Author Topic: Syntin for the second stage of Falcon 9?  (Read 28161 times)

Offline sdsds

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Re: Syntin for the second stage of Falcon 9?
« Reply #20 on: 03/11/2014 02:19 am »
As a 2009 point of reference, for 507,388 gallons of JP-10 (decane) and 11,350 gallons of PF-1 (priming fluid) the Defense Energy Support Center paid Dixie Chemical Company $10,355,053.
https://www.fbo.gov/index?id=411dccf10d9b778ec20da46b81c60c98
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Offline Lars_J

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Re: Syntin for the second stage of Falcon 9?
« Reply #21 on: 03/11/2014 03:35 am »
Syntin is not 'KISS'. It only provides a minimal performance boost. Therefore it won't happen.
Same with subcooling, which Musk suggests is likely?

One of these is not like the other.

Online LouScheffer

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Re: Syntin for the second stage of Falcon 9?
« Reply #22 on: 04/18/2016 12:20 am »
Seems like this might be worth considering again, now with new Falcon FT numbers.

Synthetic fuels 'syntin' or 'boctane' give about a 2% boost in ISP.  If used on something like the SES-9 mission (5.3t) and making normal assumptions  (111t fuel, 5t second stage mass), then upping the ISP from 348 to 355 gives about 170 m/s more.  Plus with higher density you might be able to cram more in (though I've seen nothing about sub-cooling it.)

This would be enough to make SES-9 a routine landing.  At cutoff, the booster is accelerating at about 4.2 Gs, or about 42 m/s.  So the extra ISP could let the booster burn for 4 seconds less.  Converting the 3 engine suicide slam (3 engines, 5 seconds) into a normal landing (33 sec of single engine) needs 18 seconds more engine time.  That's 2 seconds of the 9-engine booster firing.  Likewise the other 2 seconds could allow the re-entry burn (known to be marginal for SES-9) to be extended by 6 seconds.

Alternatively, Falcon 9 could boost a 5.8t satellite with minimal margins like it had on SES-9.

Of course one of the main reasons against such a proposal is the expense of the synthetic fuel.  The Falcon-9 FT has about 32,000 kg of RP-1.  At $100/kg it would be $3.2M, perhaps worth it if it enables you to recover a stage.  At $1000/kg it's $32M, almost surely too much.  The exact cost cutoff is unclear.  However, Atlas was looking to use boctane for the first stage, so it can't be ridiculously expensive.  reference.

Offline Robotbeat

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Re: Syntin for the second stage of Falcon 9?
« Reply #23 on: 04/18/2016 12:30 am »
Or just use a Raptor upper stage...
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Offline gospacex

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Re: Syntin for the second stage of Falcon 9?
« Reply #25 on: 04/18/2016 04:43 pm »
Or just use a Raptor upper stage...

Exactly, Methane will be a much greater performance improvement than tinkering with RP1.

SpaceX has what they are going to use for a few year to come.  The current configuration is 'good enough'.

The Merlin US is the best they can do at the time and deliveries the payloads they have booked. 

SpaceX needs to ramp up flight rate, increase revenue, grow market share much more than they need to improve US performance.
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Offline savuporo

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Re: Syntin for the second stage of Falcon 9?
« Reply #26 on: 04/18/2016 08:48 pm »
Nothing wrong with some theoretical rocket tuning. How about NOS injection paired with some Go Fast stickers? ;)
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Offline nicp

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Re: Syntin for the second stage of Falcon 9?
« Reply #27 on: 04/12/2017 08:52 pm »
I was about to post a question re Falcon 9 and syntin. But I was thinking the first stage.
Previous comments suggest syntin is too expensive, a non-starter.
Is it dead?

And given the density difference, does that affect turbopump design?
Which I think would kill it.
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Offline go4mars

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Re: Syntin for the second stage of Falcon 9?
« Reply #28 on: 04/13/2017 03:09 am »
Chemists talking about it:

http://www.chemicalforums.com/index.php?PHPSESSID=042724659af47dc60cb2ddb8ed62ce5e&topic=50579.15
Thank you!
The obvious question is 'why does it cost so much and can the price drop?'.
These chemists shed some light on that.

