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Liquid rocket propellant
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===1950s and 1960s=== {{unreferenced section|date=March 2017}} During the 1950s and 1960s there was a great burst of activity by propellant chemists to find high-energy liquid and solid propellants better suited to the military. Large strategic missiles need to sit in land-based or submarine-based silos for many years, able to launch at a moment's notice. Propellants requiring continuous refrigeration, which cause their rockets to grow ever-thicker blankets of ice, were not practical. As the military was willing to handle and use hazardous materials, a great number of dangerous chemicals were brewed up in large batches, most of which wound up being deemed unsuitable for operational systems.{{citation needed|date=May 2025}} In the case of [[nitric acid]], the acid itself ({{chem|H|N|O|3}}) was unstable, and corroded most metals, making it difficult to store. The addition of a modest amount of [[dinitrogen tetroxide|nitrogen tetroxide]], {{chem|N|2|O|4}}, turned the mixture red and kept it from changing composition, but left the problem that nitric acid corrodes containers it is placed in, releasing gases that can build up pressure in the process. The breakthrough was the addition of a little [[hydrogen fluoride]] (HF), which forms a self-sealing metal fluoride on the interior of tank walls that ''Inhibited'' Red Fuming Nitric Acid. This made "IRFNA" storeable. Propellant combinations based on IRFNA or pure {{chem|N|2|O|4}} as oxidizer and kerosene or [[hypergolic]] (self igniting) [[aniline]], [[hydrazine]] or [[unsymmetrical dimethylhydrazine]] (UDMH) as fuel were then adopted in the United States and the Soviet Union for use in strategic and tactical missiles. The self-igniting storeable liquid bi-propellants have somewhat lower specific impulse than LOX/kerosene but have higher density so a greater mass of propellant can be placed in the same sized tanks. Gasoline was replaced by different [[hydrocarbon]] fuels,<ref name=Clark2018 /> for example [[RP-1]]{{snd}} a highly refined grade of [[kerosene]]. This combination is quite practical for rockets that need not be stored.
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