TY - JOUR
T1 - Ignition-combustion mechanisms in insensitive HTPE propellants
T2 - Bridging thermal stability and flame dynamics
AU - Yao, Qifa
AU - Chen, Hanyu
AU - Yang, Wei
AU - Li, Dayong
AU - Geng, Zhishuai
AU - Yang, Fanzhi
AU - Luo, Yunjun
AU - Xia, Min
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2024
PY - 2026/2/15
Y1 - 2026/2/15
N2 - Hydroxyl-terminated polyether (HTPE)-based insensitive propellants exhibit unique combustion behaviors governed by their thermal stability and binder-phase dynamics. This study systematically investigates the ignition-combustion mechanisms of HTPE propellants through multi-scale characterization and modeling. Experimental results reveal that the HTPE binder forms a dynamic “liquid-phase lubricating layer” upon heating, delaying oxidizer decomposition and extending ignition delay times by an order of magnitude compared to conventional HTPB propellants. High-speed imaging and thermal analysis demonstrate that this layer modulates condensed-phase reactions, inducing cyclic Al particle agglomeration and stabilizing flame structures. The burning rate pressure index (0.337) aligns with composite propellant norms, confirming self-regulating combustion stability. A modified ignition delay model incorporating phase-change effects and a combustion framework integrating binder encapsulation dynamics further elucidate how HTPE's phase change decomposition behavior governs oxidizer gasification and flame propagation. These findings establish new insights into designing thermally stable, low-sensitivity propellants with tunable combustion performance.
AB - Hydroxyl-terminated polyether (HTPE)-based insensitive propellants exhibit unique combustion behaviors governed by their thermal stability and binder-phase dynamics. This study systematically investigates the ignition-combustion mechanisms of HTPE propellants through multi-scale characterization and modeling. Experimental results reveal that the HTPE binder forms a dynamic “liquid-phase lubricating layer” upon heating, delaying oxidizer decomposition and extending ignition delay times by an order of magnitude compared to conventional HTPB propellants. High-speed imaging and thermal analysis demonstrate that this layer modulates condensed-phase reactions, inducing cyclic Al particle agglomeration and stabilizing flame structures. The burning rate pressure index (0.337) aligns with composite propellant norms, confirming self-regulating combustion stability. A modified ignition delay model incorporating phase-change effects and a combustion framework integrating binder encapsulation dynamics further elucidate how HTPE's phase change decomposition behavior governs oxidizer gasification and flame propagation. These findings establish new insights into designing thermally stable, low-sensitivity propellants with tunable combustion performance.
KW - HTPE binder
KW - HTPE propellants
KW - Ignition-combustion mechanisms
KW - Ignition-combustion models
KW - Thermoplastic polyurethane
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/105029079706
U2 - 10.1016/j.cej.2026.173527
DO - 10.1016/j.cej.2026.173527
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:105029079706
SN - 1385-8947
VL - 530
JO - Chemical Engineering Journal
JF - Chemical Engineering Journal
M1 - 173527
ER -