Titanium Nanoparticles on Reduced Boron Nanoparticles for Enhanced Combustion and Propulsion Performance in Hypersonic Fuel Systems

  • Zambaga Otgonbayar
  • , Jungchul Noh
  • , Suk Jekal
  • , Minki Sa
  • , Jiwon Kim
  • , Hyung Sub Sim
  • , Sungwook Leo Hong
  • , Jeonghun Kim
  • , Myeongjin Kim
  • , Chang Min Yoon

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

1 Scopus citations

Abstract

This study introduces a dual strategy combining oxide-layer reduction and physical mixing with ignition promoters to enhance the combustion performance of boron-based nanoadditive for scramjet engine fuels. Oxide-layer-reduced boron nanoparticles were functionalized with a silane layer to improve their dispersion stability in hydrocarbon fuels. To further accelerate ignition and exothermic reactivity, titanium nanoparticles (TNs) were physically integrated with silane-coated reduced boron nanoparticles (SRBNs), enabling a tunable composite system without altering the individual particle functionality. Compared with bare boron, the optimized SRBN–TN formulations exhibited significantly enhanced combustion characteristics, including shortened combustion time, higher peak temperatures, and increased calorific output. Thermal analysis and high-speed droplet combustion imaging confirmed that the synergistic effect of silane coating and TN-induced ignition promoted faster and more complete combustion with reduced soot formation. These findings highlight the advantage of integrating surface-functionalized boron with ignition-promoting metals as a practical and scalable approach for developing high-performance energetic nanoadditive in advanced propulsion systems.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)16476-16489
Number of pages14
JournalACS Applied Nano Materials
Volume8
Issue number33
DOIs
StatePublished - 22 Aug 2025

Keywords

  • boron nanoparticles
  • dispersion stability
  • hydrocarbon fuel
  • ignition promoter
  • microexplosion
  • nanoadditive
  • silane coating

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