The Effects of Processing Variables on Resonant Acoustic Mixed Polymer Bonded Explosives

Date

2018-11-23 10:40

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Publisher

Cranfield University

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Poster

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Citation

Claydon, Andrew (2018). The Effects of Processing Variables on Resonant Acoustic Mixed Polymer Bonded Explosives. Cranfield Online Research Data (CORD). Poster. https://doi.org/10.17862/cranfield.rd.7378058.v1

Abstract

Poster presented at the 2018 Defence and Security Doctoral Symposium.Polymer Bonded Explosives (PBXs) are composite materials which consist of high explosive crystals bound in a polymer matrix. During manufacture, the crystals are dispersed throughout a liquid prepolymer, which is then cured into a crosslinked elastomeric solid. Dispersion can be achieved with Resonant Acoustic Mixing (RAM), a novel mixing technique which uses a vibrating platform to create longitudinal acoustic pressure waves which agitate the mixture. This work describes the outcomes of a comparison between the effects of different mixing vessel surfaces on process efficiency, and a way in which RAM equipment can be modified to mix PBX samples ‘in-situ’, in their end-use cases.NOTE: This poster is based on preliminary data that has since been superseded, additional details on where to find current work will be included here in due course.

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Keywords

'Resonant acoustic mixing', 'Polymer bonded explosives', 'DSDS18 poster', 'DSDS18', 'Polymers and Plastics', 'Defence Studies'

Rights

CC BY 4.0

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