17th Biennial International Conference of the APS Topical Group on Shock Compression of Condensed Matter
Volume 56, Number 6
Sunday–Friday, June 26–July 1 2011;
Chicago, Illinois
Session T1: Energetic Materials VII
11:00 AM–12:30 PM,
Thursday, June 30, 2011
Room: Grand Ballroom II-III
Chair: Michael Winey, Washington State University
Abstract ID: BAPS.2011.SHOCK.T1.5
Abstract: T1.00005 : Shock-induced chemistry in simple organic molecules
12:00 PM–12:30 PM
Preview Abstract
Abstract
Author:
Dana Dattelbaum
(Los Alamos National Laboratory)
Interrogating chemical reactions behind a shock front is immensely
difficult, and as a result, the details of shock-induced
chemistry remain
poorly understood. Shock compression creates transient distorted
structures
from which molecular reactions initiate. Previous works have
reported that
dimerizations, polymerizations, ring-opening and decomposition
reactions
occur under shock compression, depending on molecular structure.
Certainly
for explosives, exothermic decomposition reactions ultimately drive
self-supported detonation. Questions regarding the thresholds for
incipient
reaction for different chemical functional groups, the nature of
first and
subsequent reaction steps, and the influence of shock input
conditions on
reaction kinetics remain to be answered.
Evidence of reaction can be discerned from discontinuities in the
mechanical
variables for reactions with a change in density along the reaction
coordinate, similar to first-order phase transformations. Here,
we have
applied in-situ electromagnetic gauging at multiple Lagrangian
positions to
elucidate the evolution of multiple-wave structures associated with
shock-induced reactions. We have applied in-situ gauging, in
concert with
reactive molecular dynamic simulations, to investigate
shock-reactivity of
several simple functional groups: carbon-carbon double (-C=C-)
and triple
bonds, and nitriles (e.g. phenylacetylene and acrylonitrile), and
aromatic
ring structures (benzene), all building blocks for explosives. From
measurements of the reactive flow, we have obtained detailed
information
about the temporal evolution of the waves, and global kinetics
associated
with transformation(s) between partially- and fully-reacted
states. Near the
reactive threshold, evolution in particle velocities point to
reaction
timescales on the order of several hundred nanoseconds. We have
defined the
reactive cusp Hugoniot states, and established the relative order
of group
reactivity under single shock conditions. These observations will be
compared with reactions from the solid phase under static high
pressure/temperature conditions, with a description of
crystalline phase,
and identification of polymerized products by in-situ x-ray
diffraction and
spectroscopic methods.
To cite this abstract, use the following reference: http://meetings.aps.org/link/BAPS.2011.SHOCK.T1.5