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1 vote
2 answers
287 views

Chemical Fuel Improvements

With advances in chemical engineering, could chemical propulsion have a fuel (or fuels) that would allow it to compete with newer, more advanced form of propulsion (such as electrical or nuclear) or ...
Antonio Marmo's user avatar
2 votes
1 answer
351 views

What proportion of a rockets fuel remains unburnt?

Presumably liquid rocket combustion is never 100% efficient, so what proportion of fuel does typically remain unburnt, venting into the atmosphere, and does this vary for different rocket designs and ...
Dent Arthur Dent's user avatar
12 votes
5 answers
2k views

What limits burning speed of solid propellant?

SRBs and missiles use grain to regulate thrust over time, as only exposed surface of the propellant burns. But what causes propellant to burn only on the surface, and regulates the speed at which the ...
SF.'s user avatar
  • 55.1k
5 votes
1 answer
243 views

How much energy does it take to extract water from silicate?

Browsing Asterank, it seems that people believe many asteroids have large amounts of iron or magnesium silicate. These compounds may come in a hydrated form which contains water, but it is chemically ...
MattD's user avatar
  • 245
10 votes
2 answers
2k views

What is required to produce rocket quality methane fuel and oxygen from Mars' atmosphere?

Turning $\require{mhchem}\ce{CO2}$ and some hydrogen into $\ce{O2}$ and $\ce{CH4}$ seems pretty straightforward and has been known since early chemistry in the 19th century. But what about the quality,...
LocalFluff's user avatar
6 votes
2 answers
6k views

What does "self-pressurizing" mean in regards to propellant tanks?

I've come across this term a few times. IIRC, liquid hydrogen is "self-pressurizing", but other fuels are not. Apparently, if a propellant is self-pressurizing, we do not need to build any complex ...
DrZ214's user avatar
  • 4,596

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