Abstract

AbstractCookoff – the concept of heating explosives to ignition – is a useful tool for determining issues that may be related to safely using and storing explosives, and as such, cookoff experiments have been performed on many different materials. All explosive systems require a means of initiation, which is usually a detonator: a device that often contains a sensitive, primary explosive and a more powerful, secondary explosive. Even if the cookoff behaviors of all the individual explosives in an explosive system are known, the behavior of the combined system may be quite different. In this experiment, the cookoff behavior of non‐electric detonators is investigated. It was determined that there was no distinguishable difference between initiating detonators properly or heating them at a rate greater than 10 °C min−1. Heating detonators at rates less than 10 °C min−1 diminished their output.

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