Experimental Study On The Mechanism Of Hot Zone Formation In Open-tank Fires

  • Hasegawa K
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Abstract

The electronic structure and initial decomposition in high explosive HMX under conditions of shock loading are examined. The simulation is performed using quantum molecular dynamics in conjunction with multi-scale shock technique (MSST). A self-consistent charge density-functional tight-binding (SCC-DFTB) method is adapted. The results show that the N-N-C angle has a drastic change under shock wave compression along lattice vector b at shock velocity 11 km/s, which is the main reason that leads to an insulator-to-metal transition for the HMX system. The metallization pressure (about 130 GPa) of condensed-phase HMX is predicted firstly. We also detect the formation of several key products of condensed-phase HMX decomposition, such as NO 2 , NO, N 2 , N 2 O, H 2 O, CO, and CO 2 , and all of them have been observed in previous experimental studies. Moreover, the initial decomposition products include H 2 due to the C-H bond breaking as a primary reaction pathway at extreme condition, which presents a new insight into the initial decomposition mechanism of HMX under shock loading at the atomistic level. © 2014 Springer-Verlag.

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APA

Hasegawa, K. (1989). Experimental Study On The Mechanism Of Hot Zone Formation In Open-tank Fires. Fire Safety Science, 2, 221–230. https://doi.org/10.3801/iafss.fss.2-221

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