Much work was done in the US in the 1950s and 1960s to attempt to find better and more energetic monopropellants. For the most part, researchers came to the conclusion that any single substance that contained enough energy to compete with bipropellants would be too unstable to handle safely under practical conditions. With new materials, control systems and requirements for high-performance thrusters, engineers are currently re-examining this assumption. Many partially nitrated alcohol esters are suitable for use as monopropellants. "Trimethylene glycol dinitrate" or
1,3-propanediol dinitrate is
isomeric with
PGDN, and produced as a fractional byproduct in all but the most exacting laboratory conditions; the marginally lower
specific gravity (and thus
energy density) of this compound argues against its use, but the minor differences in chemistry may prove useful in the future. The related "dinitrodiglycol", more properly termed
diethylene glycol dinitrate in modern notation, was widely used in World War 2 Germany, both alone as a liquid monopropellant and
colloidal with
nitrocellulose as a solid propellant. The otherwise desirable characteristics of this compound; it is quite stable, easy to manufacture, and has a very high energy density; are marred by a high
freeze point (-11.5 deg. C) and pronounced thermal expansion, both being problematic in spacecraft. "Dinitrochlorohydrin" and "tetranitrodiglycerin" are also likely candidates, though no current use is known. The polynitrates of long chain and
aromatic hydrocarbons are invariably room temperature solids, but many are soluble in simple alcohols or ethers in high proportion, and may be useful in this state.
Hydrazine,
ethylene oxide,
hydrogen peroxide (especially in its German World War II form as
T-Stoff), and
nitromethane are common rocket monopropellants. As noted the specific impulse of monopropellants is lower than bipropellants and can be found with the Air Force Chemical Equilibrium Specific Impulse Code tool. One newer monopropellant under development is
nitrous oxide, both neat and in the form of
nitrous oxide fuel blends. Nitrous oxide offers the advantages of being self-pressurizing and of being relatively non-toxic, with a specific impulse intermediate between hydrogen peroxide and hydrazine.
Nitrous oxide generates oxygen upon decomposition, and it is possible to blend it with fuels to form a monopropellant mixture with a specific impulse up to 325 s, comparable to
hypergolic bipropellants. In 2018 a new precious metal catalyst was invented for use with nitrous oxide - rhodium oxide on alumina spheres – which is more stable at higher temperatures than pure rhodium or iridium. Direct comparison of physical properties, performance, cost, storability, toxicity, storage requirements and accidental release measures for hydrogen peroxide,
hydroxylammonium nitrate (HAN), hydrazine and various cold gas monopropellants shows that hydrazine is the highest performing in terms of specific impulse. However, hydrazine is also the most expensive and toxic. In addition HAN and hydrogen peroxide have the highest density impulse (total impulse per given unit volume). ==See also==