An alternative to melting:
Recrystallized Potassium Nitrate and Sugar |
Please note that I NO LONGER USE the oven method presented here. The skillet method is better.
If you do this start with small batches.
Large batches are more difficult, more dangerous, and often wasteful as the first batch or two may not turn out right.
The Propellant
Blessings of Recrystallized KNO3/Sucrose
I like this kind of propellant especially because it is non-toxic. It consists of a food additive and a fertilizer. Thus I don't have to worry a lot about handling it or dropping bits in the yard. Potassium nitrate is used as a meat preserver in making sausage, and as a medicine as well. In my adolescence I obtained KNO3 from a drugstore, where the bottles indicated that one should take 1/4 teaspoon dissolved in water, as a diuretic. I also found some in a butcher shop where it was used in making sausage. And I just noticed that my tube of toothpaste includes KNO3 as a desensitizing agent. Thus one should not have to worry about moderate contact, and even ingesting small amounts of it should not cause immediate harm to most individuals. Looking at a bag of Peter's Special liquid-feed fertilizer, I note that Potassium Nitrate is the first item on the list. Plants love it.
Cautions on KNO3:
Other good things about Rcandy:
Curses
1. I do not like the fact that this propellant is hygroscopic, absorbing moisture from the air. It must be sealed against air or it will be rendered useless in a short time, especially in Florida, where 90 percent humidity is considered low. In a way, this is a safety factor, as little bits dropped here and there will not be flammable for long. They will soon become fluid, revert to the earth, and the plants will eat it up.
2. This propellant is somewhat brittle, thus it must be arranged in the rocket motor so that it does not break or crack during handling or upon firing. Fears include that case-bonded grains may crack if the case expands, and that Bates-type grains may slam against each other. There has been some concern expressed about shear forces caused by extreme acceleration breaking off pieces which clog the nozzle. Conservative engine design can compensate for this limitation, but it may restrict the options for grain geometry.
3. This propellant has lower ISP than some other propellants, notably composites.
4. It produces very little visible flame when fired in an engine. This is mostly an aesthetic problem - many would like to see a brilliant white or colored flame as the rocket streaks skyward. I have yet to find an additive that creates a "tail" of visible flame or sparks. Dennis Welch reports that titanium creates a nice tail, but I have yet to try this myself.
5. Making propellant by this method requires the use of an oven, normally found in the kitchen. Warning! This may jeopardize domestic tranquility!
A little good news: I have recently made half-batches of
rcandy in my toaster-oven, using a suitably-sized Pyrex baking dish.
So if you are not ready to spring for a an oven in your workshop, this
might provide a good way to get started.
Safety: | You MUST read the safety page before making this propellant! Click
here.
And don't come back until you have read it all! |
The Recipe
Photos in this document are thumbnails - clicking on one will call up
a larger version of that picture.
Hit your Back button to return to this page.
Click here to read a rambling narrative text-only version of this recipe.
The ingredients:
100g KNO3 (aka: potassium nitrate, saltpeter)
50g sucrose (aka: white sugar, cane sugar, beet sugar also works) 18g light corn syrup (Karo Syrup is the standard brand here.) 5 tablespoons water = 80ml =1/3 cup |
No Karo?
No Problem!
Use a little Dextrose and Fructose instead. |
Equipment includes:
- 2 Pyrex glass pie-pans, "9-inch" nominal diameter
- 2 stoneware or glass plates that fit nicely on top of the Pyrex pie-pans,
thus serving as covers.
- Small saucepan - I prefer stainless or enameled steel, but see no
reason why other pans should not work.
- Triple-beam or another scale accurate to a gram or better and capable
of weighing 100 grams or more.
- Table knife and spoon, fork is optional.
- Measuring spoons or measuring cup
- Oven, preheated to 300 degrees F. (150 celsius)
- Pot holders or some other hot-pan-grabber.
- 35mm film cans, or other small containers that will seal air-tight
and won't fragment if burst. I have never had a spontaneous ignition
with this propellant, but you never know...
