Bipropellant rocket Guide, Meaning , Facts, Information and Description
A bipropellant rocket is a rocket that uses separate fuel and oxidizer propellants. Bipropellant systems are more efficient than monopropellant systems, but they tend to be more complicated because of the extra hardware components needed to make sure the right amount of fuel gets mixed with the right amount of oxidizer (this is known as the mixture ratio.)Thousands of combinations of fuels and oxidizers have been tried over the years. Some of the more common and practical ones are:
- liquid oxygen (LOX, O2) and liquid hydrogen (LH2,H2) - Space Shuttle main engines, Saturn V, Saturn IB, and Saturn I upper stages as well as Centaur rocket stage
- liquid oxygen (LOX) and kerosene or RP-1 - Saturn V, various Soviet boosters,Delta, Saturn I, and Saturn IB first stages, Titan I and Atlas rockets
- liquid oxygen (LOX) and alcohol (Ethanol, C2H5OH) - early liquid fueled rockets, like German (WW2) A-4, aka V-2, and Redstone
- liquid oxygen (LOX) and gasoline - Robert Goddard's first liquid-fuel rocket
- T-Stoff (80% Hydrogen Peroxide, H2O2) and C-Stoff (methanol, CH3OH, and hydrazine hydrate, N2H4.n(H2O) - Walter Werke HWK 109-509 engine used on Messerschmitt Me 163B Komet a rocket fighterplane of (WW2)
- nitric acid (HNO3) and kerosene - Soviet Scud-A, aka SS-1
- inhibited red fuming nitric acid (IRFNA, HNO3 + N2O4) and unsymmetric methyl hydrazine (UDMH, (CH3)2N2H2) Soviet Scud-B,-C,-D, aka SS-1-c,-d,-e
- nitric acid 73% with dinitrogen tetroxide 27% (=AK27) and kerosene/gasoline mixture - various Russian (USSR) cold-war ballistic missiles, Iran: Shahab-5, North Korea: Taep'o-dong-2
- hydrogen peroxide and kerosene - UK (1970s) Black Arrow, USA Development (or study): BA-3200
- hydrazine (N2H4) and red fuming nitric acid - Nike Ajax Antiaircraft Rocket
- Areozine 50 and dinitrogen tetroxide - Titans 2–4;, various Soviet rockets, Apollo lunar module, Apollo service module, interplanatary probes (Such as Voyager 1 and Voyager 2
- monomethylhydrazine (MMH, (CH3)HN2H2) and dinitrogen tetroxide - Space Shuttle Orbital maneuvering system (OMS) engines
Small scale rocket engines
XCOR Aerospace, a California based company, is developing small scale rocket engines to power small airplanes for suborbital flights.
They have tested various combination of propellants including nitrous oxide/propane, nitrous oxide/alcohol, LOX/alcohol, LOX/kerosene with success.
