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Shock-induced explosive chemistry in a deterministic sample configuration.
Author(s) -
John N. Stuecker,
Jaime N. Castañeda,
Wayne M. Trott,
M.R. Baer,
Alexander S. Tappan
Publication year - 2005
Publication title -
osti oai (u.s. department of energy office of scientific and technical information)
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Reports
DOI - 10.2172/875610
Subject(s) - explosive material , inert , nitromethane , shock wave , mechanics , computer simulation , shock (circulatory) , materials science , matrix (chemical analysis) , sample (material) , physics , chemistry , thermodynamics , composite material , medicine , organic chemistry , quantum mechanics
Explosive initiation and energy release have been studied in two sample geometries designed to minimize stochastic behavior in shock-loading experiments. These sample concepts include a design with explosive material occupying the hole locations of a close-packed bed of inert spheres and a design that utilizes infiltration of a liquid explosive into a well-defined inert matrix. Wave profiles transmitted by these samples in gas-gun impact experiments have been characterized by both velocity interferometry diagnostics and three-dimensional numerical simulations. Highly organized wave structures associated with the characteristic length scales of the deterministic samples have been observed. Initiation and reaction growth in an inert matrix filled with sensitized nitromethane (a homogeneous explosive material) result in wave profiles similar to those observed with heterogeneous explosives. Comparison of experimental and numerical results indicates that energetic material studies in deterministic sample geometries can provide an important new tool for validation of models of energy release in numerical simulations of explosive initiation and performance

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