US3238076A - Process for primary explosives containing boron having reduced electrostatic sensitivity - Google Patents

Process for primary explosives containing boron having reduced electrostatic sensitivity Download PDF

Info

Publication number
US3238076A
US3238076A US335375A US33537564A US3238076A US 3238076 A US3238076 A US 3238076A US 335375 A US335375 A US 335375A US 33537564 A US33537564 A US 33537564A US 3238076 A US3238076 A US 3238076A
Authority
US
United States
Prior art keywords
boron
primary explosive
styphnate
primary
lead
Prior art date
Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)
Expired - Lifetime
Application number
US335375A
Inventor
Taylor George William Charles
White John Richard
Miller Cecil Henry
Current Assignee (The listed assignees may be inaccurate. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation or warranty as to the accuracy of the list.)
Individual
Original Assignee
Individual
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Application filed by Individual filed Critical Individual
Application granted granted Critical
Publication of US3238076A publication Critical patent/US3238076A/en
Anticipated expiration legal-status Critical
Expired - Lifetime legal-status Critical Current

Links

Classifications

    • CCHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
    • C06EXPLOSIVES; MATCHES
    • C06BEXPLOSIVES OR THERMIC COMPOSITIONS; MANUFACTURE THEREOF; USE OF SINGLE SUBSTANCES AS EXPLOSIVES
    • C06B23/00Compositions characterised by non-explosive or non-thermic constituents
    • C06B23/009Wetting agents, hydrophobing agents, dehydrating agents, antistatic additives, viscosity improvers, antiagglomerating agents, grinding agents and other additives for working up
    • CCHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
    • C06EXPLOSIVES; MATCHES
    • C06CDETONATING OR PRIMING DEVICES; FUSES; CHEMICAL LIGHTERS; PYROPHORIC COMPOSITIONS
    • C06C7/00Non-electric detonators; Blasting caps; Primers
    • C06C7/02Manufacture; Packing
    • YGENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
    • Y10TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC
    • Y10STECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
    • Y10S149/00Explosive and thermic compositions or charges
    • Y10S149/11Particle size of a component
    • Y10S149/114Inorganic fuel

