Determining Explosivity Part II: Comparison of Small-Scale Cartridge Tests to Actual Pipe Bombs
- 1 September 2001
- journal article
- other
- Published by ASTM International in Journal of Forensic Sciences
- Vol. 46 (5) , 1070-1075
- https://doi.org/10.1520/jfs15100j
Abstract
The small-scale explosivity device (SSED) has been used to assess the explosive power of a number of low explosives—smokeless powders (WC-870, Red Dot, Bullseye, Winchester Action Pistol, and IMR-PB), Pyrodex, black powder, and an improvised explosive (TATP). The device requires 2 g of energetic material, a heavy-walled containment vessel, and a standard blast shield to permit use in most laboratories. The data from the SSED are compared with the fragmentation of pipe bombs which contained 300 to 700 g of powder. The SSED provided the same relative ordering of explosivity as suggested by the fragmentation of the real devices. In addition, the SSED was used to evaluate the chemical residue remaining after an explosion. Issues in using the device such as optimal detonators and restricted reaction volume were probed using three high explosives—TNT, Tetryl, and RDX.Keywords
This publication has 3 references indexed in Scilit:
- Improvised Explosive Devices: Pipe BombsJournal of Forensic Sciences, 2001
- Small-scale explosivity testingJournal of Energetic Materials, 1999
- Cartridge case deformation testJournal of Energetic Materials, 1998