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by topaz0 258 days ago
You're probably thinking of NO2, which is indeed a pollutant that results from overly hot combustion in air. N2O is in fact used in engines, but it is not the fuel -- rather it is a supplementary oxidizer, which allows you to burn more fuel and therefore produce more power than you could if you only had the oxygen from air. At any rate, that means using N2O won't be a solution to the aircraft fuel problem -- you'd still need a combustible fuel for it to oxidize.
2 comments

You are correct that N2O is the "nitro" afterburner used in different systems.

But the reaction 2 N2O => 2 N2 + O2 is very exothermic, in fact it is explosive (but not in the burning sense, since its autodecomposition). However adding a small amount of ethanol makes N2O stable so that sudden shocks or compressions don't result in initiating autodecomposition or explosion.

To power an engine one doesn't necessarily need to burn, or a redox reaction to happen, the reaction just needs to be exothermic and N2O is very exothermic.

I stand corrected.
Damn, yes, I mixed those up.