Monopropellant
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Monopropellants are rocket propellants (usually liquid) that can be used by themselves, without the need for a second component. These can either be a single chemical that can be made to decompose exothermically, or a mixture of chemicals (generally a fuel and an oxidizer) that can be made to react with one another and release energy. The most common monopropellants currently used are hydrazine and occasionally hydrogen peroxide, both of which are generally decomposed with a catalyst bed or thermal bed in a rocket engine to produce thrust.
Much work was done in the US in the 1950s and 1960s to attempt to find better and higher-energy monopropellants. For the most part, the people working on monopropellants 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. One class of propellant under active investigation is hydrazinium ammonium nitrate.
There is an entire chapter on the history of monopropellant development in the book Ignition! An Informal History of Liquid Rocket Propellants (ISBN 0-8135-0725-1) by John D. Clark, first published in 1972.