Velocity of detonation of Non-Ideal explosives: investigating the influence of confinement

International Society of Explosives Engineers
Organization:
International Society of Explosives Engineers
Pages:
11
File Size:
192 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 2007

Abstract

The VoD of non-ideal explosives depends on the charge diameter and the thickness, strength and sound velocity of the confiner. VoD measurements are made to evaluate explosives for development, quality control and prediction of field performance. In testing, the container is part of the explosive system and affects the measured VoD. Pipe testing in cardboard tubes delivers the best guide to unconfined critical diameter and minimum VoD range, but the thickness of the pipes affects the result close to critical diameter, even in emulsions. PVC pipes are not good for unconfined test work because they provide relatively strong confinement. Care must be taken to select pipes with constant relative pipe area across the range of diameters. Where pipes are used to evaluate the effect of confinement, the ratio of the wall thickness relative to the thickness of the detonation driving zone in the explosive needs to exceed 0.5 to create full confinement and the ratio of the detonation velocity to the confiner wave speed must be considered. Estimates for critical thicknesses are provided from Non-Ideal detonation models. The relationship between confinement modulus and VoD is discussed and indexes are suggested for quantifying the explosive performance.
Citation

APA:  (2007)  Velocity of detonation of Non-Ideal explosives: investigating the influence of confinement

MLA: Velocity of detonation of Non-Ideal explosives: investigating the influence of confinement. International Society of Explosives Engineers, 2007.

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