High-Test Peroxide as a Rocket Monopropellant
High-Test Peroxide (HTP), a highly concentrated solution of H₂O₂ (typically 85-98%), is used as a monopropellant in rocketry. When passed over a catalyst, usually silver or platinum, it rapidly decomposes into a high-temperature mixture of steam and oxygen. This hot gas is then directed through a nozzle to generate thrust, powering rockets, torpedoes, and reaction control systems.
The use of HTP as a monopropellant was pioneered by the German engineer Hellmuth Walter in the 1930s. He developed the “Walter-Antrieb” (Walter drive) which was used in submarines and torpedoes during World War II. The principle is based on the highly exothermic catalytic decomposition of H₂O₂. A typical catalyst pack consists of silver-plated nickel screens. As the liquid HTP flows through the pack, it decomposes almost instantaneously. The reaction \(2 H_2O_2(l) \rightarrow 2 H_2O(g) + O_2(g)\) releases a significant amount of energy, heating the resulting steam and oxygen to over 600 °C (1112 °F). This rapid expansion of hot gas, when channeled through a rocket nozzle, produces significant thrust. The specific impulse of HTP as a monopropellant is around 150-160 seconds, which is modest compared to bipropellants but offers advantages in simplicity, storability, and lower toxicity compared to alternatives like hydrazine. The system requires only one tank and a simple valve and catalyst bed, making it reliable for applications like reaction control systems (RCS) for spacecraft attitude control. HTP can also be used as an oxidizer in bipropellant systems, where it is injected into a combustion chamber with a fuel like kerosene or ethanol, producing a higher specific impulse.
Handling HTP requires extreme care. It is a powerful oxidizing agent and can cause spontaneous combustion with many organic materials. Contamination can trigger uncontrolled decomposition, leading to a pressure explosion, a phenomenon known as a vapor explosion or “VE”. Despite these hazards, its performance and relative simplicity have secured its place in various niche aerospace and naval applications.
UNESCO Nomenclature: 3301
– Aeronautics. Astronautics
Precursors
- discovery of hydrogen peroxide’s exothermic decomposition
- development of catalysis, particularly with precious metals
- invention of the de laval nozzle for converting thermal energy into kinetic energy
- basic principles of newton’s third law of motion
Applications
- v-2 rocket turbine fuel pump
- black knight rocket
- reaction control thrusters on the soyouz spacecraft
- bell rocket belt (rocket pack)
- propulsion for torpedoes like the british mark 12 “fancy”
Potential Innovations Ideas
Due to scrapping bot traffic, currently more than 40k per day, this content is reserved to community members.
> Login < or > Register < (100% free) to access this, so as all other restricted content and tools.
Related to: high-test peroxide, HTP, monopropellant, rocket, Hellmuth Walter, catalyst, thrust, steam, oxygen, specific impulse.