Definitions

  • the invention relates to primary explosive compositions which may be used as initiatory or fast delay exp-losives in fuses, detonators and the like and which will explode under mild stimulus with suflicient violence to produce a detonation wave capable of exploding quantities of less sensitive explosive.
  • Primary explosives according to the invention are metal azides and metal salts of nitrosubstituted resorcinols.
  • a primary explosive composition In order to be of practical value, a primary explosive composition must be able to fulfil a number of exacting requirements. In particular, although it must be capable of being exploded consistently, when required, by a small pulse of energy (from a small electric current or mechanical impact, for example), a primary explosive composition must be reasonably safe and not easily exploded during manufacture and subsequent handling.
  • Copper acetylide for example, although capable of functioning satisfactorily as an initiatory exfacture of primary explosive compositions in a modified form which have reduced sensitivity to electrostatic ignition thus enabling various primary explosives which have an electrostatic hazard to be manufactured and handled in greater safety.
  • the present invention is thus particularly applicable to primary explosives which are very sensitive to ignition by electrostatic sparks of very low energies such as, for example, various normal and basic metal salts of nitrosubstituted resorcinols.
  • crystals of a primary explosive are formed in a liquid medium in the presence of a suspension of finely-divided boron to form crystals having an increased resistance to electrostatic ignition containing boron.
  • An important advantage of the present process is that the handling of sensitive dry primary explosive is avoided and the primary explosive composition is initially obtained in the dry state with reduced electrostatic sensitivity and with the boron more fully dispersed throughout the crystal granules than is readily possible with mechanical mixing.
  • the boron particles In order to achieve a good interspersion of the boron particles with those of the primary explosive, the boron particles should be finely divided so that they are appreciably finer than the primary explosive particles.
  • suitable mean boron particle size i.e., diameter of particles
  • suitable mean boron particle size is between about 1-10 microns as primary exp osive granules generally have a mean size of the order of 50 microns.
  • the presence of boron in the primary explosive composition can provide important advantages besides the reduction of electrostatic hazard which can make the incorporation of boron in the particles very advantageous, even if the electrostatic hazard without boron is insufiicient for its reduction to be vital.
  • the igniting power of certain primary explosives, such as barium styphnate, to ignite other explosives can be increased advantageously by the incorporation of boron although there is no real electrostatic hazard.
  • the presence of boron can advantageously reduce the electrostatic hazard and also increase the stab and percussion sensitivity to a desirable extent.
  • the presence of boron also advantageously increases the ability of these primary explosives to ignite the next element in the firing train as the boron produces hot particles.
  • the boron may be incorporated in the primary explosive particles in proportions as desired, the electrostatic sensitivity decreasing progressively with increasing additions generally up to about 20%.
  • the formation of crystalline particles of a primary ex plosive composition in accordance with the invention is conveniently carried out in a liquid medium by precipitating the primary explosive by a double decomposition reaction.
  • a typical example of the production of a primary explosive composition in accordance with the invention wherein the primary explosive is precipitated by a doubledecomposition reaction between two reactant aqueous solutions A and B is as follows.
  • Solution A is added to the stirred solution B which contains a suspension of finely-divided "boron.
  • the primary explosive composition precipitates from the mixed solutions as crystalline particles which incorporate the boron dispersed in the individual particles. Substantially all the boron in suspension is incorporated by this procedure and the separated, dried primary explosive composition has a greatly reduced sensitivity to electrostatic ignition as compared with the primary explosive prepared similarly by double decomposition without the incorporation of boron.
  • Example 1 50 mls. of an aqueous solution of lead nitrate (260 g. Pb.(NO per litre) is added with stirring over a period of eight minutes to mls. of an aqueous solution of magnesium styphnate (150 g. styphnic acid per litre) in which is suspended 2.1 g. of finely-divided boron 92% pure) having an average particle size of 4.0 microns.
  • the temperature of the magnesium :styphnatc/ boron solution is maintained at 75 C. during the addition of the lead nitrate solution, and the precipitated lead styphnate is washed by decantation twice with mls. distilled water and twice with acetone.
  • Normal lead styphnate prepared in this way contains 10% by wt. of boron and has a threshold energy for ignition by electrostatic spark of about 5,000 ergs.
  • the threshold energy for normal lead styphnate prepared in a known manner from lead nitrate and magnesium styphnate Without the incorporation of boron or other additives is about 80 ergs.
  • Example 2 22.4 mls. aqueous lead acetate solution (containing 7.05 g. Pb(Ac) .3I-I O) are added dropwise over a period of twenty minutes to 80 mls. of a stirred aqueous solution of sodium 2:4-dinitroresorcinate (equivalent to 4 g. 2z4 dinitroresorc-inol and 0.72 g. sodium hydroxide per litre) in which is suspended 0.67 g. of finely-divided boron having a mean particle size of about 4 microns.
