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Nitro explosives cyclonite

Cyclonite is a very important explosive. The outstanding properties of RDX as an explosive are high chemical stability, not much lower than aromatic nitro compounds and high explosive power which considerably surpasses that of aromatic nitro compounds such as TNT and picric acid. RDX has a detonation velocity of8600 ms"1 and a detonation pressure of 33.8 GPa at a density of 1.77 gem"3. RDX is used in mixtures with TNT (Hexotols, Cyclotols, Compn. B) wax (Composition A) aluminum (Hexals) aluminum and TNT (HBX, Hexotonal, Torpex) etc. [Pg.82]

This is a powerful explosive, stronger than tetryl but weaker than cyclonite. It is, however, of no practical value chiefly because its preparation is too expensive, requiring first the conversion of methylamine into urethane and then into its nitro derivative. On hydrolysis the latter yields methylnitramine. Similarly, the hydrolysis of dinitrodimethyloxamide (p. 35) leads to the formation of methylnitramine. [Pg.16]

Investigations carried out at that time revealed the outstanding value of cyclonite as an explosive its high chemical stability, which is not much lower than that of aromatic nitro compounds, and its great explosive power, which considerably surpasses that of aromatic nitro compounds, such as trinitrotoluene and picric acid. [Pg.77]

Dynamites were retained for military purposes for some time for use in demolition charges. The disadvantage of these explosives lies in their limited chemical stability. Ultimately, therefore they were replaced by explosives that remain unchanged during storage (aromatic nitro compounds such as TNT, picric acid, and more recently TNT with cyclonite or PETN). [Pg.281]

The nitroamines are substituted ammonias, substances in which a nitro group is attached directly to a trivalent nitrogen atom. They are prepared in general either by the nitration of a nitrogen base or of one of its salts, or they are prepared by the splitting off of water from the nitrate of the base by the action of concentrated sulfuric acid upon it. At present two nitroamines are of particular interest to the explosives worker, namely, nitro-guanidine and cyclotrimethylenetrinitramine (cyclonite). Both are produced from synthetic materials which have become available in large commercial quantities only since the first World War, the first from cyanamide, the second from formaldehyde from the oxidation of synthetic methyl alcohol. [Pg.369]

Mining explosives without nitroglycerine with ammonium nitrate and TNT. The aromatic nitro compounds are sometimes replaced with 10-30% PETN or Cyclonite. The names are Agcr, Vulcania, Vulcanite. [Pg.630]


See other pages where Nitro explosives cyclonite is mentioned: [Pg.1192]    [Pg.447]    [Pg.389]    [Pg.636]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.695 ]




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Cyclonite

Explosives, nitro

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