APS March Meeting 2017
Volume 62, Number 4
Monday–Friday, March 13–17, 2017;
New Orleans, Louisiana
Session H2: Materials in Extremes IV
2:30 PM–5:06 PM,
Tuesday, March 14, 2017
Room: 261
Sponsoring
Units:
DCOMP DMP SHOCK
Chair: Brian Barnes, Army Research Laboratory
Abstract ID: BAPS.2017.MAR.H2.1
Abstract: H2.00001 : Laser-shocked energetic materials for laboratory-scale characterization and model validation
2:30 PM–3:06 PM
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Abstract
Author:
Jennifer Gottfried
(US Army Research Laboratory)
The development of laboratory-scale methods for characterizing the
properties of energetic materials, i.e., using only milligram quantities of
material, is essential for the development of new types of explosives and
propellants for use in military applications. Laser-based excitation methods
for initiating or exciting the energetic material offer several advantages
for investigating the response of energetic materials to various stimuli: 1)
very small quantities of material can be studied prior to scale-up
synthesis, 2) no detonation of bulk energetic material is required,
eliminating the need for expensive safety precautions, and 3) extensive
diagnostics can be incorporated into the experimental setup to provide as
much information as possible per shot. In this presentation, progress in our
laboratory developing three laser-based methods for characterizing energetic
materials will be discussed. Direct excitation of a sample residue using a
focused nanosecond laser pulse enables estimation of the performance of the
energetic material based on the measured shock wave velocity with a
technique called laser-induced air shock from energetic materials (LASEM);
recent LASEM results on novel energetic materials will be presented. Impact
ignition of energetic materials has also been investigated using
laser-driven flyer plates. High-speed schlieren imaging of the flyer plate
launch has demonstrated that late-time emission from the impacted energetic
material is caused by the reaction of particles ejected off the sample
surface with the flyer plate launch products. Finally, the role of a rapid
temperature jump (10$^{\mathrm{14}}$ K/s) in the initiation of the explosive
cyclotrimethylenetrinitramine (RDX) has been investigated by indirect
ultrafast laser heating. Although the temperature jump was insufficient to
decompose the RDX, it did induce a temporary electronic excitation of the
heated explosive molecules. These results are being used to validate
multiscale models in order to understand initiation mechanisms for
explosives.
To cite this abstract, use the following reference: http://meetings.aps.org/link/BAPS.2017.MAR.H2.1