21st Biennial Conference of the APS Topical Group on Shock Compression of Condensed Matter
Volume 64, Number 8
Sunday–Friday, June 16–21, 2019;
Portland, Oregon
Session N1: DSIC: Shock-induced chemical reactions
9:15 AM–10:45 AM,
Wednesday, June 19, 2019
Room: Grand Ballroom I
Chair: Dana Dattelbaum, LANL
Abstract: N1.00005 : Homogeneous initiation in single crystal PETN from shock induced bulk heating
10:15 AM–10:45 AM
Preview Abstract
Abstract
Author:
Bryan Henson
(Los Alamos National Laboratory)
Calculations of shock initiation in polycrystalline explosives convolve
several phenomena. An input shock pressure $P$ generates compression and
temperature ($V$, $T)$. The temperature, $T $(and possibly $P)$, determines the time to
thermal ignition and the resulting rate of decomposition through a thermally
activated Arrhenius rate and mechanism. The resulting rate of pressurization
is further determined by the state of solid compression $V$ and the product
pressure through the fliuid equation of state (EOS). This pressurization
then determines the resulting shock physics that follows ignition, $e.g.$ wave
coalescence, initiation. The simplest version of this problem in the solid
state is the shock initiation of single crystal samples by homogeneous
initiation. Here the relationship of ($V$,$T)$ in the reactant crystal is
simplified by the absence of free volume and a quantitative relationship
amongst ($P$,$V$,$T)$ through the solid EOS. In particular the possible states ($V$,
$T)$ as a function of $P$ are constrained by the EOS.
We present calculations of the time and distance to initiation as a function
of input pressure in single crystal PETN. We use a JWL EOS for the solid to
constrain the bulk temperature and compression as a function of impact
pressure. We calculate the thermal ignition time as a function of
temperature from a model of PETN thermal decomposition and the
pressurization in the far field using a product fluid EOS and a simple
application of the method of characteristics. We determine the unique ($V$,
$T)$ state at each pressure by solving for the intersection of characteristics
generated by the ignition and the input shock at the time and distance to
initiation observed in experiments. Interesting results include the
relationship between the input $T(P)$, the observation of multiple wave
phenomena at low pressure and a mechanism for the nonlinearity in the
measured pop-plot.