  • the temperature of the sodium 2:4-dinitroresoroinate/ boron solution is maintained at 65 C. during the addition of the lead acetate solution, and the precipitated product is washed twice with 120 mls. distilled water and then twice with acetone or methanol. After drying at 45 C., 6.5 g. of granular, free-flowing normal lead 2:4- dinitroresorcinate are obtained substantially free from unincorporated boron.
  • the product contains boron by weight and has a threshold energy for electrostatic ignition of about 5,500 ergs as compared with the threshold energy of 160 ergs for normal icad 2:4-dinitroresorcinate prepared in a similar manner but without the incorporation of boron.
  • Example 3 3 litres aqueous magnesium styphnate solution (containing 164 g. styphnic acid and 2.2 g. sodium carboxymethyl cellulose per litre) are added over a period of minutes to two litres of a stirred aqueous solution of barium chloride (244.3 g. BaCl .2H O per litre) in which 80 g. finely-divided boron (mean particle size about 4 microns) are suspended, the temperature of the barium chloride solution being maintained at 75 C. during the addition.
  • the precipitated barium styphnate is washed with water by decantation and, after drying at 50 C., 750 g.
  • Electrostatic Energy for Ignition (ergs) B oron incorporated (percent; by
  • Primary explosive Normal lead styphnate a a s a Basic lead styphnate Normal lead 2z4-dinitroresorcinate Normal lead trinitrophloroglucinata. Barium styphnate monohydrate 1 Mechanical mixing.
  • boron is incorporated from suspension in a liquid in the manner described in the preparative examples.
  • C) and P) indicate respectively whether complete or partial ignition of the explosive composition occurs at threshold ignition energies, partial ignition being a case where at least a third, but not all, of the composition ignites.
  • the results for normal lead styphnate demonstrate the superiority of the described processes for incorporating boron from a suspension in a liquid over a mechanical mixing of the primary explosive and boron.
  • a process for producing a primary explosive composition which comprises forming the primary explosive in a liquid medium in the presence of a suspension of finely divided boron to give crystalline particles of primary explosive individually containing boron having an increased resistance to electrostatic ignition and separating said crystalline particles from the liquid medium.
  • a process as in claim 1 wherein the said primary explosive is a compound selected from the group consisting of normal and basic salts of a nitro substituted resorcinol.
  • said primary explosive is a compound selected from the group consisting of normal lead styphnate, basic lead styphnate, normal lead 2,4-dinitroresorcinate and barium styphnate.
  • a process for producing a primary explosive composition comprising precipitating a primary explosive selected from the group consisting of normal lead styphnate, basic lead styphnate, normal lead 2,4-dinitroresorcinate and barium styphnate from a liquid medium in the presence of a suspension of boron having a mean particle size of up to 10 microns, the boron being present in the liquid medium in the proportion of up to 20% by weight of the product primary explosive; separating the said primary explosive and drying it to form crystalline particles of said primary explosive containing up to 20% by weight boron.
  • a primary explosive selected from the group consisting of normal lead styphnate, basic lead styphnate, normal lead 2,4-dinitroresorcinate and barium styphnate from a liquid medium in the presence of a suspension of boron having a mean particle size of up to 10 microns, the boron being present in the liquid medium in the proportion of up to 20% by weight of the product
  • a process for producing a normal lead styphnate primary explosive composition comprising reacting lead nitrate and magnesium styphnate in about stoichiometric amounts in an aqueous solution containing a suspension of finely divided boron having an average particle size of about 0.9 micron in the proportion of about 16 grams per liter; separating and drying the resulting lead styphnate to form crystalline particles of lead styphnate containing about 10% by weight boron.
  • a process for producing a normal lead 2,4-dinitroresorcinate primary explosive composition comprising reacting in about stoichiometric amounts an aqueous solution of lead acetate and an aqueous solution of sodium 2,4-dinitroresorcinate containing a suspension of finely divided boron having an average particle size of about 4 microns in the proportion of about 8.3 grams per liter; separating and drying the resulting normal lead 2,4-dinitroresorcinate to form crystalline particles of normal lead 2,4-dinitroresorcinate containing about 10% by weight boron.
  • a process for producing a barium styphnate primary explosive composition comprising reacting in about stoichiometric amounts an aqueous solution of magnesium styphnate and an aqueous solution of barium chloride containing a suspension of finely divided boron having an average particle size of about 4 microns in the proportion of about 40 grams per liter; separating and drying the resulting barium styphnate to form crystalline particles of barium styphnate containing about 6% by weight boron.
  • a primary explosive composition comprising crystalline particles of a primary explosive containing dis
  • a primary explosive composition comprising crys- 212921956 8/1942 McNutt et 14924 tallinc particles of a compound selected from the group 5 fi i consisting of normal and basic lead styphnate, normal Sc uz lead 2,4dinitroresorcinate, and barium styphnate, con- 12 12/1964 Von Herz 149 24 X taining dispersed within said particles up to about 20% CARL D QUARFORTH Primary Examinerby weight of boron particles having a mean particle size of up t 10 i 10 BENJAMIN R. PADGETT, Examzner.

