I cannot seem to find any solid research done on utilizing micro black holes for pulse propulsion. I've read about using fission, thermonuclear, matter-antimatter, & antimatter-catalyzed fission/fusion explosions for pulse propulsion, but I would like to know if evaporating micro black holes can also be used for pulse propulsion, at least theoretically. I've searched Academic Search Complete, Wilson Select Plus, the NASA Technical Reports Server, ArXiv, & Google, but nothing's come up. The only thing I did find was apparently the idea was used in Star Trek (http://stexpanded.wikia.com/wiki/Black_hole_propulsion_drive), but ideally I'd like some academic/scientific sources to verify the idea's validity. I've created this thread if anyone has any information or would like to discuss this version of pulse propulsion.
Well, it's pretty cutting edge...there isn't a lot of literature on it...yet. It's an idea which I've written about quite a bit, but it depends upon knowing quite a great deal about microblackholes--how they evaporate, the rate at which they evaporate, nailing down the basic physics involved...etc.
There are some interesting papers available on ArXiv.org:
There are hundreds of papers on the subject of Black Hole evaporation, and many are really quite fascinating...once the new experiment comes on line at CERN, we may know a lot more about black hole evaporation once we begin to see actual events...
In order to even think in terms of a propulsion system, it will be necessary to nail down rates of evaporation versus energy of formation. If a black hole cannot be 'force fed' to bulk it up to microgram levels of mass, then the rate of power generation will probably not be sufficient to be useful for propulsion.
TRL (technology readiness level) is still Zero: basic principles have not even been demonstrated yet...
Actually it remains to be seen if micro black holes can be created at all. This is far from evident since they appear only in theories quite far beyond our current knowledge. So, until they are observed, we should treat them as highly speculative objects.