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UndermineBriarEverglade
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[*] posted on 21-8-2024 at 10:55


Unfortunately I can't buy AN or high-% ammonia. I could produce AN from KNO3 but I'd first need to buy condensing equipment for ammonia. Path to NQ is long from where I am.

Mixing is a good idea but I think it'd take too much ETN. I calculated

  • ETN 302.1 g/mol
    C4H6N4O12→(4 CO2 + 3 H2O + N2 + 3/2 O2) 3 oxygen provided per mol
  • urea nitrate 123.06 g/mol
    CH5N3O4→CO2 + N2 + 1/2 N2 + 2 H2O + H) 1/2 oxygen needed per mol
  • nitrourea 105.05324 g/mol
    H2NC(O)NH(NO2) → (H2O + CO2 + N2 + 1/2 N + H) 1/2 oxygen needed per mol
  • nitroguanidine 104.068 g/mol
    (CH4N4O2 → CO2 + 2N2 + 2 H2[O]) 2 oxygen needed per mol

So for an oxygen-balanced 100g charge:
  • 29g ETN + 71g urea nitrate
  • 32.4 ETN + 67.6g nitrourea
  • 66g ETN + 34g NQ


If my math is right a 2kg charge with ETN/UN would be 580g of ETN. Although the mix would be safe to handle I don't want to manufacture such quantities of ETN. If UN must be mixed I'd rather use a cheap oxidizer. Don't want to waste my KNO3 but I wonder what calcium sulfate would do?

I think strong confinement might be able to make working shaped charges from low VOD explosive.
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Sir_Gawain
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[*] posted on 21-8-2024 at 12:36


ETN only produces 1 oxygen per mole, not 3.
(C4H6N4O12 > 4CO2 + 3H2O + 2N2 + 1/2O2)

I highly doubt adding any calcium sulfate to an explosive composition would increase performance - it’s far too unreactive. Even if it did manage to take part in the detonation reaction, the solid byproducts would dampen the energy significantly.




“Alchemy is trying to turn things yellow; chemistry is trying to avoid things turning yellow.” -Tom deP.
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UndermineBriarEverglade
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[*] posted on 22-8-2024 at 09:08


Equation contaminated by atmospheric O2! :D In that case the situation is even bleaker, 2 moles urea nitrate per 1 mole ETN to be oxygen balanced.

I grabbed off a list of pyrotechnic oxidizers, looking for easy-to-obtain chemicals. Tichapondwa 2015 uses it to replace barium sulfate in slow-burning delay compositions, which is about the opposite of an explosion. I guess a more reactive oxidizer is in order. I may need to find a fertilizer source of KNO3, stump remover is pricey.
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dettoo456
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[*] posted on 22-8-2024 at 11:21


NQ is far and away the best option for mixing with ETN, as it’s very powerful on its own, insensitive, and very stable. The only issue is obtaining the right crystal morphology to select for small particle size and rounded crystal shape. Even so, UN is just too weak and finnicky IMO.

If you’re not comfortable answering, don’t feel you need to, but are you in the US? If so, pyrochemsource still offers GN cheaply (a cheaper alternative than making your own if you’re doing small scale work). Then, just dehydrate with conc H2SO4, regenerate the spent acid, and then repeat the process.

Also, a shaped charge with a cone angle <90ish degrees WILL require a high performing EM with uniform density and initiation to perform correctly. If you are considering using ETN mixes instead of pure ETN, I’d recommend just looking at EFPs - easier to produce, much more forgiving in use with weaker EMs, and performs on-par with amateur made shaped charges.

To give some ideas on how to optimize performance based on different materials and charge designs: https://apps.dtic.mil/sti/pdfs/ADA419413.pdf

[Edited on 22-8-2024 by dettoo456]

[Edited on 22-8-2024 by dettoo456]
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UndermineBriarEverglade
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[*] posted on 24-8-2024 at 12:09


Thanks dettoo, I'll do more research into EFPs. Curious what determines the amount of "curve" of the parabolic? liners I see in videos.

