I am sure it detonating under just it's own weight is a myth for sure, never heard of anything like that happening. Especially considering long ago,
it was stored in large volumes in some pretty big containers where the weight of the NG on top would have been a lot.
I can't find much relevant information on production plants nowadays. But I did find the attached pic below of a MEISSNER nitrator for NG manufacture
that looks quite recent with some information about the equipment used. The page said:
"MEISSNER injector plants are characterized by on-line mixing of the acids (mixed acid store not necessary), small production quantities in the
nitration cycle, dynamic separation of the product from the spent acid, and automatic discharging in case of power outage or shutdown."
The absorbent material is not added during the nitration ever. Kieselghur is not used anymore, starch, wood dust, or flour and some other things I
can't remember are used in place with an antacid (CaCO3, etc...) as well.
Seems they still nitrate in a reactor, dump into water, separate NG and neutralize and dry it. Not too much has changed except the equipment is
better.
From the limited info I can find at the moment, it seems the NG is poured in small batches sizes of the absorbent material and blended by a machine
with soft paddles similar to a cake mixer where the paddles don't touch the sides of the vessel so friction is minimized.
Maybe it is dropped in while the mix is being slowly blended, or it is allowed to soak in for a while before mixing is started, I am unsure
[Edited on 21-9-2018 by greenlight]
[Edited on 21-9-2018 by greenlight] |