Explosive
An explosive is a reactive substance that contains a great amount of potential energy that can produce an explosion if released suddenly, usually accompanied by the production of light, heat, sound, and pressure. An explosive charge is a measured quantity of explosive material. The material may either be composed solely of one ingredient or be a mixture containing at least two substances.
The potential energy stored in an explosive material may, for example, be:
- chemical energy, such as nitroglycerin or grain dust
- pressurized gas, such as a gas cylinder, aerosol can, or boiling liquid expanding vapor explosion
- nuclear energy, such as in the fissile isotopes uranium-235 and plutonium-239
A wide variety of chemicals can explode; only some are manufactured specifically for the purpose of being used as explosives. The remainders are too dangerous, sensitive, toxic, expensive, unstable, or prone to decomposition or degradation over short time spans.
In contrast, some materials are merely combustible or flammable if they burn without exploding. The distinction, however, is not always clear. Certain materials—dusts, powders, gases, or volatile organic liquids—may simply be combustible or flammable under ordinary conditions but become explosive in specific situations or forms, such as dispersed airborne clouds, or confinement or sudden release.
History
, such as Greek fire, have existed since ancient times. The history of chemical explosives is closely intertwined with the history of gunpowder. While searching for an elixir of eternal life, Taoist alchemists in China created the earliest form of gunpowder from coal, saltpeter, and sulfur. Gunpowder was the first form of chemical explosives, first seeing use in warfare in 1161. Early forms of explosives in warfare included bamboo firecrackers, which were explosives fired from bamboo or bronze tubes.The first explosive stronger than black powder to see widespread use was nitroglycerin, developed in 1847. Since nitroglycerin is a liquid and highly unstable, it was replaced by nitrocellulose and trinitrotoluene in 1863, smokeless powder and dynamite in 1867, and gelignite. World War I saw the adoption of TNT in artillery shells, while World War II saw extensive use of new explosives.
In modern weapons, these have largely been replaced by more powerful explosives such as C-4 and pentaerythritol tetranitrate, which are waterproof and malleable, though they may catch fire due to reactions with metals.
Applications
Classification
By energy source
Chemical
An explosion is a type of spontaneous chemical reaction that, once initiated, is driven by both a large exothermic change and a large positive entropy change in going from reactants to products, thereby constituting a thermodynamically favorable process that propagates very rapidly. Thus, explosives are substances that contain a large amount of energy stored in chemical bonds. The energetic stability of the gaseous products, and hence their generation, comes from the formation of strongly bonded species like carbon monoxide, carbon dioxide, and nitrogen gas, which contain strong double and triple bonds having bond strengths of nearly 1 MJ/mole. Consequently, most commercial explosives are organic compounds containing –NO2, –ONO2, and –NHNO2 groups that, when detonated, release gases like the aforementioned.Traditional explosives mechanics are based on the shock-sensitive rapid oxidation of carbon and hydrogen to carbon dioxide, carbon monoxide, and water in the form of steam. Nitrates typically provide the required oxygen to burn the carbon and hydrogen fuel. A sensitizer such as powdered aluminum may be added to an explosive to increase the energy of the detonation. Once detonated, the nitrogen portion of the explosive formulation emerges as nitrogen gas and toxic nitric oxides.
The chemical decomposition of an explosive may take years, days, hours, or a fraction of a second. The slower processes of decomposition take place in storage and are of interest only from a stability standpoint. Of more interest are the other two rapid forms besides decomposition: deflagration and detonation.
Nuclear
Exotic
In addition to chemical and nuclear explosives, there are more exotic explosive materials.By sensitivity
Primary
A primary explosive is an explosive that is extremely sensitive to stimuli such as impact, friction, heat, static electricity, or electromagnetic radiation. Some primary explosives are also known as contact explosives. A relatively small amount of energy is required for initiation. As a very general rule, primary explosives are considered to be those compounds that are more sensitive than PETN. As a practical measure, primary explosives are sufficiently sensitive that they can be reliably initiated with a blow from a hammer; however, PETN can also usually be initiated in this manner, so this is only a very broad guideline. Additionally, several compounds, such as nitrogen triiodide, are so sensitive that they cannot even be handled without detonating. Nitrogen triiodide is so sensitive that it can be reliably detonated by exposure to alpha radiation.Primary explosives are often used in detonators or to trigger larger charges of less sensitive secondary explosives. Primary explosives are commonly used in blasting caps and percussion caps to translate a physical shock signal. In other situations, different signals, such as electrical or physical shock, or, in the case of laser detonation systems, light, are used to initiate an action, i.e., an explosion. A small quantity, typically milligrams, is sufficient to initiate a larger charge of explosive that is usually safer to handle.
Examples of primary high explosives are:
- Acetone peroxide
- Alkali metal ozonides
- Ammonium permanganate
- Ammonium chlorate
- Azidotetrazolates
- Azoclathrates
- Benzoyl peroxide
- Benzvalene
- 3,5-Bistetrazole
- Chlorine oxides
- Copper acetylide
- Copper azide
- Cumene hydroperoxide
- Cyclopropenyl nitrate
- Cyanogen azide
- Cyanuric triazide
- Diacetyl peroxide
- 1-Diazidocarbamoyl-5-azidotetrazole
- Diazodinitrophenol
- Diazomethane
- Diethyl ether peroxide
- 4-Dimethylaminophenylpentazole
- Disulfur dinitride
- Ethyl azide
- Explosive antimony
- Fluorine perchlorate
- Fulminic acid
- Halogen azides:
- * Fluorine azide
- * Chlorine azide
- * Bromine azide
- * Iodine azide
- Hexamethylene triperoxide diamine
- Hydrazoic acid
- Hypofluorous acid
- Lead azide
- Lead styphnate
- Lead picrate
- Manganese heptoxide
- Mercury fulminate
- Mercury nitride
- Methyl ethyl ketone peroxide
- Nickel hydrazine nitrate
- Nickel hydrazine perchlorate
- Nitrogen trihalides:
- * Nitrogen trichloride
- * Nitrogen tribromide
- * Nitrogen triiodide
- Nitroglycerin
- Nitronium perchlorate
- Nitrosyl perchlorate
- Nitrotetrazolate-N-oxides
- Pentazenium hexafluoroarsenate
- Peroxy acids
- Peroxymonosulfuric acid
- Selenium tetraazide
- Silicon tetraazide
- Silver azide
- Silver acetylide
- Silver fulminate
- Silver nitride
- Tellurium tetraazide
- tert-Butyl hydroperoxide
- Tetraamine copper complexes
- Tetraazidomethane
- Tetrazene explosive
- Tetrazoles
- Titanium tetraazide
- Triazidomethane
- Oxides of xenon:
- * Xenon dioxide
- * Xenon oxytetrafluoride
- * Xenon tetroxide
- * Xenon trioxide
Secondary
Examples of secondary explosives include TNT and hexogen.
Tertiary
Tertiary explosives, also called blasting agents, are so insensitive to shock that they cannot be reliably detonated by practical quantities of primary explosives, and instead require an intermediate explosive booster of secondary explosives. These are often used for safety and the typically lower costs of material and handling. The largest consumers are large-scale mining and construction operations.Most tertiaries include a fuel and an oxidizer. ANFO can be a tertiary explosive if its reaction rate is slow.