Abstract
This paper reports the results of an experimental study of the detonation of low-density (3–40 mg/cm3) secondary high explosives (HEs) in evacuated and gas-filled inert porous media. A convective-jet mechanism of detonation propagation was found to occur under all conditions studied. The effects of the type of HE and initial gas pressure on the critical density of the HE and detonation parameters were elucidated. It is shown that, in the presence of air, detonation can occur at a lower volume-averaged density of the HE than in the case of the evacuated media and there are two limits (minimal and maximal) for the initial gas pressure. As the volume-averaged density HE decreases, the limits approach each other and, for a certain critical density of the HE, detonation exists only at one value of the initial pressure.
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