APS March Meeting 2013
Volume 58, Number 1
Monday–Friday, March 18–22, 2013;
Baltimore, Maryland
Session B39: Focus Session: Imaging & Modifying Materials Under Extreme Conditions of Radiation, Temperature, and at the Limits of Space and Time Resolution
11:15 AM–1:51 PM,
Monday, March 18, 2013
Room: 348
Sponsoring
Units:
DMP GIMS
Abstract ID: BAPS.2013.MAR.B39.4
Abstract: B39.00004 : Imaging and measuring the evolution of solid density within a thermal explosion
12:15 PM–12:51 PM
Preview Abstract
Abstract
Author:
Laura Smilowitz
(LANL)
Explosives have been used for millennia. All materials are energetic, but
high explosives have the ability to release their stored energy in a very
short period of time- nanoseconds in the case of detonations. Many
explosives have an as-designed behavior that is well understood and
controlled. However, the off-nominal behavior, such as would occur in an
accident scenario, is typically much less understood. The subject of our
research has been the energy release mechanisms for secondary high
explosives heated to thermal explosion. The study of thermal explosions
poses several difficulties including extreme temperature, pressure, and rate
of change. In addition, thermal explosions pose the difficulty of being
spontaneous dynamic events with limited ability to predict the time of the
event. Typically, event durations are tens of microseconds and timing jitter
is tens of seconds- essentially a one in a million duty cycle. These
difficulties have precluded the use of many standard laboratory diagnostics
to the study of the phenomena. In the past years, we have developed
diagnostics which can survive the extremes of the thermal explosion with
sufficient response time and the ability to remain armed and be triggered by
the onset of the spontaneous event. In addition to microsecond temporal
resolution, the diagnostics need to be spatially resolved with 100 micron
spatial resolution and centimeter field of view in order to capture the
spatial heterogeneity of the event. Our work has focused on the important
secondary high explosive PBX 9501 which is a formulation of the organic
crystalline nitramine octahydro-1,3,5,7-tetranitro-1,3,5,7-tetrazocine
(HMX). Our evolving understanding of this material has enabled us to develop
a table-top x-ray imaging experiment providing millisecond time resolution
with duration of minutes and sensitivity to density changes of better than
1{\%}. This quasistatic regime provides images of material thermal
expansion, phase transitions, and thermal decomposition leading to the onset
of thermal ignition. A second technique provides microsecond scale time
resolution with duration of milliseconds and contrast sensitivities of a few
percent. This technique allows us to observe the propagation of ignition
which determines the overall violence of the thermal explosion. In this
talk, I will describe our current understanding of thermal explosions, and
the evolution of the radiographic diagnostics that we have developed to
study thermal explosions.
To cite this abstract, use the following reference: http://meetings.aps.org/link/BAPS.2013.MAR.B39.4