monopropellants
Monopropellants are rocket propellants that consist of a single chemical species capable of producing thrust without an external oxidizer. In a monopropellant thruster, the propellant is introduced into a catalyst bed or heated section where it decomposes or oxidizes exothermically, generating hot gases that expand through a nozzle to provide propulsion. Thrust and operating conditions are controlled by feed rate, catalyst activity, and temperature; some designs allow restart and throttling by regulating the decomposition rate.
Common monopropellants include hydrogen peroxide at high concentrations (high-test peroxide, HTP), which decomposes catalytically to steam
Applications are most prominent in spacecraft propulsion for reaction control and attitude control systems, where simplicity,