"hydrogen peroxide as fuel"
i wonder how that works...
I would think that peroxide would be the oxidizer, with something else used for the propellant.
If you spray hydrogen peroxide into or through a platinum mesh, the platinum acts as a catalyst and it instantly decomposes and turns to superheated steam and expands to 600 times the volume. Not being used as an oxidizer, it's a monopropellent.
Well I've walked across the foot bridge over the Royal Gorge. That's about the same.....right?
Yeah, they use 50% and better. The higher the concentration, the longer the jet can operate and the more thrust it can produce. I think those jetpack guys use >90% concentration. Expensive.hmmm I'm guessing that's not the same H2O2 in my med cabinet -2%??
if so, how far is it from the open end of a tailpipe to the catalytic converter?!
And if not, well, they have pills for that now.I can keep it up for longer than 75 seconds!
'Bout time they made use of that energy source!
All this talk about hydrogen peroxide... anyone want to think about the dangers of dihydrogen monoxide for a bit?
- People have to land their planes, stop their cars, and take breaks from work due to overconsumption
- Inhalation can cause death
- If it gets in your fuel your engine may quit
We should hurry up and ban this dangerous substance.
Mike don't feel bad. H2O2 can be used as an oxidizer It's just that most "jetpacks" use it as a momo propellant. The brits did a lot of work after WWII on HTP rocket Engines. The Gamma engines used H2O2 and paraffin oil.
For some modern H2O2 engines check out Armadillo Aerospace.
I would think that peroxide would be the oxidizer, with something else used for the propellant.
hmmm I'm guessing that's not the same H2O2 in my med cabinet -2%??
if so, how far is it from the open end of a tailpipe to the catalytic converter?!
And the Germans were at it during WWII. The ME-163 rocket plane used it.
http://www.airpages.ru/cgi-bin/epg.pl?nav=lw70&page=me163
http://www.militaryfactory.com/aircraft/detail.asp?aircraft_id=107
http://www.aviationartprints.com/me_163_comet.htm
No, fuel grade is a MUCH higher percentage. If you pour it on your skin, your skin will dissolve.
EEK! You have to hope your tubing/tanks don't develop a leak while that's strapped to your back!
So where would one buy 90% Hydrogen Peroxide if one owned a jetpack, and how much does it cost? Does it require any permits to purchase it?
I'd imagine at chemical suppliers, or you can refine your own.
Expect to pay ~$100 per liter ($400/gallon) and stay away from the 30-50% stuff. 100 LL is still cheaper.