Explosive Burning of a Mechanically Activated Al and CuO Thermite Mixture
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Experimental
2.1. Materials and Methods
2.2. Experimental Schemes
- Initiation of a concentrated (l ≈ d ≈ h, length, width, height) sample of a thermite mixture of bulk density on a plane, Figure 2a. The geometry of the sample was a conventional hemisphere with radius ≈ 3.5 mm;
- Ignition of five weighed portions (l ≈ d ≈ h) of thermite mixture, distributed on a plane along one line through air gaps, Figure 2b. The interval for placing samples was 23–25–50–53 mm. Ignition occurred at one end of the line of samples. Electrical contact sensors are placed under the mixture samples.
- Ignition of a linear sample (l ≥ d ≈ h) of a thermite mixture of bulk density on a plane, Figure 2c. With a sample length of 200 mm, initiation was carried out at its beginning. With a sample length of 400 mm, initiation was carried out in its middle. Electrical sensors were installed along the length of linear samples with an interval of 25–25–50–50 mm to one side from the point of initiation.
- Ignition of a linear sample (l ≥ d ≈ h) of a thermite mixture of bulk density in a shallow (d = h) groove, Figure 2d. The groove section was 3 × 3 mm. The ignition was carried out at the end of the groove.
- Ignition of a bulk density thermite mixture localized in a shallow cell (d = h), Figure 2e. Shallow cell diameter 4 mm, depth 2 mm. The mixture was ignited on a free surface at spark energies of 10 ± 1, 25 ± 2 and 100 ± 6 mJ.
- Ignition of a bulk density thermite mixture in a short channel (l = 2.5 d), Figure 2f. Channel length 10 mm, diameter 4 mm. The ignition was carried out at the bottom of the groove. Thin flat targets were placed opposite the channel at a distance of 30–200 mm. The targets retained traces of the transverse structure of the combustion product flow. Either 0.15 mm thick aluminium foils or 0.3 mm thick transparent polycarbonate films were used as targets. A thin layer of thermite mixture was applied to the reverse side of the polycarbonate targets. The same polycarbonate targets were installed to the side of the trajectory of the flow of combustion products.
- Ignition of a bulk density thermite mixture in a long channel (l ≈ 18 d), Figure 2g. Channel diameter was 4.5 mm. The total length of the channel was 160 mm, the length of the channel filled with the mixture was 80 mm. The ignition was carried out at the bottom of the groove.
3. Results
4. Discussion
5. Conclusions
- Evidence was obtained for the heterogeneity of the flow of the reacting components of the mixture surrounded by a cloud of emitted plasma of the reaction products;
- The dominant role of scattering clusters carrying the centres of a chemical reaction in the initiation of a cold mixture through an air gap of up to 150 mm had been established;
- A quantitative characteristic of the combustion dynamics of the studied mixtures of aluminium with copper oxide was obtained;
- An increase in the mass of local samples led to an increase in the expansion rate of the chemical energy release area. The limitation of the expansion of combustion products by the side walls within the height of the mixture track also led to an increase in the combustion rate;
- The combustion of a thermite mixture of Al and CuO is promising for use in single-shot systems for gas mixtures ignition.
Supplementary Materials
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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No. | Experimental Set-up No. (Figure 2) | M (g) | U0 (m/s) | Luminescence Volume V at Time tph after Ignition [cm3 (ms)] | Rate of the Glowing Volume Formation V/tm (cm3/μs) |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | 2a | 0.06 | 118 | 134 (2.2) | 0.05 |
0.25 | 101 | 450 (1.5) | 0.3 | ||
0.75 | 109 | 780 (1.5) | 0.52 | ||
1.5 | 129 | 1280 (1.2) | 0.89 | ||
2 | 2b | 0.06 × 5 | 55 | 107 (2.1) | 0.34 |
3 | 2c | 8 (0.4 g/cm) | 65 | 7226 (2.4) | 3 |
8.5 (0.21 g/cm) | 76 | 2009 (2.5) | 0.8 | ||
4 | 2d | 3 (0.2 g/cm) | 52 | 785 (2.5) | 0.39 |
5 | 2e | 0.06 | 55 | 136 (2.5) | 0.054 |
78 | 107 (2.5) | 0.043 | |||
120 | 89 (2.5) | 0.036 | |||
6 | 2f | 0.3 | Photographic recording of the process was not made | ||
0.25 | 75–95 | 300 (2.5) | 0.12 | ||
0.2 | 84 | 226 (2.5) | 0.09 | ||
7 | 2g | 3.3 | 192 | 360 (3) | 0.12 |
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Dolgoborodov, A.; Yankovsky, B.; Ananev, S.; Valyano, G.; Vakorina, G. Explosive Burning of a Mechanically Activated Al and CuO Thermite Mixture. Energies 2022, 15, 489. https://doi.org/10.3390/en15020489
Dolgoborodov A, Yankovsky B, Ananev S, Valyano G, Vakorina G. Explosive Burning of a Mechanically Activated Al and CuO Thermite Mixture. Energies. 2022; 15(2):489. https://doi.org/10.3390/en15020489
Chicago/Turabian StyleDolgoborodov, Alexander, Boris Yankovsky, Sergey Ananev, George Valyano, and Galina Vakorina. 2022. "Explosive Burning of a Mechanically Activated Al and CuO Thermite Mixture" Energies 15, no. 2: 489. https://doi.org/10.3390/en15020489
APA StyleDolgoborodov, A., Yankovsky, B., Ananev, S., Valyano, G., & Vakorina, G. (2022). Explosive Burning of a Mechanically Activated Al and CuO Thermite Mixture. Energies, 15(2), 489. https://doi.org/10.3390/en15020489