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Review of Phase Transformations in Energetic Materials as a Function of Pressure and Temperature
Date Issued
05-12-2019
Author(s)
Ravindran, T. R.
Rajan, Rajitha
Venkatesan, V.
Abstract
Under ambient conditions, energetic materials may exist in one or more than one metastable crystal structure. Under compression or when heated, the material may transform into a different structure or may decompose. Mapping the phase diagram of explosive materials at high pressures and temperatures is an important component to evaluate their performance and safety aspects. In particular, a detailed knowledge of polymorphism and the structural and chemical stabilities of the various phases is necessary to understand the reactive behavior of explosive materials in the high-pressure and high-temperature range that is relevant to shock-wave initiation. Phase transformations could be rate-dependent; that is, fast compression or rapid heating could result in different transformation pressures, temperatures, or even structures compared with static compression and slow heating because shock compression could be accompanied by sudden and extreme heating effects. Nevertheless, static methods are expected to give a fair idea of the structure of the materials under different P-T conditions and, from the structure, their performance characteristics. Also, the shock-wave physics and chemistry of explosives are so complex that in shock experiments it has not been possible to identify the intermediate phases of molecules during decomposition. Hence experiments with static high pressure and high temperature are necessary to gain insight into these processes. Additionally, computational modeling and simulations have been extensively used to understand the effects of pressure on explosives. There is considerable literature on these aspects of energetic materials accumulated over the years. We will review the current status of experimental results, primarily using X-ray diffraction, Raman, and infrared spectroscopies, as probes exploring the P-T phase diagram of important secondary explosives ammonium nitrate, TNT, TATB, PETN, RDX, HMX, CL-20, TEX, FOX-7, and TKX-50.
Volume
123