Abstract

The initial states and pressure of detonation products in a bubble have a great impact on bubble pulsation in underwater explosions; particularly, the initial accelerated expansion of a bubble can determine the energy distribution. The energy output and distribution of explosives were obtained on the basis of the underwater explosion experiment in this paper. To study the process of bubble pulsation and energy output, we proposed a gas equation of state (EOS) combining the pvk form, Jones–Wilkins–Lee (JWL) EOS, and the initial states of a bubble to take the effects of the initial bubble pressure and detonation products state transformation into account; furthermore, the bubble radius, velocity, and acceleration vs time were obtained through the Rayleigh–Plesset equation under our experimental condition. The differences of bubble behaviors were compared by adopting the JWL EOS and a polytropic EOS with k = 3. The results showed that the initial bubble pressure and detonation products state transformation influence the accelerating expansion and the subsequent bubble oscillation, respectively. Subsequently, comparisons of the energy output and distribution for different gas EOSs showed that the initial shock wave energy for the JWL EOS was underestimated in accelerating expansion, and the bubble energy was overestimated using the polytropic EOS for k = 3; the obtained energy output and distribution had a better agreement with experimental data when adopting the improved gas EOS. In addition, the energy distribution was determined before the detonation products turned to the explosion gas state in initial expansion based on the relationship of the accelerating expansion characteristics and the initial shock wave energy generation. The research has a great significance to reveal the mechanism of bubble pulsation in underwater explosions.

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