Farnesane, or 2,6,10-trimethyl-dodecane, has three (hydrogenated) isoprene patterns. It melts at atypical
-100°C and boils at +252°C so its flash point is +109°C. Patents US7589243 and US7399323 call it AMD-200 to power aeroplanes; their combustion heat looks wrong, but assimilating to 2,4,6-trimethyl-dodecane, the exhaust speed at a rocket would improve by 8m/s over RG-1, with fair 773kg/m3.
Phytane, or 2,6,10,14-tetramethyl-hexadecane, has one isoprene pattern more. It melts at -99°C as well and boils at +296°C. The exhaust speed is kept, density improves to 791kg/m3.
That's the kind of freezing point, safety and performance I'd pick for a
Martian descent-ascent module, including manned. Could cyclopropanation keep the liquid range and improve performance?
I imagine to
trimerize or tetramerize butadiene (log in to see the drawing). Maybe some butene can adjust the oligomer's length; a mix is good, a eutectic welcome. At the polymer, lithium catalyst produces 20...60% of the 1,4-trans, while neodymium, cobalt and nickel make the 1,4-cis.
http://es.wikipedia.org/wiki/Polibutadienohttp://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/PolybutadienIf only the cyclopropanated 1,4-trans has the low melting point (just an intuition) the oligomers should be separated, say by cold. Eutectics welcome.
The
cyclopropanated 1,4-trans oligomer has all features I suppose make the outstanding
melting point of farnesane and phytane:
- Many position isomers, as each methyl can be at right or left, and so do the cycles.
- The molecules stack badly. Asymmetric ends (0 and 2 carbons beyond the cycles) would improve.
- The bonds next to the branches or cycles rotate more easily than in a straight alkane. Or at least, AM1 alleges it...
Cyclopropanes improve the density over the alkane, and
gain 30m/s exhaust speed over RG-1.
(The fuels derived from fatty acids must be better than that, exceeding my previous estimates - but what is their freezing point?)
Marc Schaefer, aka Enthalpy