Phase Diagram of Ammonium Nitrate

ORAL

Abstract

Ammonium Nitrate (AN) has often been subjected to uses in improvised explosive devices, due to its wide availability as a fertilizer and its capability of becoming explosive with slight additions of organic and inorganic compounds. Yet, the origin of enhanced energetic properties of impure AN (or AN mixtures) is neither chemically unique nor well understood - resulting in rather catastrophic disasters in the past1 and thereby a significant burden on safety, in using ammonium nitrates even today. To remedy this situation, we have carried out an extensive study to investigate the phase stability of AN, in different chemical environments, at high pressure and temperature, using diamond anvil cells and micro-Raman spectroscopy. The present results confirm the recently proposed phase IV-to-IV' transition above 15 GPa2 and provide new constraints for the melting and phase diagram of AN to 40 GPa and 673 K. 1. Stephens, H. W. The Texas City disaster, 1947. Austin, TX: University of Texas Press. 1997 2. Alistair, J. D. et al., J. Phys. Chem. A 2011, 115, 11889; Dunuwille, M. et al., J. Phys. Chem. A 2012, 116, 7600.

Authors

  • Mihindra Dunuwille

    Department of Chemistry Washington State University and Institute for Shock Physics

  • Choong-Shik Yoo

    Department of Chemistry, Washington State University and Institute for Shock Physics, Washington State University, Department of Chemistry Washington State University and Institute for Shock Physics, Department of Chemistry, Institute of Shock Physics, Washington State University, Pullman, Washington 99164