2006 59th Annual Meeting of the APS Division of Fluid Dynamics
Sunday–Tuesday, November 19–21, 2006;
Tampa Bay, Florida
Session JB: Invited Lecture: Advanced Modeling of Detonation Dynamics in Energetic Materials and Explosive Systems
4:30 PM–5:10 PM,
Monday, November 20, 2006
Tampa Marriott Waterside Hotel and Marina
Room: Grand Salon F
Chair: David Kassoy, University of Colorado at Boulder
Abstract ID: BAPS.2006.DFD.JB.1
Abstract: JB.00001 : Advanced modeling of detonation dynamics in energetic materials and explosive systems
4:30 PM–5:10 PM
Preview Abstract
Author:
D. Scott Stewart
(Mechanical Science and Engineering, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign)
Explosives are energetic materials that support a supersonic
detonation
wave;
a shock followed by an exothermic reaction zone. Because the
explosive
products expand rapidly behind the shock, the flow can choke. A
sonic
(characteristic) surface forms that propagates at about the same
velocity as
the lead shock, sealing the reaction zone from the trailing flow.
Since
detonation propagates in autonomous and robust way and induces large
pressure changes (hundreds of Kilo bars for condensed
explosives), they are
useful for engineering purposes. The explosive system is
detonation in the
explosive and its interaction with its environment. Explosive
systems
include material processing, for example. Extreme miniaturized
explosive
systems have many alternative applications that include prospects
for
bio-medical uses.
Since the detonation reaction zone is extremely thin compared to
the domain
in which it propagates, the calculation of detonation dynamics is a
difficult multi-scale problem. Direct numerical simulation of the
behavior
of detonation dynamics is usually not an option. Fortunately, the
scale
disparity allows asymptotic treatments of the detonation front,
and these
have led to a rich and interesting theory of detonation shock
dynamics where
one obtains evolution equations for the front that are geometric in
character and that relate the normal detonation shock velocity to
the shock
front curvature and higher intrinsic derivatives. Detonations
exhibit
generic instabilities that include pulsations and cellular
instabilities;
some of these can be described by the asymptotic theory.
The theory of detonation shock dynamics has provided new way to
interpret
experiments and measure the properties of condensed explosives.
Validation
of theory with experiments requires multi-material (fluid)
simulation of the
interaction of the explosive with inert materials. The use of modern
high-resolution numerical methods and modern material interface
treatments,
such as level-set methods is required. The talk will summarize
some key
advances in this subject.
To cite this abstract, use the following reference: http://meetings.aps.org/link/BAPS.2006.DFD.JB.1