I know hydrazine has been and is used, as well by Proton in big amounts. But everyone wants to go away from it, because the fuel's toxicity matters an awful lot, not just the exhaust. And again, density isn't so important at a launcher, that's why hydrogen is the very best of all fuels for performance. So much that Delta uses it at the first stage.
If not hydrogen, the natural choice is RP-1 or RG-1, usually called kerosene. Practically as efficient as hydrazine, but nontoxic and nonflammable, which changes everything at the launch operations and the induced cost.
Instead of Penner's claims, you could make your own opinion. By the way, 5% more specific impulse would be 15s over RP-1 for instance, and this would be a greater improvement than any dreamed fuel achieves - an excellent reason why designers stick at the safe RP-1. But the advantage of oxygen+rekosene over solids is 40s, that's why solids are disregarded.
To compare: the recent and much improved Vega has 3 solid stages plus a small liquid stage just to reach the Low-Earth-Orbit, while Falcon and Zenit reach the higher Geosynchronous Transfer Orbit with two liquid stages. This does make a cost difference. And two light hydrogen stages would reach the geosynchronous orbit directly.
Rocket designers don't pay so much attention to hydrogen fraction or nitrogen-to-carbon. What matters is (1) Safety (2) Practical operation (3) Specific impulse. Once (1) and (2) are fulfilled, the way your achieve (3) is your matter and doesn't result directly from such ratios. But for sure, solids won't compete with liquid oxygen.
Liquids don't need to push as strongly as solids, because a liquid launcher is so much lighter. Vega puts ridiculous 1.7% of its start mass on LEO, Falcon 2.6%, Delta IV M 3.8% thanks to hydrogen.
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Again, I have no desire to use a monopropellant as the main propellant. They are far too bad.
Only at the auxiliary flux that drives the turbopump.
The aerospike doesn't gain that much, and simpler methods are nearly as good.
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How to add compounds in Propellant.dat: look at the examples. Remember the units: cal/g and LB/in
3.
Propep is historically an Ms-Dos programme (and even older than Dos supposedly), on which graphical interfaces were added. Mine is Cpropepshell found there (seems 404)
www.dark.dk/downloadseems to be here now
http://users.cybercity.dk/~dko7904/cpropepshell/cpropepshell.htmbut others are good as well, like Guipep
http://www.lekstutis.com/Artie/PEP/http://www.lekstutis.com/Artie/PEP/GuiPep.ziphttp://www.ibiblio.org/pub/archives/rec.models.rockets/PROGRAMS