Landscapes

  • Chemical & Material Sciences (AREA)
  • Organic Chemistry (AREA)
  • Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Manufacturing & Machinery (AREA)
  • Luminescent Compositions (AREA)

Description

United States Patent Ofiiice Patented Mar-. 1 1 966 3,238,076 PROCESS FOR PRIMARY EXPLOSIVES CQNTAIN- ING BORON HAVING REDUCED ELECTRO- STATIC SENSITIVITY George William Charles Taylor and John Richard White,
Waltham Abbey, Essex, and Cecil Henry Miller, Woo'dford Green, Essex, England, assignors to Minister of Aviation, in Her Majestys Government of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland, London, England No Drawing. Filed Jan. 2, 1964, Ser. No. 335,375 Claims priority, application Great Britain, Jan. 7, 1963, 665/ 63 12 Claims. (Cl. 149-42) The invention relates to primary explosive compositions which may be used as initiatory or fast delay exp-losives in fuses, detonators and the like and which will explode under mild stimulus with suflicient violence to produce a detonation wave capable of exploding quantities of less sensitive explosive. Primary explosives according to the invention are metal azides and metal salts of nitrosubstituted resorcinols.
In order to be of practical value, a primary explosive composition must be able to fulfil a number of exacting requirements. In particular, although it must be capable of being exploded consistently, when required, by a small pulse of energy (from a small electric current or mechanical impact, for example), a primary explosive composition must be reasonably safe and not easily exploded during manufacture and subsequent handling.
Although there is a substantial hazard of mechanical shock causing accidental detonation of primary explosives during their manufacture and handling, many accidents are caused by accidental ignition by electrostatic spark, to which many primary explosives especially various nor- ;mal and basic salts of nitr-o-substituted resor-cinols, are
very sensitive. Copper acetylide, for example, although capable of functioning satisfactorily as an initiatory exfacture of primary explosive compositions in a modified form which have reduced sensitivity to electrostatic ignition thus enabling various primary explosives which have an electrostatic hazard to be manufactured and handled in greater safety.
The present invention is thus particularly applicable to primary explosives which are very sensitive to ignition by electrostatic sparks of very low energies such as, for example, various normal and basic metal salts of nitrosubstituted resorcinols.
In a process for producing a primary explosive composition in accordance with the invention, crystals of a primary explosive are formed in a liquid medium in the presence of a suspension of finely-divided boron to form crystals having an increased resistance to electrostatic ignition containing boron.
An important advantage of the present process is that the handling of sensitive dry primary explosive is avoided and the primary explosive composition is initially obtained in the dry state with reduced electrostatic sensitivity and with the boron more fully dispersed throughout the crystal granules than is readily possible with mechanical mixing.
In order to achieve a good interspersion of the boron particles with those of the primary explosive, the boron particles should be finely divided so that they are appreciably finer than the primary explosive particles. A
suitable mean boron particle size (i.e., diameter of particles) is between about 1-10 microns as primary exp osive granules generally have a mean size of the order of 50 microns.
The presence of boron in the primary explosive composition can provide important advantages besides the reduction of electrostatic hazard which can make the incorporation of boron in the particles very advantageous, even if the electrostatic hazard without boron is insufiicient for its reduction to be vital. Thus the igniting power of certain primary explosives, such as barium styphnate, to ignite other explosives can be increased advantageously by the incorporation of boron although there is no real electrostatic hazard.
For other primary explosives, such as normal lead 2:4- dinitroresorcinate and lead styphnate, the presence of boron can advantageously reduce the electrostatic hazard and also increase the stab and percussion sensitivity to a desirable extent. The presence of boron also advantageously increases the ability of these primary explosives to ignite the next element in the firing train as the boron produces hot particles.
The boron may be incorporated in the primary explosive particles in proportions as desired, the electrostatic sensitivity decreasing progressively with increasing additions generally up to about 20%.
The formation of crystalline particles of a primary ex plosive composition in accordance with the invention is conveniently carried out in a liquid medium by precipitating the primary explosive by a double decomposition reaction.
