Feasibility Study and Demonstration of an Aluminum and Ice Solid Propellant

Aluminum-water reactions have been proposed and studied for several decades for underwater propulsion systems and applications requiring hydrogen generation. Aluminum and water have also been proposed as a frozen propellant, and there have been proposals for other refrigerated propellants that could...

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Main Authors: Timothee L. Pourpoint, Tyler D. Wood, Mark A. Pfeil, John Tsohas, Steven F. Son
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Hindawi Limited 2012-01-01
Series:International Journal of Aerospace Engineering
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2012/874076
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spelling doaj-815e50afc5d14ff58515ce65241b61242020-11-24T20:54:31ZengHindawi LimitedInternational Journal of Aerospace Engineering1687-59661687-59742012-01-01201210.1155/2012/874076874076Feasibility Study and Demonstration of an Aluminum and Ice Solid PropellantTimothee L. Pourpoint0Tyler D. Wood1Mark A. Pfeil2John Tsohas3Steven F. Son4School of Aeronautics and Astronautics, Purdue University, 500 Allison Road, West Lafayette, IN 47907, USASchool of Aeronautics and Astronautics, Purdue University, 500 Allison Road, West Lafayette, IN 47907, USASchool of Aeronautics and Astronautics, Purdue University, 500 Allison Road, West Lafayette, IN 47907, USASchool of Aeronautics and Astronautics, Purdue University, 500 Allison Road, West Lafayette, IN 47907, USASchool of Aeronautics and Astronautics, Purdue University, 500 Allison Road, West Lafayette, IN 47907, USAAluminum-water reactions have been proposed and studied for several decades for underwater propulsion systems and applications requiring hydrogen generation. Aluminum and water have also been proposed as a frozen propellant, and there have been proposals for other refrigerated propellants that could be mixed, frozen in situ, and used as solid propellants. However, little work has been done to determine the feasibility of these concepts. With the recent availability of nanoscale aluminum, a simple binary formulation with water is now feasible. Nanosized aluminum has a lower ignition temperature than micron-sized aluminum particles, partly due to its high surface area, and burning times are much faster than micron aluminum. Frozen nanoscale aluminum and water mixtures are stable, as well as insensitive to electrostatic discharge, impact, and shock. Here we report a study of the feasibility of an nAl-ice propellant in small-scale rocket experiments. The focus here is not to develop an optimized propellant; however improved formulations are possible. Several static motor experiments have been conducted, including using a flight-weight casing. The flight weight casing was used in the first sounding rocket test of an aluminum-ice propellant, establishing a proof of concept for simple propellant mixtures making use of nanoscale particles.http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2012/874076
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Timothee L. Pourpoint
Tyler D. Wood
Mark A. Pfeil
John Tsohas
Steven F. Son
spellingShingle Timothee L. Pourpoint
Tyler D. Wood
Mark A. Pfeil
John Tsohas
Steven F. Son
Feasibility Study and Demonstration of an Aluminum and Ice Solid Propellant
International Journal of Aerospace Engineering
author_facet Timothee L. Pourpoint
Tyler D. Wood
Mark A. Pfeil
John Tsohas
Steven F. Son
author_sort Timothee L. Pourpoint
title Feasibility Study and Demonstration of an Aluminum and Ice Solid Propellant
title_short Feasibility Study and Demonstration of an Aluminum and Ice Solid Propellant
title_full Feasibility Study and Demonstration of an Aluminum and Ice Solid Propellant
title_fullStr Feasibility Study and Demonstration of an Aluminum and Ice Solid Propellant
title_full_unstemmed Feasibility Study and Demonstration of an Aluminum and Ice Solid Propellant
title_sort feasibility study and demonstration of an aluminum and ice solid propellant
publisher Hindawi Limited
series International Journal of Aerospace Engineering
issn 1687-5966
1687-5974
publishDate 2012-01-01
description Aluminum-water reactions have been proposed and studied for several decades for underwater propulsion systems and applications requiring hydrogen generation. Aluminum and water have also been proposed as a frozen propellant, and there have been proposals for other refrigerated propellants that could be mixed, frozen in situ, and used as solid propellants. However, little work has been done to determine the feasibility of these concepts. With the recent availability of nanoscale aluminum, a simple binary formulation with water is now feasible. Nanosized aluminum has a lower ignition temperature than micron-sized aluminum particles, partly due to its high surface area, and burning times are much faster than micron aluminum. Frozen nanoscale aluminum and water mixtures are stable, as well as insensitive to electrostatic discharge, impact, and shock. Here we report a study of the feasibility of an nAl-ice propellant in small-scale rocket experiments. The focus here is not to develop an optimized propellant; however improved formulations are possible. Several static motor experiments have been conducted, including using a flight-weight casing. The flight weight casing was used in the first sounding rocket test of an aluminum-ice propellant, establishing a proof of concept for simple propellant mixtures making use of nanoscale particles.
url http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2012/874076
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AT markapfeil feasibilitystudyanddemonstrationofanaluminumandicesolidpropellant
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