Protective equipment is required. I recommend using a full-face shield, a heavy apron, long-sleeved shirt, and flash-resistant gloves. These must be worn at certain phases of production.
Fire-control equipment is also necessary. Hopefully you won't ever need it, but just in case, you had better have it.
KNO3
I normally weigh a small pan, then calculate the added weight for each component and add it. The pan weighs 251 grams. |
So I set the scale at 351 grams and add KNO3 until it balances |
Now I set the scale at 406.0g and add sugar. |
More sugar...finally it balances. |
Now a little corn syrup. I have never used this brand (Roddenberry's) before but it worked just fine. Tastes pretty good too. |
A finger is a very useful thing. I use mine to determine when the scale is about to come into balance so I don't pour in too much sticky syrup. |
Pan goes on the fire. This is a moderate danger
point. It's hard to see it the photos, but there is a medium-heat
flame under the pan. Note the two different cookers. Both work.
Sometimes I have used a plug-in hotplate, which works great. I am
sure it could be done over a campfire in a pinch. It is not
critical how you heat the pot as long as the KNO3 and sugar get dissolved.
It IS critical that you observe and do not allow this to boil over or to
cook dry!
Finally, all of the solids are dissolved, the mixture turns clear. Five minutes can seem so long, but this IS a watched pot.
Roughly half goes into each pan. Seems like I should have to measure here to make sure each pan gets exactly half, but small discrepancies don't make much difference. And I like to pour it out quickly, for fear that the skin which forms so readily would stick in whatever measuring vessel I might use, unbalancing the mix.
Pans after 10 minutes. Just beginning to bubble up.
Pans after 25 minutes. Bubbles are well-formed. There is
still some liquid in the middle of each pan.
Pans after 35 minutes. No liquid is apparent, but the flakes
and bubbles are all still bluish-white.
Pans at 40 minutes, and about done. The color of the mixture
has subtly changed from bluish-white to light ivory. This does not
show in the photos. Again note that the amber color of the rear-left
pan is an illusion - they are both the same color, more like the front-right
pan..
Note that the mixture is NOT STIRRED until it is completely cooked. Breaking up the bubbles prematurely will inhibit evaporation of the water, making for a very slow process from that point on. So don't stir this mixture until it has passed the snap-test described below.
At 45 minutes, a pan is removed from the oven, and a small sample is
taken.
It is rolled into a pea-sized ball, pressed flat on a cool, dry surface and allowed to harden until cooled, perhaps 20 seconds. The pan is returned to the oven while the sample cools.
The cooled sample is bent in half. If the sample bends over without breaking, the mixture is too moist and should be cooked a bit longer. Sample every 3 minutes or so until it snaps cleanly when bent.
(Time-warp: more recently I have found that a good texture can be achieved by leaving a bit of moisture in the mix. If the cooled sample is stiffly flexible, it may be OK. This might reduce the brittleness of the resulting propellant, but that has yet to be determined.)
In this case, I took the pans out of the oven just in time. The cooled sample snapped cleanly, indicating proper texture. In fact it was a little grainy, almost too dry. Five more minutes and I would have needed to rescue it. *
* To rescue, add 1 tsp of water to each pan, cover with a stoneware plate, and return to the oven for 15 minutes, then test. Contunue cooking and repeating the testing procedure until proper texture is achieved.
Once the mix passes the snap-test it is done and should be processed
immediately. Time to scrape it up. This is a danger-point at
which you should put on all your protective equipment. I have never had
an accidental ignition with this propellant, but keep thinking that if
these loose flakes were to happen to catch fire, they would fly all over,
causing lots of excitement.
The flakes in each pan are scraped up, and both combined in one pan.
I use a strong tablespoon to press, stir, and knead the flakes until
they begin to consolidate. They may resist sticking together at first.
Persist. Unless you have cooked it too dry, it will stick eventually.
Another new trick: Mound up the flakes and tap on the pile using a wooden or plastic mallet. This will encourage them to consolidate with much less effort than simply stirring and pressing.
After a minute or two of cooling, the propellant is rather hot but
it can be handled lightly. I am tossing it from one hand to the other
to maintain good relations with my nerve cells.