(NH2)2CO + KNO3 + HCl -> CH5N3O4 + KCl

So what about using this KCl byproduct with bleach to make potassium chlorate, to mix with UN? (Maybe not NU, highly reactive with S traces from dehydration.) It would be oxygen balanced at 14:86 ratio. Wonder if it would be too sensitive.
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UndermineBriarEverglade
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[*] posted on 4-9-2024 at 09:55


Think I'm not going to do potassium chlorate, probably too sensitive. Potassium perchlorate possibly, but it's additional trouble to make. KCl from UN reaction is better off poured down the drain, it's easier to buy food-grade KCl. I might just mix ETN and UN for EFPs so that I can get on with it.

I tried melt-casting a 10g cylinder of ETN but it's full of bubbles. Obviously I don't want to knock liquid ETN around to get the bubbles out. Has anybody made a vacuum chamber for melt-casting?
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dettoo456
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[*] posted on 9-9-2024 at 08:01


I believe the vacuum casting has been brought up before but I can’t remember what was discussed regarding design or implementation.

In any case, you’d need plastic to avoid shrapnel (just in case). I’d say those glass dessicators could work too, but they have really thick glass which would act as a strong thermal mass, and whenever melt casting, you’ll want your heating vessel to be able to dissipate heat quickly in case of a thermal runaway.

On top of that, you might run into issues using water as a heating fluid with its higher vapor pressure. A light oil could be better.
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Bender84
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[*] posted on 12-9-2024 at 10:39


Is dry PETN prone to static charge accumulation due to e.g. triboelectric effect? Is it a standard practice to wash it with an anti-static agent before drying? I'm asking this in the context of detonating cords production process. Thanks in advance.
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UndermineBriarEverglade
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[*] posted on 14-9-2024 at 10:30
Urea nitrate


Made some urea nitrate. When stored at room temp it gave off acid fumes and seemed permanently damp. I thought it was supposed to be storage stable and non-hygroscopic. How do you guys dry and recrystallize it?

I pressed 20g of crystals into a 16mm tall / 36mm wide plastic cylinder (approx 1.3 g/cm3 after cap intrusion) and attempted to detonate from above with a 400mg ETN cap. Incomplete or no detonation occurred. The sides and lid of the cylinder were destroyed but the bottom face was practically unharmed and some clumps of urea nitrate remained on it. What happened?
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Sir_Gawain
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[*] posted on 14-9-2024 at 11:48


Did you wash it with alcohol?



“Alchemy is trying to turn things yellow; chemistry is trying to avoid things turning yellow.” -Tom deP.
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UndermineBriarEverglade
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[*] posted on 14-9-2024 at 12:19


No. I was fooled by the wiki which has the wrong value for ethanol solubility. With pure and dry product, would it have detonated in that arrangement?
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Sir_Gawain
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[*] posted on 14-9-2024 at 13:08


Urea nitrate isn’t very sensitive, but I would expect it to detonate under those conditions. Maybe try adding a sensitizer, like ETN.



“Alchemy is trying to turn things yellow; chemistry is trying to avoid things turning yellow.” -Tom deP.
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UndermineBriarEverglade
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[*] posted on 14-9-2024 at 14:06


Thanks. I'll probably repeat the experiment with better UN.

One more set of questions. I'm thinking about giving up on UN and its derivatives and using ETN as primary charges. I see that you can make a PBX with styrofoam+acetone, and that ETN can be melt-cast with nitrocellulose.

  1. Instead of melting, could I dissolve ETN and NC in acetone and then let the mix dry? Seems safer than molten ETN, enough do it under vacuum to remove bubbles.
  2. What are the properties of ETN+NC? Is it more or less sensitive than ETN?
  3. How about polystyrene mixes?
  4. I've also got DBSP. Dangerously sensitive over pure NC lacquer?
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[*] posted on 24-9-2024 at 12:14
ATO (aminotriazolone)


Will carbohydrazine and formic acid form aminotriazolone (ATO) just like semicarbazide with formic acid form triazolone ? I am not a chemist so i am not really sure

Edit: From this paper ATO is made from carbohydrazide and triethyl orthoformate

Quote:

The ATO used in this work was prepared as follows. Appropriate quantities of triethyl orthoformate (20 ml) and carbohydrazide (25 g) in aqueous solution were put into a reaction bulb and stirred at 60–85 °C for 3 h. The water and the by-product ethanol were distilled off and the white precipitate was collected by filtration. The precipitate was washed thoroughly with ethanol and vacuum dried.


Triethyl orthoformate from wiki


Quote:

Triethyl orthoformate is an organic compound with the formula HC(OC2H5)3. This colorless volatile liquid, the ortho ester of formic acid, is commercially available.