A typical example of the production of a primary explosive composition in accordance with the invention wherein the primary explosive is precipitated by a doubledecomposition reaction between two reactant aqueous solutions A and B is as follows.
Solution A is added to the stirred solution B which contains a suspension of finely-divided "boron. The primary explosive composition precipitates from the mixed solutions as crystalline particles which incorporate the boron dispersed in the individual particles. Substantially all the boron in suspension is incorporated by this procedure and the separated, dried primary explosive composition has a greatly reduced sensitivity to electrostatic ignition as compared with the primary explosive prepared similarly by double decomposition without the incorporation of boron.
Three examples of processes for producing primary explosive compositions in accordance with the invention will now be described.
Example 1 50 mls. of an aqueous solution of lead nitrate (260 g. Pb.(NO per litre) is added with stirring over a period of eight minutes to mls. of an aqueous solution of magnesium styphnate (150 g. styphnic acid per litre) in which is suspended 2.1 g. of finely-divided boron 92% pure) having an average particle size of 4.0 microns. The temperature of the magnesium :styphnatc/ boron solution is maintained at 75 C. during the addition of the lead nitrate solution, and the precipitated lead styphnate is washed by decantation twice with mls. distilled water and twice with acetone. After drying at 50, 21 g. of free-flowing product are obtained substantially free of unincorporated boron. Normal lead styphnate prepared in this way contains 10% by wt. of boron and has a threshold energy for ignition by electrostatic spark of about 5,000 ergs. The threshold energy for normal lead styphnate prepared in a known manner from lead nitrate and magnesium styphnate Without the incorporation of boron or other additives is about 80 ergs.
Example 2 22.4 mls. aqueous lead acetate solution (containing 7.05 g. Pb(Ac) .3I-I O) are added dropwise over a period of twenty minutes to 80 mls. of a stirred aqueous solution of sodium 2:4-dinitroresorcinate (equivalent to 4 g. 2z4 dinitroresorc-inol and 0.72 g. sodium hydroxide per litre) in which is suspended 0.67 g. of finely-divided boron having a mean particle size of about 4 microns.
The temperature of the sodium 2:4-dinitroresoroinate/ boron solution is maintained at 65 C. during the addition of the lead acetate solution, and the precipitated product is washed twice with 120 mls. distilled water and then twice with acetone or methanol. After drying at 45 C., 6.5 g. of granular, free-flowing normal lead 2:4- dinitroresorcinate are obtained substantially free from unincorporated boron. The product contains boron by weight and has a threshold energy for electrostatic ignition of about 5,500 ergs as compared with the threshold energy of 160 ergs for normal icad 2:4-dinitroresorcinate prepared in a similar manner but without the incorporation of boron.
Example 3 3 litres aqueous magnesium styphnate solution (containing 164 g. styphnic acid and 2.2 g. sodium carboxymethyl cellulose per litre) are added over a period of minutes to two litres of a stirred aqueous solution of barium chloride (244.3 g. BaCl .2H O per litre) in which 80 g. finely-divided boron (mean particle size about 4 microns) are suspended, the temperature of the barium chloride solution being maintained at 75 C. during the addition. The precipitated barium styphnate is washed with water by decantation and, after drying at 50 C., 750 g. of free-flowing barium styphnate containing 6% by weight boron is obtained substantially free of unincorporated boron. This product has a threshold energy for electrostatic ignition of about 600,000 ergs, whereas the threshold energy for barium styphnate prepared in a similar manner without the incorporation of boron is about 25,000 ergs.
The increase in the resistance of primary explosives to electrostatic ignition resulting from the incorporation of various percentages of boron is illustrated by the following results.
Electrostatic Energy for Ignition (ergs) B oron incorporated (percent; by
weight) Primary explosive Normal lead styphnate a a s a Basic lead styphnate Normal lead 2z4-dinitroresorcinate Normal lead trinitrophloroglucinata. Barium styphnate monohydrate 1 Mechanical mixing.
Except where indicated, boron is incorporated from suspension in a liquid in the manner described in the preparative examples. (C) and (P) indicate respectively whether complete or partial ignition of the explosive composition occurs at threshold ignition energies, partial ignition being a case where at least a third, but not all, of the composition ignites. The results for normal lead styphnate demonstrate the superiority of the described processes for incorporating boron from a suspension in a liquid over a mechanical mixing of the primary explosive and boron.
