- List of stoffs
During
World War II ,Germany fielded manyaircraft androcket s whose fuels were designated (letter)-"Stoff".In German, "Stoff" means roughly the same thing as English "material", and like the ubiquitous English noun "stuff" derives ultimately from the Old French word estoffe (meaning cloth or material). Stoff has as broad a range of meanings, ranging from "chemical substance" to "cloth", depending on the context. It was used in chemical
code name s in bothWorld War I and World War II. Some code names were reused between the wars and had different meanings at different times; for example, T-Stoff meant a rocket propellant in World War II, but a tear gas (xylyl bromide ) in World War I. Currently, this list refers only to the World War II, aerospace meanings.List of stoffs
*
A-Stoff - liquidoxygen (LOX )
*B-Stoff -hydrazine orethanol /water, (used in the V-2)
*Br-Stoff -Ligroin extracted from crudegasoline
*C-Stoff -methanol /hydrazine /water
*K-Stoff -methyl chloroformate
*M-Stoff - methanol
*N-Stoff -chlorine trifluoride
*R-Stoff -monoxylidene oxide /triethylamine
*S-Stoff -nitric acid /sulfuric acid or nitric acid/ferric chloride
*SV-Stoff - nitric acid/sulfuric acid or nitric acid/dinitrogen tetroxide
*T-Stoff -hydrogen peroxide , used ashypergolic oxidizer with C-Stoff
*Z-Stoff -sodium permanganate /potassium permanganate External links
* [http://www.warbirdsresourcegroup.org/LRG/fuels.html Fuels Used By German Rocket Engines]
*IBWiki, [http://ib.frath.net/w/index.php?title=Rocket_Fuels&oldid=28907 Rocket fuels]
*de icon [http://www.luftwaffen-projekte.de/lwp/rlm/rlm.htm Die Tarnummern des Reichsluftfahrtministeriums]
*Daniel Green, [http://www.ww2guide.com/missiles.shtml Missiles Guided Weapons World War II]
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