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The Effects of Containment on Detonation Velocity
Author(s) -
Souers P. Clark,
Vitello Peter,
Esen Sedat,
Kruttschnitt Julius,
Bilgin H. A.
Publication year - 2004
Publication title -
propellants, explosives, pyrotechnics
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.56
H-Index - 65
eISSN - 1521-4087
pISSN - 0721-3115
DOI - 10.1002/prep.200400028
Subject(s) - detonation , explosive material , detonation velocity , mechanics , radius , shock (circulatory) , cylinder , overpressure , materials science , shock wave , deflagration to detonation transition , jump , physics , chemistry , geometry , thermodynamics , mathematics , medicine , computer security , organic chemistry , computer science , quantum mechanics
Reactive flow cylinder code runs on six explosives were made with rate constants varying from 0.03 to 70 μs −1 . Six unconfined/steel sets of original ANFO and dynamite data are presented. A means of comparing confinement effects both at constant radius and at constant detonation velocity is presented. Calculations show two qualitatively different modes of behavior. For U s / C o ≥1.2, where U s is the detonation velocity and C o the zero‐pressure sound speed in steel, we find a sharp shock wave in the metal. The shock passes through the steel and the outer wall has a velocity jump‐off. For U s / C o ≤1.04, we find a pressure gradient that moves at the detonation velocity. A precursor pulse drives in the explosive ahead of the detonation front. The outer wall begins to move outward at the same time the shock arrives in the explosive, and the outer wall slowly and continuously increases in velocity. The U s / C o ≥1.2 cylinders saturate in detonation velocity for thick walls but the U s / C o <<1.04 case does not. The unconfined cylinder shows an edge lag in the front that approximately equals the reaction zone length, but the highly confined detonation front is straight and contains no reaction zone information. The wall thickness divided by the reaction zone length yields a dimensionless wall thickness, which allows comparison of explosives with different detonation rates. Even so, a rate effect is found in the detonation velocities, which amounts to the inverse 0.15–0.5 power.