Baratol (explosive)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Baratol is an explosive made of a mixture of TNT and barium nitrate, with a small quantity (about 1%)[1] of wax used as a binder. TNT typically makes up 25-33% of the mixture. Because of the high density of barium nitrate, Baratol has a density of at least 2.5.

Baratol was used as the "slow" compound in the explosive lenses of early atomic bombs with Composition B often used as the "fast" explosive component. Atomic bombs like those detonated in 1945 at Trinity, the Soviet Joe 1 in 1949, and in India in 1972, used baratol and Composition B.[2]

Baratol has a detonation velocity of approximately 4,900 metres per second. [3]

[edit] References

  1. ^ Explosives - Compounds
  2. ^ Explosives - Compounds
  3. ^ High explosive compound - Patent 3956039