So my question is if just formic acid can be used instead of Triethyl orthoformate, just like the triazolone synthesis.

[Edited on 25-9-2024 by underground]
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dettoo456
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[*] posted on 25-9-2024 at 04:56


I believe the terminal amines would be more reactive and the end product would either be a pseudo-polymeric, nitrogenous chain of carbohydrazide with methyl linkages, or just 1,2,4,5-tetrazine-3-one. The tetrazine though, is most often prepared with a much stronger formylating agent like Diphosgene or CDI.

So I can’t give a specific answer, but I don’t think the triazole’s formation would be very likely.

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[*] posted on 25-9-2024 at 05:25


Quote: Originally posted by dettoo456  
I believe the terminal amines would be more reactive and the end product would either be a pseudo-polymeric, nitrogenous chain of carbohydrazide with methyl linkages, or just 1,2,4,5-tetrazine-3-one. The tetrazine though, is most often prepared with a much stronger formylating agent like Diphosgene or CDI.

So I can’t give a specific answer, but I don’t think the triazole’s formation would be very likely.



According to the attached file, carbohydrazide cyclocondensate with aldehydes to form tetrazine

Quote:

Firstly, thiocarbohydrazide (1) was prepared as shown in
equation (1) and Scheme (1)[18] in good yield (76 %)
[15]. This compound gave three special absorption bands
in FT-IR spectra at 3306, (3274 and 3203) and 1282 cm-1
refered to three functional groups NH2, NH and C=S
respectively in addition to the N-N functional group at
1489 cm-1 and C-N functional group at 1384 cm-1. While
in U.V spectra it gave two types of electronic transition
represented by n→π* and π→π* at (355 & 272 nm
)respectively [19].Thiocarbohydrazide (1) used as a
good precursor to form symmetrical tatrazine represented
by compounds 6-aryl1,2,4,5-tetrahydro tetrazine-3-thione
compounds (2-6) through cyclocondensation reaction with
substituted benzaldehyde in acidic media , and these compounds
were isolated in good yield (Table I). The reaction started
by the formation of schiff base through the action of the
electron pair of primary amino group in
thiocarbohydrazide on the carbonyl group in substituted
benzaldehyde followed by proton transfer which lead to
the intracyclization reaction between the second primary
amino group and schiff base to obtained compounds (2-6)
as shown in (Scheme 2) [11].


CHZ will first react with C=O bond of the formic acid (1:1) to form

H2N-NH-C-NH-N=C-OH
_______II ______I___
_______O ______H___
Then, if the OH group will react with NH2, tetrazine will be form.
If the OH group react with the NH group then ATO will be formed.

Now with excess of formic acid,i believe a polymeric mess may accure


Attachment: Dr.ShaymaaK.Younis.pdf (727kB)
This file has been downloaded 55 times

[Edited on 25-9-2024 by underground]
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[*] posted on 27-9-2024 at 12:37


Ok after searching a bit, the amine group like to react with the C=O group forming C=NH + H20 while amides like to reach with the C-OH group forming C-NH2. A good example is semicarbazide and formic acid. The amine react with the C=O group and the amide with the C-OH group closing the ring. So most likely CHZ and formic acid (1:2) will form this



So if i am correct, it will somehow close the ring with oxalic acid forming this



Interestingly, CHZ and parabanic acid may form an analoge to glycoluril.



[Edited on 27-9-2024 by underground]
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[*] posted on 10-10-2024 at 17:07


I plan on constructing a Mercury Fulminate and PETN det's since those are the chemicals I have precursors for, I've heard that MF does not work well with aluminium casings, and I've looked through the forums and found 2 instances of people stating to use copper or brass tubes when using MF dets, I'm just looking to verify this. :)
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paulll
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[*] posted on 11-10-2024 at 14:30


Quote: Originally posted by Polkem  
I plan on constructing a Mercury Fulminate and PETN det's since those are the chemicals I have precursors for, I've heard that MF does not work well with aluminium casings, and I've looked through the forums and found 2 instances of people stating to use copper or brass tubes when using MF dets, I'm just looking to verify this. :)

It does decompose over time and aluminium's famously vulnerable to even small amounts of mercury, so, seems legit.
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[*] posted on 15-10-2024 at 10:49
Nitrocellulose Bonded Black Powder