What We claim is:
1. A process for producing a primary explosive composition which comprises forming the primary explosive in a liquid medium in the presence of a suspension of finely divided boron to give crystalline particles of primary explosive individually containing boron having an increased resistance to electrostatic ignition and separating said crystalline particles from the liquid medium.
2. A process as in claim 1 wherein the said primary explosive is a compound selected from the group consisting of normal and basic salts of a nitro substituted resorcinol.
3. A process as in claim 1 wherein the said crystalline particles of the primary explosive are formed in a liquid medium by a double decomposition reaction.
4. A process as in claim 1 wherein said primary explosive is a compound selected from the group consisting of normal lead styphnate, basic lead styphnate, normal lead 2,4-dinitroresorcinate and barium styphnate.
5. A process as in claim 1 wherein the boron is present in the liquid medium in a proportion of up to about 20% by weight of the theoretical yield of the primary explosive and wherein the primary explosive is formed in the liquid medium by a double decomposition reaction.
6. In a process for producing a primary explosive composition the steps comprising precipitating a primary explosive from a liquid medium by a double decomposition reaction in the presence of a suspension of boron having a mean particle size of up to 10 microns, the boron being present in the liquid medium in the proportion of up to 20% by weight of the product primary explosive; separating the primary explosive and drying it to form crystalline particles of primary explosive con= taining finely-divided boron.
7. In a process for producing a primary explosive composition the steps comprising precipitating a primary explosive selected from the group consisting of normal lead styphnate, basic lead styphnate, normal lead 2,4-dinitroresorcinate and barium styphnate from a liquid medium in the presence of a suspension of boron having a mean particle size of up to 10 microns, the boron being present in the liquid medium in the proportion of up to 20% by weight of the product primary explosive; separating the said primary explosive and drying it to form crystalline particles of said primary explosive containing up to 20% by weight boron.
8. In a process for producing a normal lead styphnate primary explosive composition the steps comprising reacting lead nitrate and magnesium styphnate in about stoichiometric amounts in an aqueous solution containing a suspension of finely divided boron having an average particle size of about 0.9 micron in the proportion of about 16 grams per liter; separating and drying the resulting lead styphnate to form crystalline particles of lead styphnate containing about 10% by weight boron.
9. In a process for producing a normal lead 2,4-dinitroresorcinate primary explosive composition the steps comprising reacting in about stoichiometric amounts an aqueous solution of lead acetate and an aqueous solution of sodium 2,4-dinitroresorcinate containing a suspension of finely divided boron having an average particle size of about 4 microns in the proportion of about 8.3 grams per liter; separating and drying the resulting normal lead 2,4-dinitroresorcinate to form crystalline particles of normal lead 2,4-dinitroresorcinate containing about 10% by weight boron.
10. In a process for producing a barium styphnate primary explosive composition the steps comprising reacting in about stoichiometric amounts an aqueous solution of magnesium styphnate and an aqueous solution of barium chloride containing a suspension of finely divided boron having an average particle size of about 4 microns in the proportion of about 40 grams per liter; separating and drying the resulting barium styphnate to form crystalline particles of barium styphnate containing about 6% by weight boron.
11. A primary explosive composition comprising crystalline particles of a primary explosive containing dis;
5 6 persed Within said particles up to about 20% by Weight References Cited by the Examiner (if) lzlcgircorgngarticles having a mean particle size of up to UNITED STATES PATENTS 12. A primary explosive composition comprising crys- 212921956 8/1942 McNutt et 14924 tallinc particles of a compound selected from the group 5 fi i consisting of normal and basic lead styphnate, normal Sc uz lead 2,4dinitroresorcinate, and barium styphnate, con- 12 12/1964 Von Herz 149 24 X taining dispersed within said particles up to about 20% CARL D QUARFORTH Primary Examinerby weight of boron particles having a mean particle size of up t 10 i 10 BENJAMIN R. PADGETT, Examzner.