Here I am breaking off a small sample to roll into a stick. Note
the board covered in denim. Smooth cloth makes an excellent rolling
surface for this propellant.
You can roll this into nice sticks, just like clay. It will harden
as you roll, allowing precise hand-forming.
Patting the lump down so that I can cover it with a plate. This
lets me keep it warm and soft a bit longer. The oven temp is reduced
to 200 degrees Farenheit (93 degrees celsuis.) The propellant can
be kept covered and soft at this temperature for a long time with no degradation.
An alternative to patting it down by hand: Put it in a food-processor! This must be done outside, or in a very safe place. I plug the food-processor into an unplugged drop-cord, turn it on, then plug the cord into an outlet from a safe distance. I have yet to experience an accidental ignition, but there is always a chance.
After about 1 minute, the propellant makes a ball that goes 'round and 'round. The wetter batches will make a slurry that never balls-up, but whenever I am satisfied that it is well-blended, I unplug the machine and take out the propellant. It is usually rolled into smaller balls which are allowed to cool and placed in a tight container.
I always save out a piece to make into sticks for testing burn-rate.
A chunk of propellant is rolled by hand into a rod 1/4 inch in
diameter. A piece is cut exactly one inch long, and one end
ignited.. This configuration is called a "strand" of propellant.
Ignition does not really require a propane torch, it's just a good, stable
flame source that leaves one hand free to hold the strand, the other free
to hold the stopwatch..
I start my stop-watch the instant the strand ignites, and stop the watch
the instant it burns out. Since the rod will burn from one end to
the other, this provides a measure of its burn-rate in open air.
This sample burned one inch in 11 seconds, which is about average for a
light batch. Some batches burn 8 or 9 seconds per inch. It
will burn much faster under pressure, as in a rocket motor.
The stick has cooled, so I break it into pieces and put them in a film-can.
This propellant will keep for years if tightly sealed. I use these
1/4-inch diameter sticks for whizzers and
micro-rocket engines.
Be sure to label each container clearly, and store in a safe place.
Perhaps the most remarkable feature of this propellant is that can be re-heated and re-formed into most any shape. Placed in a 200 degree oven until heated through, it regains its putty-like texture and can be formed by hand like clay or pressed into a mold. Gentle hand-pressure is adequate to make it conform to the shape of a mold.
For example, I will make a propellant grain for a model-rocket sized
engine. This is a simple, cylindrical grain 5/8 inch in diameter
with a 1/8 inch perforation going all the way through the long way. It
is 1-1/8 inches long and weighs 10 grams. It is primed with a touch
of commercial FFFG black powder.
Cut off a chunk of about 10 grams or a little more.
Roll it into a cylinder about the size of your rocket-engine tube.
In this case, the tube is 5/8 inch inside diameter.
Sprinkle a pinch of 3F black powder on the rolling-board, then roll
the propellant pellet over it until the grains stick. If they won't
stick, put the propellant back in the oven at 200 degrees Farenheit (93
degrees celsuis) for a few minutes until it is soft again.
Make a hole through the middle of the propellant-charge, going the
long way. Make it big enough for your fuse to pass through.
Here I am using a bamboo skewer such as is sold for making shish-kebabs
or tempura. I use these sticks for so many things....
Now I try fitting the propellant grain into a 5/8 inch tube.
It is a bit too fat.
So I roll it again. It is a bit harder now, and so can be rolled
more precisely.
Didn't show you, but I weighed this pellet and found it to be over
12 grams. That will almost certainly burst the case, so I cut off
a bit with a sharp knife. It weighed 10.2 grams afterward.
Close enough.
Now it fits quite well, just slipping into the 5/8 inch tube.
Since I won't be using this grain right away, I will put in a film-can.
Along with the rest of this batch. Just make wads and slugs of propellant
that will fit into your containers, put them in warm, and seal them up.
Lay the cans on their sides while they cool. If you stand them on
end and the propellant runs down to the bottom and cools there, you will
have quite a time getting it out.
Jimmy Yawn
5/26/01
rev 2/16/08