Shock Initiation of Solid Explosives

Abstract
Initiation phenomena in solid explosives produced by strong shock waves are described. Shock pressures in the explosive are between 20 and 200 kbar. It is demonstrated that in the usual case the shock wave travels not as an inert shock, but as a shock to which the explosive contributes energy, probably from reaction at voids and defects. This slightly reacting shock travels at increasing velocity for some distance, typically 1 cm in the experiments described, and then in a travel of perhaps 0.01 cm becomes full detonation, moving at full velocity. The increase to full detonation velocity occurs without overshoot. Experiments demonstrating the variation of sensitivity to shock with density, grain size, and other properties are discussed. The explosives studied are cyclotol B, TNT, plastic-bonded HMX, and nitromethane-carborundum mixtures.

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