Cover for Assessment of Safety and Risk with a Microscopic Model of Detonation

Assessment of Safety and Risk with a Microscopic Model of Detonation

Book2003

Edited by:

Carl-Otto Leiber and Brigitta Dobratz

Assessment of Safety and Risk with a Microscopic Model of Detonation

Book2003

 

Cover for Assessment of Safety and Risk with a Microscopic Model of Detonation

Edited by:

Carl-Otto Leiber and Brigitta Dobratz

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Book description

This unique book is a store of less well-known explosion anddetonation phenomena, including also data and experiences related tosafety risks. It highlights the shortcomings of the ... read full description

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  2. Book chapterNo access

    I - SHORTCOMINGS IN THE MACROSCOPIC PLANE-WAVE MODEL OF DETONATION

    Pages 7-12

  3. Book chapterNo access

    II - IMPEDANCE MIRROR PHOTOGRAPHY OF H. DEAN MALLORY

    Pages 13-32

  4. Book chapterNo access

    III - PRESSURE GENERATING MECHANISMS

    Pages 33-40

  5. Book chapterNo access

    IV - EQUATIONS

    Pages 41-78

  6. Book chapterNo access

    V - PRESSURE SOURCES FOR MODELING

    Pages 79-91

  7. Book chapterNo access

    VI - RAYLEIGH'S BUBBLE MODEL

    Pages 93-106

  8. Book chapterNo access

    VII - LOSSES BY VOLUME VARIATIONS

    Pages 107-122

  9. Book chapterNo access

    VIII - VARIETY OF INITIATION MODES BY BUBBLES

    Pages 123-144

  10. Book chapterNo access

    IX - VARIOUS APPROACHES TO DESCRIBE BUBBLE DYNAMIC PHENOMENA

    Pages 145-160

  11. Book chapterNo access

    X - SENSITIVITY TESTING

    Pages 161-184

  12. Book chapterNo access

    XI - LOW- (LVD) AND SLOW-VELOCITY DETONATION (SVD) OF LIQUID EXPLOSIVES

    Pages 185-218

  13. Book chapterNo access

    XII - LOW VELOCITY DETONATION OF SOLID EXPLOSIVES

    Pages 219-252

  14. Book chapterNo access

    XIII - CASE HISTORIES

    Pages 253-320

  15. Book chapterNo access

    XIV - DIPOLE SCATTERING

    Pages 321-344

  16. Book chapterNo access

    XV - FINITE SHOCK RISE

    Pages 345-358

  17. Book chapterNo access

    XVI - VOID PRECURSORS

    Pages 359-370

  18. Book chapterNo access

    XVII - ALTERATIONS OF HUGONIOTS BY BUBBLE FLOW

    Pages 371-391

  19. Book chapterNo access

    XVIII - CRITICAL DIMENSIONS

    Pages 393-423

  20. Book chapterNo access

    XIX - CRITICAL DIAMETER(S) OF NITROMETHANE (NM)

    Pages 425-446

  21. Book chapterNo access

    XX - SMOOTH AND ROUGH PRESSURE FRONTS, DARK WAVES AND DDT

    Pages 447-471

  22. Book chapterNo access

    CHAPTER XXI - SHOCK TUBES

    Pages 473-486

  23. Book chapterNo access

    XXII - DETONATION PHENOMENA IN CHARGES WITH AN AXIAL CAVITY

    Pages 487-492

  24. Book chapterNo access

    XXIII - MICROSCOPIC AND MACROSCOPIC PROPERTIES OF SOLIDS

    Siegfried Haussühl

    Pages 493-554

  25. Book chapterNo access

    XXIV - FRACTURE DYNAMICS OF INITIATION

    Pages 555-567

  26. Book chapterNo access

    AUTHORS

    Pages 569-578

  27. Book chapterNo access

    SUBJECT INDEX

    Pages 579-594

About the book

Description

This unique book is a store of less well-known explosion and
detonation phenomena, including also data and experiences related to
safety risks. It highlights the shortcomings of the current
engineering codes based on a classical plane wave model of the
phenomenon, and why these tools must fail.

For the first time all the explosion phenomena are described in terms
of proper assemblages of hot spots, which emit pressure waves and
associated near field terms in flow. Not all of the approaches are
new. Some even date back to the 19th century or earlier.. What is new
is the application of these approaches to explosion phenomena. In
order to make these tools easily available to the current detonation
physicist, basic acoustics is therefore also addressed.

Whereas the current plane wave, homogeneous flow detonation physics
is an excellent engineering tool for numerical predictions under
given conditions, the multi-hot-spot-model is an additional tool for
analyzing phenomena that cannot be explained by classical
calculations. The real benefit comes from being able to understand,
without any artificial assumptions, the whole phenomenology of
detonations and explosions. By specifying pressure generating
mechanisms, one is able to see that the current treatment of the
detonics of energetic materials is only a very special - but powerful
- case of explosion events and hazards. It becomes clear that
physical explosions must be taken into account in any safety
considerations. In these terms it is easy to understand why even
liquid carbon dioxide and inert silo materials can explode.

A unique collection of unexpected events, which might surprise even
specialists, has resulted from the evaluation of the model. Therefore
this book is valuable for each explosion and safety scientist for the
understanding and forecasting of unwanted events. The text mainly
addresses the next generation of explosion and detonation scientists,
with the goal of promoting the science of detonation on a new
physical basis. For this reason gaps in current knowledge are also
addressed. The science of explosions is not fully mature, but is
still in its beginning - and the tools necessary for furthering the
understanding of these phenomena have been with us for centuries.

This unique book is a store of less well-known explosion and
detonation phenomena, including also data and experiences related to
safety risks. It highlights the shortcomings of the current
engineering codes based on a classical plane wave model of the
phenomenon, and why these tools must fail.

For the first time all the explosion phenomena are described in terms
of proper assemblages of hot spots, which emit pressure waves and
associated near field terms in flow. Not all of the approaches are
new. Some even date back to the 19th century or earlier.. What is new
is the application of these approaches to explosion phenomena. In
order to make these tools easily available to the current detonation
physicist, basic acoustics is therefore also addressed.

Whereas the current plane wave, homogeneous flow detonation physics
is an excellent engineering tool for numerical predictions under
given conditions, the multi-hot-spot-model is an additional tool for
analyzing phenomena that cannot be explained by classical
calculations. The real benefit comes from being able to understand,
without any artificial assumptions, the whole phenomenology of
detonations and explosions. By specifying pressure generating
mechanisms, one is able to see that the current treatment of the
detonics of energetic materials is only a very special - but powerful
- case of explosion events and hazards. It becomes clear that
physical explosions must be taken into account in any safety
considerations. In these terms it is easy to understand why even
liquid carbon dioxide and inert silo materials can explode.

A unique collection of unexpected events, which might surprise even
specialists, has resulted from the evaluation of the model. Therefore
this book is valuable for each explosion and safety scientist for the
understanding and forecasting of unwanted events. The text mainly
addresses the next generation of explosion and detonation scientists,
with the goal of promoting the science of detonation on a new
physical basis. For this reason gaps in current knowledge are also
addressed. The science of explosions is not fully mature, but is
still in its beginning - and the tools necessary for furthering the
understanding of these phenomena have been with us for centuries.

Details

ISBN

978-0-444-51332-8

Language

English

Published

2003

Copyright

Copyright © 2003 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved

Imprint

Elsevier Science

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Editors

Carl-Otto Leiber

Brigitta Dobratz