Claims (1)

  1. 4. A PROCESS AS IN CLAIM 1 WHEREIN SAID PRIMARY EXPLOSIVE IS A COMPOUND SELECTED FROM THE GROUP CONSISTING OF KNORMAL LAD STYPHNATE, BASIC LEAD STYPHNATE, NORMAL LEAD 2,4-DINITRORESORCINATE AND BARIUM STYPHNATE.
US335375A 1963-01-07 1964-01-02 Process for primary explosives containing boron having reduced electrostatic sensitivity Expired - Lifetime US3238076A (en)

Applications Claiming Priority (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
GB665/63A GB1086861A (en) 1963-01-07 1963-01-07 Improvements in primary explosives

Publications (1)

Publication Number Publication Date
US3238076A true US3238076A (en) 1966-03-01

Family

ID=9708373

Family Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
US335375A Expired - Lifetime US3238076A (en) 1963-01-07 1964-01-02 Process for primary explosives containing boron having reduced electrostatic sensitivity

Country Status (2)

Country Link
US (1) US3238076A (en)
GB (1) GB1086861A (en)

Cited By (14)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3303073A (en) * 1964-05-29 1967-02-07 Canadian Ind Ammonium nitrate-fuel oil explosive containing anti-static ingredinent
US3320104A (en) * 1964-02-28 1967-05-16 Dynamit Nobel Ag Method of making lead styphnate primer compositions
US3475237A (en) * 1968-07-01 1969-10-28 Dow Chemical Co Boron fuel-salt smoke-producing compositions
US3613758A (en) * 1968-01-13 1971-10-19 Dynamit Nobel Ag Propagation primer
US3954822A (en) * 1966-03-08 1976-05-04 Ministry Of Defence Lead salts of di- or tri-nitroresorcinol
US4637847A (en) * 1983-12-21 1987-01-20 Atlantic Research Corporation Chemical passivation of amorphous boron powder
US20050258159A1 (en) * 2004-05-20 2005-11-24 Alexza Molecular Delivery Corporation Stable initiator compositions and igniters
US20060032501A1 (en) * 2004-08-12 2006-02-16 Hale Ron L Aerosol drug delivery device incorporating percussively activated heat packages
CN1300070C (en) * 2004-07-29 2007-02-14 南京理工大学 Method for preparing burster of double salt of spherical alkali type lead picrate and azide lead
WO2007071650A2 (en) * 2005-12-20 2007-06-28 Ruag Ammotec Gmbh Primer composition
US20080223242A1 (en) * 2001-03-09 2008-09-18 Rejean Aube Delay compositions and detonation delay device utilizing same
US20100006092A1 (en) * 2004-08-12 2010-01-14 Alexza Pharmaceuticals, Inc. Aerosol Drug Delivery Device Incorporating Percussively Activated Heat Packages
US8387612B2 (en) 2003-05-21 2013-03-05 Alexza Pharmaceuticals, Inc. Self-contained heating unit and drug-supply unit employing same
US11535574B2 (en) 2018-08-21 2022-12-27 Bae Systems Ordnance Systems Inc. High energy reduced sensitivity tactical explosives

Citations (4)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2292956A (en) * 1939-07-01 1942-08-11 Western Cartridge Co Explosive
US2702745A (en) * 1952-08-02 1955-02-22 Remington Arms Co Inc Styphnate compound and priming composition thereof
US2953447A (en) * 1957-08-08 1960-09-20 Du Pont Ignition compositions
US3159512A (en) * 1959-07-24 1964-12-01 Dynamit Nobel Ag Process for the production of primer compositions for percussion caps including rimfire cartridges

Patent Citations (4)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2292956A (en) * 1939-07-01 1942-08-11 Western Cartridge Co Explosive
US2702745A (en) * 1952-08-02 1955-02-22 Remington Arms Co Inc Styphnate compound and priming composition thereof
US2953447A (en) * 1957-08-08 1960-09-20 Du Pont Ignition compositions
US3159512A (en) * 1959-07-24 1964-12-01 Dynamit Nobel Ag Process for the production of primer compositions for percussion caps including rimfire cartridges

