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"New
propellants being developed will likely contain highly energetic metals
such as magnesium and boron." |
Rocket
Science |
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Graduate students Sinil Chai, Chris Brdar, and J.C. Melcher and undergraduate Jason Brzozowski work in the Energetic Materials Lab with Professor Krier. |
Recent shock-tube experiments at the University of Illinois have shown that propellants containing fluorine can significantly enhance the combustion of energetic boron particles. According to Herman Krier, the Richard W. Kritzer Professor of Mechanical and Industrial Engineering, the number one performance factor for any rocket is the amount of energy obtained per pound of propellant. More energetic material means a rocket can carry less propellant and more payload. Liquid fuels and oxidizers provide more energy per pound than solid propellants, but liquids must be cryogenically cooled, adding to their cost and making them difficult to store. Solid propellants are cheaper to make and can be stored safely for years, even under harsh environmental conditions. "Todays solid-fueled rockets use propellants that were developed in the 1960s and 70s," said Krier. "These materials are safe and reliable but not extremely energetic. New propellants being developed will likely contain highly energetic metals such as magnesium and boron." Boron has a low molecular weight and a high energy of combustion, making it an attractive additive for use in rocket propellants. But a thin layer of boron oxide that forms on the particle surface hinders combustion, resulting in long ignition delays. Chemical models have suggested that fluorine, the most reactive of the elements, will attack and remove this oxide coating, thus shortening the time required for ignition and increasing the rate of combustion. To study the effect of fluorine on boron combustion, Krier and his colleagues, doctoral candidate Martin Spalding and aeronautical and astronautical engineering professor Rodney Burton, used the 12-meter shock tube in the universitys High-Pressure Combustion Laboratory. Boron particles were ignited under high pressures and temperatures in atmospheres consisting of argon and oxygen, mixed with varying amounts of fluorine. Time-resolved spectra of the burning particles were obtained using a streak camera to record the output of a sensitive spectrometer. The spectral fingerprints of the reacting molecules allowed the scientists to determine how long it took before the reactions started, identify the specific reactions that occurred, and measure how long it took for the particles to burn. "A significant decrease in both the ignition delay time and the total combustion time resulted when a small amount of fluorine was added to the shock tube," Krier said. "Now that we have verified the chemical models, the next step will be to find a safe and effective way of incorporating fluorine into the solid propellant." James E. Kloeppel is a physical sciences editor at the University of U of Is News Bureau. |
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