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TATB Sensitivity to Shocks from Electrical Arcs

Propellants, Explosives, Pyrotechnics

Chen, Kenneth C.; Warne, Larry K.; Jorgenson, Roy E.; Niederhaus, John H.

Use of insensitive high explosives (IHEs) has significantly improved ammunition safety because of their remarkable insensitivity to violent cook-off, shock and impact. Triamino-trinitrobenzene (TATB) is the IHE used in many modern munitions. Previously, lightning simulations in different test configurations have shown that the required detonation threshold for standard density TATB at ambient and elevated temperatures (250 C) has a sufficient margin over the shock caused by an arc from the most severe lightning. In this paper, the Braginskii model with Lee-More channel conductivity prescription is used to demonstrate how electrical arcs from lightning could cause detonation in TATB. The steep rise and slow decay in typical lightning pulse are used in demonstrating that the shock pressure from an electrical arc, after reaching the peak, falls off faster than the inverse of the arc radius. For detonation to occur, two necessary detonation conditions must be met: the Pop-Plot criterion and minimum spot size requirement. The relevant Pop-Plot for TATB at 250 C was converted into an empirical detonation criterion, which is applicable to explosives subject to shocks of variable pressure. The arc cross-section was required to meet the minimum detonation spot size reported in the literature. One caveat is that when the shock pressure exceeds the detonation pressure the Pop-Plot may not be applicable, and the minimum spot size requirement may be smaller.

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Performance portable sparse approximate inverse preconditioner for EFIE equations

Proceedings of the 2017 19th International Conference on Electromagnetics in Advanced Applications, ICEAA 2017

Bettencourt, Matthew T.; Zinser, Brian; Jorgenson, Roy E.; Kotulski, J.D.

A block base sparse approximate inverse preconditioner for the electric field integral equations is documented and tested. It utilized the Kokkos library for performance portability and shows superior performance when compared to a direct method, 36x faster for a 112K DOF problem. Furthermore, due to the abstractions available in the Kokkos library it allows one to migrate from CPU to GPU in a trivial way.

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Radiation-MHD simulations for the development of a spark discharge channel

Niederhaus, John H.; Jorgenson, Roy E.; Warne, Larry K.; Chen, Kenneth C.

The growth of a cylindrical s park discharge channel in water and Lexan is studied using a series of one - dimensional simulations with the finite - element radiation - magnetohydrodynamics code ALEGRA. Computed solutions are analyzed in order to characterize the rate of growth and dynamics of the spark c hannels during the rising - current phase of the drive pulse. The current ramp rate is varied between 0.2 and 3.0 kA/ns, and values of the mechanical coupling coefficient K p are extracted for each case. The simulations predict spark channel expansion veloc ities primarily in the range of 2000 to 3500 m/s, channel pressures primarily in the range 10 - 40 GPa, and K p values primarily between 1.1 and 1.4. When Lexan is preheated, slightly larger expansion velocities and smaller K p values are predicted , but the o verall behavior is unchanged.

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6 Results
6 Results