Cited By (25)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3320104A (en) * 1964-02-28 1967-05-16 Dynamit Nobel Ag Method of making lead styphnate primer compositions
US3303073A (en) * 1964-05-29 1967-02-07 Canadian Ind Ammonium nitrate-fuel oil explosive containing anti-static ingredinent
US3954822A (en) * 1966-03-08 1976-05-04 Ministry Of Defence Lead salts of di- or tri-nitroresorcinol
US3613758A (en) * 1968-01-13 1971-10-19 Dynamit Nobel Ag Propagation primer
US3475237A (en) * 1968-07-01 1969-10-28 Dow Chemical Co Boron fuel-salt smoke-producing compositions
US4637847A (en) * 1983-12-21 1987-01-20 Atlantic Research Corporation Chemical passivation of amorphous boron powder
US20080223242A1 (en) * 2001-03-09 2008-09-18 Rejean Aube Delay compositions and detonation delay device utilizing same
US8066832B2 (en) 2001-03-09 2011-11-29 Orica Explosives Technology Pty Ltd Delay compositions and detonation delay device utilizing same
US9370629B2 (en) 2003-05-21 2016-06-21 Alexza Pharmaceuticals, Inc. Self-contained heating unit and drug-supply unit employing same
US8991387B2 (en) 2003-05-21 2015-03-31 Alexza Pharmaceuticals, Inc. Self-contained heating unit and drug-supply unit employing same
US8387612B2 (en) 2003-05-21 2013-03-05 Alexza Pharmaceuticals, Inc. Self-contained heating unit and drug-supply unit employing same
US20050258159A1 (en) * 2004-05-20 2005-11-24 Alexza Molecular Delivery Corporation Stable initiator compositions and igniters
US7923662B2 (en) 2004-05-20 2011-04-12 Alexza Pharmaceuticals, Inc. Stable initiator compositions and igniters
US7402777B2 (en) 2004-05-20 2008-07-22 Alexza Pharmaceuticals, Inc. Stable initiator compositions and igniters
CN1300070C (en) * 2004-07-29 2007-02-14 南京理工大学 Method for preparing burster of double salt of spherical alkali type lead picrate and azide lead
US20060032501A1 (en) * 2004-08-12 2006-02-16 Hale Ron L Aerosol drug delivery device incorporating percussively activated heat packages
US20100006092A1 (en) * 2004-08-12 2010-01-14 Alexza Pharmaceuticals, Inc. Aerosol Drug Delivery Device Incorporating Percussively Activated Heat Packages
US7581540B2 (en) 2004-08-12 2009-09-01 Alexza Pharmaceuticals, Inc. Aerosol drug delivery device incorporating percussively activated heat packages
WO2007071650A3 (en) * 2005-12-20 2007-10-18 Ruag Ammotec Gmbh Primer composition
WO2007071650A2 (en) * 2005-12-20 2007-06-28 Ruag Ammotec Gmbh Primer composition
US20080308201A1 (en) * 2005-12-20 2008-12-18 Ulrich Bley Primer Composition
NO20082996L (en) * 2005-12-20 2008-07-15 Ruag Ammotec Gmbh Ignition kit
US9663413B2 (en) 2005-12-20 2017-05-30 Ruag Ammotec Gmbh Primer composition
NO341072B1 (en) * 2005-12-20 2017-08-21 Ruag Ammotec Gmbh A primer
US11535574B2 (en) 2018-08-21 2022-12-27 Bae Systems Ordnance Systems Inc. High energy reduced sensitivity tactical explosives

Also Published As

Publication number Publication date
GB1086861A (en) 1967-10-11

Similar Documents

Publication Publication Date Title
US3238076A (en) Process for primary explosives containing boron having reduced electrostatic sensitivity
US2066954A (en) C-nitrotetrazole compounds
US3046168A (en) Chemically produced colored smokes
US3617405A (en) Incendiary composition containing a metal, metal alloy, oxidizer salt, and nitrated organic compound
US3414570A (en) N2, n4, n6-tripicrylmelamine
US1939365A (en) Paraphenylenediamine dipicrate and process of preparing same
US4534810A (en) Red phosphorous smoke producing composition
US3159512A (en) Process for the production of primer compositions for percussion caps including rimfire cartridges
US2970047A (en) Conductive priming mixture
US1797509A (en) Electric blasting cap and ignition material for the same
US1443328A (en) Explosive and process of making same
US1922123A (en) Inulin nitrate and method of producing
US1390378A (en) Explosive and process of making same
US3291664A (en) Preparation of explosive substances containing carboxymethyl cellulose
US2268372A (en) Ignition composition comprising pyro-lead salt-chlorate
US2356211A (en) Ammunition priming composition
US2116514A (en) Priming compositions
US3165753A (en) Preparation of 1-alkyl-3, 5-dinitro-1, 2, 4-triazole
US1928205A (en) Detonator and composition for the same
US3959043A (en) Primary explosives containing nitrated polybasic lead salt and boron
US1928206A (en) Detonator composition
CA1080732A (en) Process for producing lead styphnate
US3278353A (en) Ammunition priming composition comprising aromatic hydroxy compounds
US3357873A (en) Explosive composition comprising a nitric acid ester of a polyvalent alcohol and theternary salt mixture of ammonium chloride, an alkali nitrate, and an alkaline earth carbonate
US2124570A (en) Priming composition