TNT equivalent

TNT equivalent is a method of quantifying the energy released in explosions. The ton (or tonne, i.e. metric ton) of TNT is a unit of energy equal to 4.184 gigajoules, which is approximately the amount of energy released in the detonation of one ton of TNT. The megaton is a unit of energy equal to 4.184 petajoules.[1]

The kiloton and megaton of TNT have traditionally been used to rate the energy output, and hence destructive power, of nuclear weapons (see nuclear weapon yield). This unit is written into various nuclear weapon control treaties, and gives a sense of destructiveness as compared with ordinary explosives, like TNT. More recently, it has been used to describe the energy released in other highly destructive events, such as asteroid impacts. However, TNT is not the most energetic of conventional explosives. Dynamite, for example, has more than 60% more energy density (approximately 7.5 MJ/kg, compared to 4.7 MJ/kg for TNT).

Contents

Value

A gram of TNT releases 4100–4602 Joules upon explosion. To define the tonne of TNT, this was arbitrarily standardized by letting 1 gram TNT = 4184 J (exactly).[2] This conveniently defined the energy liberated by one gram to TNT as exactly one kilocalorie.

This definition is a conventional one. The explosive's energy is normally calculated using the thermodynamic work energy of detonation, which for TNT has been accurately measured at 4686 J/g from large numbers of air blast experiments and theoretically calculated to be 4853 J/g.[3]

The measured pure heat output of a gram of TNT is only 2724 J,[4] but this is not the important value for explosive blast effect calculations.

A kiloton of TNT can be visualized as a cube of TNT of 8.46 metres on a side.

Grams TNT Symbol Tons TNT Symbol Energy
gram of TNT g microton of TNT μt 4.184×103 J
kilogram of TNT kg milliton of TNT mt 4.184×106 J
megagram of TNT Mg ton of TNT t 4.184×109 J
gigagram of TNT Gg kiloton of TNT kt 4.184×1012 J
teragram of TNT Tg megaton of TNT Mt 4.184×1015 J
petagram of TNT Pg gigaton of TNT Gt 4.184×1018 J

Examples

See also

References

  1. ^ Joules to Megatons Conversion Calculator
  2. ^ NIST Guide for the Use of the International System of Units (SI): Appendix B8—Factors for Units Listed Alphabetically
  3. ^ Cooper, Paul. Explosives Engineering, New York: Wiley-VCH, 1996, p. 406.
  4. ^ "Physics for Future Presidents, a textbook", 2001–2002, Richard A. Muller, Chapter 1. Energy, Power, and Explosions
  5. ^ See Currently deployed U.S. nuclear weapon yields, Complete List of All U.S. Nuclear Weapons, Tsar Bomba, all from Carey Sublette's Nuclear Weapon Archive.
  6. ^ "Frequently Asked Questions – Electricity". United States Department of Energy. 2009-10-06. http://tonto.eia.doe.gov/ask/electricity_faqs.asp#electricity_use_home. Retrieved 2009-10-21.  (Calculated from 2007 value of 936 kWh monthly usage)
  7. ^ "Country Comparison :: Electricity - consumption". The World Factbook. CIA. https://www.cia.gov/library/publications/the-world-factbook/rankorder/2042rank.html. Retrieved 2009-10-22.  (Calculated from 2007 value of 3,892,000,000,000 kWh annual usage)
  8. ^ In antiproton annihilation, about 50% of this energy is carried off by effectively invisible neutrinos (see S.K. Borowski,Comparison of Fusion/Antiproton Propulsion systems); in contrast, almost 100% of electron-positron annihilation events emit their energy entirely as gamma rays.

External links