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Liquid Bottle Rocket

by Even Steven


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How to make a liquid bottle rocket from everyday items.

ENJOY!!!

Materials:

  • Plastic 2 liter soda pop bottle
  • Spray mist bottle
  • Model rocket igniters
  • Model rocket launch pad with electric control
  • Fat soda straw
  • Lighter fluid (naptha)
  • Masking tape
  • Hammer
  • Fat nail 1/8" in diameter
  • Wood block

Refer to cautions in the discussion section.

Procedure:

  1. Remove the plastic flat bottom from the 2 liter bottle. The black plastic is glued on and can be removed by pulling it off. It may be helpful to use scissors to cut it a bit in order to get a grip. Do not puncture the bottle.
  2. Tape the plastic, non-bendable soda straw along the side of the bottle to form a launch lug like those used in model rockets.
  3. Remove the bottle cap and pound a nail hole from the inside to form a rocket nozzle. Use the wood block as a surface to hammer into. The hole should be about 1/8" in diameter.
  4. Set up the launch pad in an open area about the size of a back yard.
  5. Transfer enough lighter fluid from the container to the spray mist bottle to enable the bottle to work. Spray the lighter fluid a few times Into the air away from open flame or other ignition sources to get a uniform spray.
  6. Remove the bottle cap and spray lighter fluid 1 or 2 times (no more) into the bottle. Replace the cap and thread the bottle's straw with the launch pad's launch rod.
  7. Insert an electric igniter into the nozzle so that the igniter head enters the chamber where the lighter fluid mist is. Be careful not to squeeze the igniter wires together to cause a short circuit, premature ignition, and perhaps burns. Normally, the plastic liner of the cap is sufficient to prevent short circuits with the cap metal.
  8. Do a brief countdown and ignite the rocket. Use a second rocket if you wish to have another flight. The first rocket needs time for fresh air to replace residual combustion gasses.

Upon ignition, the liquid propellant bottle rocket rises about 15 to 20 feet into the air with a very audible whoosh from the rocket's exhaust. Because the lighter fluid or naptha has been converted into a fine spray, much of the fluid in the bottle ignites immediately. Each tiny droplet of naptha provides a large burning surface for its volume consequently making ignition much more rapid than would have taken place if large drops of naptha were ignited.

The liquid propelled space rocket works on this very principle. Liquid propellants from tanks inside the rocket casing are pumped to the combustion chamber of the engine. Injectors, the rocket equivalent of shower spray nozzles, spray combustible mixtures of the propellants into the chamber where they are ignited. The rapid burning of the spray produces high gas pressure inside the chamber because of the expansion of the gas products during combustion. The expanded gas escapes through the engine nozzle and creates a powerful thrust.

The liquid propelled bottle rocket rises quickly off the launch pad to an altitude of as much as 20 feet before drag with the air produces a tumbling motion and stops its upward progress. After the first flight the bottle is crumpled because the plastic is heated, but not burned through, by the combustion inside. Cool outside air cannot flow back into the bottle as quickly as the combustion products that left through the nozzle. Outside air pressure squeezes the bottle and creates permanent dents. The bottle is still usable for several flights because additional ignitions reshape the bottle as pressure inside increases.

Caution: As with any demonstration involving fire, be careful to keep away from the rocket a safe distance before igniting it. A distance of 10 feet is sufficient. Do not over pressurize the bottle by spraying more than 2 times per launch or experimenting with smaller diameter nozzle holes. If the rocket does over pressurize, the aluminum bottle cap will be blown off the bottle downward with a startling sound. The bottle itself is surprisingly strong. Discard the rocket and make a new one.

 
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