The
cost of Boctane shall not be compared with kerosene but with the
value of the payload capacity it brings.
That is, 5% more payload capacity can be sold for 5M$. 200t of fuel for two stages, needing no hardware modification, can be bought for up to this cost. This would allow 25$/kg.
Used at the upper stage only, 40t of fuel would bring 3% more capacity, sold for 3M$, so the maximum purchase cost is 75$/kg in this smaller quantity.
Some three-stage kerosene rocket can use even smaller quantities.
This price is a gross maximum, because companies want purchases cheaper than sales, and a fuel change costs more than its purchase.
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Maybe I should have explained that first:
Propellants make 90% of rockets' mass, and this proportion is very hard to increase. So 5% more payload cannot be obtained by 5% more kerosene, which would have been negligible. It needs a whole rocket (100M$ recurring cost) 5% bigger, plus a new design (many G$).
In fact, a flexible approach would let most payloads fly with normal RP-1. Sometimes a payload will need just more than the launcher's capacity, and only this customer pays Boctane up to the difference between a 5t and a 10t launcher. This means smaller and irregular amounts of Boctane, but sold for much money.
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Rocket's RP-1
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/RP-1 is cheap. Not as cheap as kerosene, because components that would make bubbles or gums at heat (when it flows in the combustion chamber's cooling channels) have been removed - among several other demands.
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So, cost would mean, a few times a year:
- Produce
two trucks of Boctane for well under 3M$, or
-
Eight trucks for well under 5M$-----
Does it make sense to
start with cyclobutane, as it seems available from petroleum, and connect two rings?
I vaguely imagine it could react with a bit of chlorine diluted in nitrogen or argon, possibly at room temperature and aided with light, to produce chlorocyclobutane which must condensate more easily than cyclobutane and chlorine.
Then, I figure diluted chlorocyclobutane would be brought to react with cyclobutane - did I read AlCl
3 catalyses this reaction?