Sympathetic detonation: Difference between revisions

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imported>Howard C. Berkowitz
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  | title = Explosives - Compositions
  | title = Explosives - Compositions
  | publisher = Federation of American Scientists}}</ref>
  | publisher = Federation of American Scientists}}</ref>
[[Line charge]]s used for mine clearing use sympathetic detonation.
==References==
==References==
{{reflist|2}}
{{reflist|2}}

Revision as of 22:50, 23 April 2010

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Sympathetic detonation of explosives takes place when an "acceptor" explosive detonates from the blast of a nearby "donor" explosion, with no interconnection between the donor and acceptor. Sympathetic detonation may be undesirable from the standpoint of the owner of the acceptor munition, as when controlled explosions are used to detonate a minefield, or in the catastrophic chain reactions among munitions during fires on the aircraft carriers US aircraft carriers Forrestal (1967), USS Enterprise (1969) and USS Nimitz (1981). [1] It may be desirable with such explosives as "ditching dynamite", a 50% nitroglycerin shock-sensitive explosive used for commercial excavation without a need for complex interconnection of the individual charges.[2]

Line charges used for mine clearing use sympathetic detonation.

References

  1. Dinesh Raghavan (December 2005), Design Methodology for Understanding the Sympathetic Detonation Charactistics of Insensitive High Explosives, Naval Postgraduate School, Master's Thesis, p. 17
  2. Explosives - Compositions, Federation of American Scientists