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Proceedings ArticleDOI

The ignition of ultra-fine aluminum in ammonium perchlorate solid propellant flames

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TLDR
Dokhan et al. as discussed by the authors investigated the ignition of ultrafine aluminum (UFAl) compared to conventional sized aluminum (CSAl) particles in ammonium perchlorate (AP)-polybutadiene acrylonitrile acrylic acid (PBAN) solid propellants.
Abstract
A preliminary experimental investigation was carried out to investigate the ignition of ultrafine aluminum (UFAl) compared to conventional sized aluminum (CSAl) particles in ammonium perchlorate (AP)-polybutadiene acrylonitrile acrylic acid (PBAN) solid propellants. To evaluate the temperature criteria for igniting UFAl, matrix samples (binder, fine AP and Al only) were prepared with various loadings of 10μm fine AP (fAP) as a means of varying the AP-binder flame temperature, and with Al coarse-to-fine ratio of 0(30μm)/20(UFAl) and 80(30μm)/20(UFAl). Preliminary results showed that UFAl sized particles ignite at lower gasphase flame temperatures than CSAl particles and that the UFAl particles tend to affect the combustion processes close to the propellant surface depending upon the availability of oxidizer. * Senior Combustion/Propulsion Engineer. AIAA Member. E mail: allandokhan@hotmail.com † ‡ Regent Professor Emeritus. Fellow Member. Associate Professor. Senior Member. E mail: jerry.seitzman@ae.gatech.edu Senior Research Engineer. INTRODUCTION In recent studies of ultra-fine aluminum (UFAl~0.1μm) in ammonium perchlorate (AP) solid propellants with bimodal AP (10μm:400μm and 82.5μm:400μm) and bimodal aluminum (Al) distribution (30μm:UFAl), the burning of UFAl was found to create a very dense aluminum burning region (ABR) directly above and some distance beyond the propellant surface (~3000-4000μm) compared to the burning of conventional sized aluminum (CSAl~12-100μm). The density of the ABR was found to be the product of the number of burning Al particles/droplets/agglomerates leaving the propellant surface per unit area (one 30μm Al particle is the mass equivalent of 10 UFAl particles), which is very dependent upon the propellant microstructure (see later). The combustion of fine Al (~3μm) and UFAl particles occur much closer behind the AP-binder flame because of their near equilibrium state with the gas flow (temperature & velocity) compared to CSAl. As a result, they ignite quickly as they pass through the flame surface and burn close behind the convoluted flame canopy. This dense luminous bright ABR was found to be responsible for a significant amount of heat feedback to the propellant surface and to the AP-binder flame array in the form of either radiation and/or conduction, which resulted in high burning rate propellants. Copyright© 2003 A. Dokhan, E. W. Price, J. M. Seitzman and R. K. Sigman. Published by the American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics, Inc. with permission 1

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Burning of Nano-Aluminized Composite Rocket Propellants

TL;DR: In this paper, a detailed investigation of pre-burning properties by the Brunauer-Emmet-Teller method, electron microscopy, X-ray diffraction, and Xray photoelectron spectroscopy was carried out.
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Dependence of size and size distribution on reactivity of aluminum nanoparticles in reactions with oxygen and MoO3

TL;DR: In this article, the oxidation reaction of aluminum nanoparticles with oxygen gas and the thermal behavior of a metastable intermolecular composite (MIC) composed of the aluminium nanoparticles and molybdenum trioxide are studied with differential scanning calorimetry (DSC) as a function of the size and size distribution of the aluminum particles.
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Research on the Combustion Properties of Propellants with Low Content of Nano Metal Powders

TL;DR: A comparison of various experimental results for combustionrelated properties evaluation, including burning rates, deflagration heat, flame structures and thermal decomposition properties, of AP/RDX/Al/HTPB composite propellants containing nano metal powders is presented in this paper.
Journal ArticleDOI

Performance of Ammonium-Perchlorate-Based Composite Propellant Containing Nanoscale Aluminum

TL;DR: In this paper, the effect of nanoscale aluminum particle size on the burning rate and manufacturability of composite propellant mixtures of hydroxyl-terminated polybutadiene, ammonium perchlorate, and aluminum was investigated.
Journal ArticleDOI

The numerical simulation of two-dimensional aluminized composite solid propellent combustion

TL;DR: A numerical framework for the burning of two-dimensional aluminized solid propellants is presented in this paper, which includes the level set method to capture the solid-gas interface as well as particle motion in the gas phase.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Comparison of Thermal Behavior of Regular and Ultra-fine Aluminum Powders (Alex) Made from Plasma Explosion Process

TL;DR: In this paper, a TEM was employed for examining the microstructure of Alex particles and an environmental scanning electron microscope (ESEM) was utilized to study the particle surface bahavior when samples were heated in air and nitrogen.
Journal ArticleDOI

The effects of bimodal aluminum with ultrafine aluminum on the burning rates of solid propellants

TL;DR: In this article, the authors measured the burning rates of composite aluminized composite propellants with different aluminum (Al) sizes and with bimodal Al distributions containing various amounts of ultrafine Al (UFAl).
Proceedings ArticleDOI

The Effects of Al Particle Size on the Burning Rate and Residual Oxide in Aluminized Propellants

TL;DR: In this article, the effect of aluminum particle size and bimodal Al particle size on the burning rate of propellants and the particle size distribution of residual product Al2O3 was examined.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

Pressure dependence of burning rate of ammonium perchlorate-hydrocarbon binder solid propellants

TL;DR: In this article, the mechanisms that govern the pressure depedence of the burning rate of ammonium perchlorate-hydrocarbon binder solid propellents, with emphasis on propellants with bimodal ammonium-perchlorate particle size distributions that tend to exhibit "plateau" and "mesa" burning, are discussed.
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