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 Q1: Plenary Session IV
8:00 AM–9:00 AM,
Thursday, June 20, 2019
Room: Grand Ballroom I/II
Chair: Eric Brown, LANL
Abstract: Q1.00001 : Thermal Decomposition to Detonation: Understanding Reaction Violence
8:00 AM–9:00 AM
Preview Abstract
Author:
Laura Smilowitz
(Los Alamos National Laboratory)
Our team has been studying the thermal response of energetic materials
ranging from initial processes in thermal decomposition (thermal expansion,
phase changes) through the final exothermic steps in detonation. Our
overarching goal is to understand how secondary high explosives release
energy and how this determines reaction violence. We parse the problem into
impulse and response and follow the response from endothermic decomposition
through to final violent exothermic energy release. We have applied this
method to a number of high explosives using small scale (several gram
quantity) experiments to allow many iterations in order to focus on
particular aspects of the response. A suite of diagnostics is incorporated
on each experiment to extract information about the mechanisms. We measure
temperature, pressure and density during the entire thermal trajectory of an
experiment. The in-situ measurement of state variables in high explosives
over this broad range of conditions in temperature, pressure, and time scale
has necessitated the modification of a number of tools. We start with
commercial off-the-shelf sensors and modify them as needed to reach the
extreme conditions and rates needed. Our experience has been that simple and
robust diagnostics are necessary due to the complex nature of the
experiments. Our growing understanding of explosive response to an impulse
has come through the intercomparison of all of the observables. We have used
a combination of multiple observables and a wide dynamic range in order to
develop a phenomenological understanding of mechanisms from phase change to
internal deflagration and initiation. The use of many observables and wide
dynamic range affords us the opportunity to test the precision and accuracy
necessary in these measurements to identify such mechanisms. In this talk, I
will discuss our understanding of the evolution of the thermal response of
energetic materials. I will describe the evolution of our measurement
capabilities. In particular, over the last decade we have applied
radiographic tools at both accelerator and table-top scale. Our lab-scale
asynchronous radiographic system (LARS) has advanced from a time resolution
of seconds over hours to nanoseconds over microseconds. I will present our
current capability and future directions.