Effects of fuel and oxidizer particle dimensions on the propagation of aluminum containing thermites

Results from combustion experiments, in which the fuel and oxidizer particle sizes of Al/CuO and Al/MoO 3 thermites were varied between the nanometer and micrometer scale, are presented to gain further insight into the factors governing their rate of propagation. The experiments were performed with...

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Veröffentlicht in:Proceedings of the Combustion Institute 2011, Vol.33 (2), p.1989-1996
Hauptverfasser: Weismiller, M.R., Malchi, J.Y., Lee, J.G., Yetter, R.A., Foley, T.J.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Results from combustion experiments, in which the fuel and oxidizer particle sizes of Al/CuO and Al/MoO 3 thermites were varied between the nanometer and micrometer scale, are presented to gain further insight into the factors governing their rate of propagation. The experiments were performed with thermite mixtures loosely packed in an instrumented burn tube. Critical properties, including linear propagation rates, dynamic pressure, and spectral emission, were measured and compared to determine if the scale of one constituent had more influence over the rate of propagation than the other. It was found that, although nano-fuel/nano-oxidizer composites propagated the fastest for both the Al/CuO and Al/MoO 3 thermites, composites containing micron-aluminum and a nano-scale oxidizer propagated significantly faster than a composite of nano-aluminum and a micron-scale oxidizer. The impact of nano-scale oxidizer versus nano-scale Al is twofold. Firstly, mixtures containing nano-aluminum have a greater mass percentage of Al 2O 3, which reduces reaction temperatures and propagation rates. Secondly, reactions in porous nano-thermites propagate through a convective mechanism; with heat transfer being driven by flow induced by large pressure gradients. Mixtures containing nano-scale oxidizer particles show faster pressurization rates. Because the majority of gas generation is due to the decomposition or vaporization of the oxide in these reactions, and oxide particles on the nano-scale have shorter heat-up times and smaller length scales for gas diffusion than micron particles, convective burning is greatly enhanced with the nano-scale oxidizer.
ISSN:1540-7489
1873-2704
DOI:10.1016/j.proci.2010.06.104