High-pressure behavior of a novel, nitrogen-rich energetic material
ORAL
Abstract
Energetic materials are of great interest in energy and defense applications. In the search for new energetic materials with improved properties, such as reduced environmental impact, a crystalline solid Triaminoguanidinium 1-methyl-5-nitriminotetrazolate (TAG), C$_{3}$H$_{12}$N$_{12}$O$_{2}$, has recently been synthesized (Klap\"{o}tke et. al. 2008). We have studied the properties of TAG under static compression, and under reaction initiation at high pressure, using Raman and IR spectroscopy and x-ray diffraction. TAG appears to remain a stable, crystalline solid up to at least 35 GPa at room temperature. Laser initiation at 10-15 GPa reveals a rapid self-propagating reaction (deflagration) that consumes the sample, similar to other energetic materials such as nitromethane. Post-initiation products include crystalline molecular nitrogen (delta-phase), and nitrogen crystallites with regular defects. The formation of bulk molecular nitrogen during deflagration - in both phase segregated and impurity-hosting forms - distinguishes TAG from other known energetic materials, and suggests a pathway for the generation of novel phases from element-enriched energetic substances.
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Authors
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R. Stewart McWilliams
Carnegie Institution of Washington, Howard University
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Jennifer Ciezak-Jenkins
Army Research Laboratory
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Yasmin Kadry
University of Maryland College Park
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Vitali Prakapenka
Advanced Photon Source, University of Chicago
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Mohammad Mahmood
Howard University
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Alexander Goncharov
Geophysical Laboratory, Carnegie Institution of Washington, Carnegie Institution of Washington