As you can see in the first link, moist crystals of tetraamine copper nitrate (TACN) in a glass tube under flame first seem to melt, then instantly
decompose in an explosive exothermic reaction (not actually a detonation as the thin glass does not shatter)
http://wn.com/Tetraamine_copper_complexes
The poster of this video claims that it can be detonated with only 0.5g HMTD, from the damage caused by the detonation of 100g TACN, it seems much
more sensitive to high order detonation than ammonium nitrate mixtures.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ua80h7MuRPo&feature=grec_...
Here are some pictures of TACN deflagrating. The salt easily ignites from the flame of a butane torch. TACN rapidly deflagrates with greenish-blue
flare, but there does not seem to be the instant "poof" which is seen with the deflagration of most other primaries:
http://www.youtube.com/user/kuro96inlaila#p/a/f/1/Uj9BkyGo70...
http://www.youtube.com/user/kuro96inlaila#p/a/f/2/HttKMJpJp8...
Edit: the poster appears to have removed the above two videos
There is also a video for tetraamine copper permanganate:
http://wn.com/Tetraamine_copper_complexes
and tetraamine copper persulfate:
http://sites.google.com/site/chemlabchemistry/experiments-1/...
Both of these last two complex salts are much more sensitive, (and probably unstable for long-term storage) than the nitrate.
I think I read somewhere that tetraamine copper nitrate is actually fairly insensitive to mechanical impact, that reliable detonation of this salt
requires another primary. TACN is supposedly also very hygroscopic, and if not free from moisture can be difficult or impossible to ignite. If
preparing the salt for the purpose of deflagration/detonation, pure methanol should be used as the solvent, with dry ammonia gas bubbled in, so that
the product will be free from traces of water.
[Edited on 2-5-2011 by AndersHoveland] |