Perhaps the price can drop, but it doesn't seem straightforward yet to me. 
I my point in the journey I would lean toward trying methane or hydrosilicons.  Maybe hydrogen.
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Offline russianhalo117

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Re: Syntin for the second stage of Falcon 9?
« Reply #29 on: 04/13/2017 05:10 am »
Chemists talking about it:

http://www.chemicalforums.com/index.php?PHPSESSID=042724659af47dc60cb2ddb8ed62ce5e&topic=50579.15
Thank you!
The obvious question is 'why does it cost so much and can the price drop?'.
These chemists shed some light on that.

Perhaps the price can drop, but it doesn't seem straightforward yet to me. 
I my point in the journey I would lean toward trying methane or hydrosilicons.  Maybe hydrogen.
because its synthesized fuel which requires lots of energy to make. If everyone used it like synthetic oil. It would be much cheaper.

Online TomH

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Re: Syntin for the second stage of Falcon 9?
« Reply #30 on: 04/13/2017 06:04 am »
Going back to Jim's comment on heating the RP-1 on the S2, how hot would you heat it? How much would it expand? What % specific energy would you gain?

Offline Steven Pietrobon

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Re: Syntin for the second stage of Falcon 9?
« Reply #31 on: 04/13/2017 08:13 am »
Here's an article on biosynthesis of Pinene. It has the same chemical composition as Syntin (C10H16), but is denser, 0.858 kg/L for Alpha-Pinene and 0.859 kg/L for Beta-Pinene compared with 0.851 kg/L for Syntin.

http://www.popsci.com.au/tech/aerospace/missiles-and-rockets-might-soon-smell-like-pine-trees,382230
« Last Edit: 04/13/2017 08:39 am by Steven Pietrobon »
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Offline Proponent

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Re: Syntin for the second stage of Falcon 9?
« Reply #32 on: 04/13/2017 11:17 am »
Chemists talking about it:

http://www.chemicalforums.com/index.php?PHPSESSID=042724659af47dc60cb2ddb8ed62ce5e&topic=50579.15

Unless I'm missing mention of syntin, that thread is about boctane (aka bicyclo[3.3.0]octane).

Offline spacenut

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Re: Syntin for the second stage of Falcon 9?
« Reply #33 on: 04/13/2017 01:19 pm »
Seems like SpaceX has about tweeked out the F9/FH without going to something like syntin or boctane,  Better yet like Robotbeat said, a Raptor based second stage, would greatly increase the capabilities of F9/FH.  This along with a stretch or a slightly larger fairing.  F9/FH first stage is small but very powerful.  Not much room for improvement there.  The synthetic fuels would add cost, but their costs would still be less than other's.  IF, they don't have to make too many modifications to Merlin. 

Offline karanfildavut

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Re: Syntin for the second stage of Falcon 9?
« Reply #34 on: 04/14/2017 02:33 pm »
As a Ph.D. organic chemist I usually don't get to contribute much, but since this is a topic that touches on my expertise I'll share my 0.02$

Syntin is definitely a non-starter for SpaceX. Currently RP-1 is highly processed petroleum for which substantial facilities (cracking, fractional distillation, desulfurization, dearomatization) exist. Thus, the production of RP-1 leverages the current infrastructure. Similarly, methane has a production and distribution network absent rocket use, that can then be leveraged for spacefaring systems.

In contrast syntin currently has no kiloton scale production capability worldwide. The cost and effort to set one up for exclusive SpaceX use would run, based on comparison for a simple ethylene plant, into the $1-3 billion of dollar range. SpaceX would also not be able to leverage any of the ancillary petroleum know-how in setting this up, making it even more costly.

Next, the cost of starting materials will likely be prohibitive. Gasoline is cheaper than dirt cheap when it comes to chemicals. Most intermediate chemicals (such as the starting material of syntin) come at a cost in the range 10-100 cents per gram. Apply that to kiloton scale and suddenly fuel would become your primary cost driver. To add to this, the current route uses aluminum tri(t-butoxide) and hydrazine, both of which require special handling due to pyrophoricity of the former and extreme toxicity of the latter. There is absolutely no way syntin ever gets made on rocket fuel scale unless a) the government pays for it or b) some high-volume use outside of rocket fuel can be found.