Black powder can be granulated (when a bit of acetone (or water or isopropanol) is added to the dry black powder and then put through a sift to make individual grains which are then dried), but what I was wondering is, how will nitrocellulose affect the black powder (if it is dissolved in the acetone that gets mixed with the black powder)? Will it make black powder burn slower? Faster? Make it more water resistant? Make the grains stronger? Have no effect at all?
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UndermineBriarEverglade
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[*] posted on 1-11-2024 at 19:08


I saw some short lengths of borosilicate tube for sale. Glass is harder than aluminum; would it make a more powerful blasting cap?
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dettoo456
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[*] posted on 4-11-2024 at 07:31


Quote: Originally posted by 4-Stroke  
Black powder can be granulated (when a bit of acetone (or water or isopropanol) is added to the dry black powder and then put through a sift to make individual grains which are then dried), but what I was wondering is, how will nitrocellulose affect the black powder (if it is dissolved in the acetone that gets mixed with the black powder)? Will it make black powder burn slower? Faster? Make it more water resistant? Make the grains stronger? Have no effect at all?


It would definitely increase the burn rate, and may reduce hygroscopicity simply by coating the KNO3 granules, but will not store very long in general. Any excess moisture or acidity near the Sulfur can create minute concentrations of H2SO4 which will hydrolyze the NC.
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[*] posted on 4-11-2024 at 07:44


Quote: Originally posted by UndermineBriarEverglade  
I saw some short lengths of borosilicate tube for sale. Glass is harder than aluminum; would it make a more powerful blasting cap?


Not likely; hardness is better to allow for an increase in the gas pressure in the tube during the combustion/detonation process, but glass is far more brittle and that would compromise any gains you might see in the pressure capacity of glass over something like Al or steel. The ductility of metals during those high-pressure phases will allow for better transfer of all of that energy when the shear strength of the metals is passed.

Also, the ductility of metal allows for much fewer fragments to be created when the tube bursts from the detonation, so the fast moving gases can be directed in only a few directions whilst keeping their pressure and speed concentrated towards a booster charge. Glass would shatter (even under low pressure) into hundreds of much smaller fragments, each one carrying away the energy of the detonation gases with them. And since the glass has a lower density than metal as well, those glass fragments would naturally have lower kinetic energies.

Glass is also just more prone to friction-generated issues that could arise with loading.

It’s an all-around bad idea IMO.
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Sir_Gawain
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[*] posted on 4-11-2024 at 09:08


Glass is also likely to shatter from loading or by being dropped. The best detonator casings are aluminum and stainless steel, in my experience.



“Alchemy is trying to turn things yellow; chemistry is trying to avoid things turning yellow.” -Tom deP.
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UndermineBriarEverglade
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[*] posted on 4-11-2024 at 09:19


Quote: Originally posted by dettoo456  
Quote: Originally posted by UndermineBriarEverglade  
I saw some short lengths of borosilicate tube for sale. Glass is harder than aluminum; would it make a more powerful blasting cap?


Not likely; hardness is better to allow for an increase in the gas pressure in the tube during the combustion/detonation process, but glass is far more brittle and that would compromise any gains you might see in the pressure capacity of glass over something like Al or steel. The ductility of metals during those high-pressure phases will allow for better transfer of all of that energy when the shear strength of the metals is passed.

Also, the ductility of metal allows for much fewer fragments to be created when the tube bursts from the detonation, so the fast moving gases can be directed in only a few directions whilst keeping their pressure and speed concentrated towards a booster charge. Glass would shatter (even under low pressure) into hundreds of much smaller fragments, each one carrying away the energy of the detonation gases with them. And since the glass has a lower density than metal as well, those glass fragments would naturally have lower kinetic energies.

Glass is also just more prone to friction-generated issues that could arise with loading.

It’s an all-around bad idea IMO.


Would it be accurate to say that pulverizing the glass would absorb more energy than ballooning a metal cap? Or that the way the metal makes those fractal cracks releases strong jets of gas that wouldn't happen with a glass cap that burst more quickly?

If it's relevant these would be EBW caps with ETN, so not much of a combustion process happening and they don't need to be pressed particularly hard. Shrapnel isn't really a concern since I'm storing and transporting the caps safely. My aluminum caps work fine already but I was curious. (Alas, I have no easy to way to test this anyway. I'd have to set off many main charges to see what size a given metal/glass cap could detonate.)
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