4 → N
2+H
2+2NH
3) and is the most widely used in space vehicles. (Non-oxidized ammonia decomposition is endothermic and would decrease performance).
;
Nitrous oxide: decomposes to nitrogen and oxygen.
;
Steam
Steam is a substance containing water in the gas phase, and sometimes also an aerosol of liquid water droplets, or air. This may occur due to evaporation or due to boiling, where heat is applied until water reaches the enthalpy of vaporization ...
: when externally heated gives a reasonably modest I
sp of up to 190 seconds, depending on material corrosion and thermal limits.
Present use
, liquid fuel combinations in common use:
;
Kerosene (RP-1) /
liquid oxygen (LOX): Used for the lower stages of the
Soyuz boosters, the first stages of
Saturn V and the
Atlas family, and both stages of
Electron and
Falcon 9. Very similar to Robert Goddard's first rocket.
;
Liquid hydrogen (LH) / LOX: Used in the stages of the
Space Shuttle,
Space Launch System,
Ariane 5
Ariane 5 is a European heavy-lift space launch vehicle developed and operated by Arianespace for the European Space Agency (ESA). It is launched from the Centre Spatial Guyanais (CSG) in French Guiana. It has been used to deliver payloads int ...
,
Delta IV,
New Shepard,
H-IIB,
GSLV and
Centaur
A centaur ( ; grc, κένταυρος, kéntauros; ), or occasionally hippocentaur, is a creature from Greek mythology with the upper body of a human and the lower body and legs of a horse.
Centaurs are thought of in many Greek myths as being ...
.
;
Unsymmetrical dimethylhydrazine (UDMH) or
monomethylhydrazine (MMH) /
dinitrogen tetroxide
Dinitrogen tetroxide, commonly referred to as nitrogen tetroxide (NTO), and occasionally (usually among ex-USSR/Russia rocket engineers) as amyl, is the chemical compound N2O4. It is a useful reagent in chemical synthesis. It forms an equilibrium ...
(NTO or ): Used in three first stages of the Russian
Proton booster, Indian
Vikas engine
The Vikas (a portmanteau from initials of ''VIK''ram ''A''mbalal ''S''arabhai ) is a family of liquid fuelled rocket engines conceptualized and designed by the Liquid Propulsion Systems Centre in the 1970s. The design was based on the licensed ve ...
for
PSLV and
GSLV rockets, most Chinese boosters, a number of military, orbital and deep space rockets, as this fuel combination is
hypergolic and storable for long periods at reasonable temperatures and pressures.
;
Hydrazine
Hydrazine is an inorganic compound with the chemical formula . It is a simple pnictogen hydride, and is a colourless flammable liquid with an ammonia-like odour. Hydrazine is highly toxic unless handled in solution as, for example, hydrazine ...
(): Used in deep space missions because it is
storable and hypergolic, and can be used as a monopropellant with a catalyst.
;
Aerozine-50
__NOTOC__
Aerozine 50 is a 50:50 mix by weight of hydrazine and unsymmetrical dimethylhydrazine (UDMH), originally developed in the late 1950s by Aerojet General Corporation as a storable, high-energy, hypergolic fuel for the Titan II ICBM rocket e ...
(50/50 hydrazine and UDMH): Used in deep space missions because it is
storable and hypergolic, and can be used as a monopropellant with a catalyst.
Table
The table uses data from the JANNAF thermochemical tables (Joint Army-Navy-NASA-Air Force (JANNAF) Interagency Propulsion Committee) throughout, with best-possible specific impulse calculated by Rocketdyne under the assumptions of
adiabatic combustion,
isentropic expansion, one-dimensional expansion and shifting equilibrium.
[Huzel, D. K.; Huang, D. H. (1971), NASA SP-125, "Modern Engineering for Design of Liquid-Propellant Rocket Engines", (2nd ed.), NASA] Some units have been converted to metric, but pressures have not.
Definitions
;''V''
e: Average exhaust velocity, m/s. The same measure as specific impulse in different units, numerically equal to specific impulse in N·s/kg.
;''r'': Mixture ratio: mass oxidizer / mass fuel
;''T''
c: Chamber temperature, °C
;''d'':
Bulk density of fuel and oxidizer, g/cm
3
;''C*'': Characteristic velocity, m/s. Equal to chamber pressure multiplied by throat area, divided by
mass flow rate. Used to check experimental rocket's combustion efficiency.
Bipropellants
Definitions of some of the mixtures:
;
IRFNA IIIa: 83.4%
HNO3, 14%
NO2, 2%
H2O, 0.6%
HF
;IRFNA IV HDA: 54.3% HNO
3, 44% NO
2, 1% H
2O, 0.7% HF
;
RP-1: See MIL-P-25576C, basically kerosene (approximately )
;MMH
monomethylhydrazine:
Has not all data for CO/O, purposed for NASA for Martian-based rockets, only a specific impulse about 250 s.
;''r'': Mixture ratio: mass oxidizer / mass fuel
;''V''
e: Average exhaust velocity, m/s. The same measure as specific impulse in different units, numerically equal to specific impulse in N·s/kg.
;''C*'': Characteristic velocity, m/s. Equal to chamber pressure multiplied by throat area, divided by
mass flow rate. Used to check experimental rocket's combustion efficiency.
;''T''
c: Chamber temperature, °C
;''d'':
Bulk density of fuel and oxidizer, g/cm
3
Monopropellants
References
External links
Cpropep-Weban online computer program to calculate propellant performance in rocket engines
is a computer program to predict the performance of the liquid-propellant rocket engines.
* for a history of liquid rocket propellants in the US by a pioneering rocket propellant developer.
{{spacecraft propulsion
Rocket propulsion
Rocket propellants
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