Given SpaceX's future choice of fuel is abundant, here and in space, has rocket-independent infrastructure associated with cost reductions, and does not present a toxicity hazard in its production, I cannot imagine SpaceX using boctane or syntin or any other specific hydrocarbon fuel. They're all just too damn expensive on the scale necessary for rockets.

Offline BobHk

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Re: Syntin for the second stage of Falcon 9?
« Reply #35 on: 04/14/2017 03:45 pm »
Or just use a Raptor upper stage...

Esp if you want to send a capsule to the moon...

Offline Jim

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Re: Syntin for the second stage of Falcon 9?
« Reply #36 on: 04/14/2017 04:54 pm »
Or just use a Raptor upper stage...

Can we just stop with this.  There is no such thing.

Online LouScheffer

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Re: Syntin for the second stage of Falcon 9?
« Reply #37 on: 04/15/2017 11:05 am »
Next, the cost of starting materials will likely be prohibitive. [...] Most intermediate chemicals (such as the starting material of syntin) come at a cost in the range 10-100 cents per gram. Apply that to kiloton scale and suddenly fuel would become your primary cost driver.

 I cannot imagine SpaceX using boctane or syntin or any other specific hydrocarbon fuel. They're all just too damn expensive on the scale necessary for rockets.
I agree with your conclusions about infrastructure and safety, but the sad part is that 10 cents per gram ($100 per kilogram) is not a high cost by rocket standards.  The second stage has something like 30 tonnes of fuel (the rest is LOX), which would be about $3M at this price.  That's only 5% of even a low cost launch, and about half the cost of the fairing, which all current provider throw away without a second thought.  If syntin could give you a 5% performance boost, it would even be worth it in dollars per kg.

This type of cost structure, which pertains to the second stage and the payload, explains a lot about the space industry.  Of course SpaceX is working hard to get out of this regime, another reason for not following this path.

Offline Proponent

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Re: Syntin for the second stage of Falcon 9?
« Reply #38 on: 04/15/2017 12:18 pm »
The attached paper, entitled "Synthetic Hydrocarbon Rocket Fuels (Ways of lowering the cost of syntin)," may be of interest.  The catch is that it is in Russian, but the numerous chemical diagrams will be intelligible to any chemist, and there is a brief abstract in English at the very end.

Offline Kaputnik

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Re: Syntin for the second stage of Falcon 9?
« Reply #39 on: 04/15/2017 01:23 pm »
Next, the cost of starting materials will likely be prohibitive. [...] Most intermediate chemicals (such as the starting material of syntin) come at a cost in the range 10-100 cents per gram. Apply that to kiloton scale and suddenly fuel would become your primary cost driver.

 I cannot imagine SpaceX using boctane or syntin or any other specific hydrocarbon fuel. They're all just too damn expensive on the scale necessary for rockets.
I agree with your conclusions about infrastructure and safety, but the sad part is that 10 cents per gram ($100 per kilogram) is not a high cost by rocket standards.  The second stage has something like 30 tonnes of fuel (the rest is LOX), which would be about $3M at this price.  That's only 5% of even a low cost launch, and about half the cost of the fairing, which all current provider throw away without a second thought.  If syntin could give you a 5% performance boost, it would even be worth it in dollars per kg.

This type of cost structure, which pertains to the second stage and the payload, explains a lot about the space industry.  Of course SpaceX is working hard to get out of this regime, another reason for not following this path.


That makes $3m the lowest bound. According to karanfildavut's numbers, it could also be up to $30m, and that is just for the basic ingredients to start the production. You still have to process it, and pay for all of the facilities and handling and any additional materials, as well as disposal of any byproducts. Then you have to amortise the cost of setting up the infrastructure- unless you can persuade someone else to pay for that.

Seems pretty clear that CH4 is a far better long term bet.
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