Pyrotechnic composition

A pyrotechnic composition is a substance or mixture of substances designed to produce an effect by heat, light, sound, gas/smoke or a combination of these, as a result of non-detonative self-sustaining exothermic chemical reactions. Pyrotechnic substances do not rely on oxygen from external sources to sustain the reaction.

Basic types of pyrotechnic compositions are:

Some pyrotechnic compositions are used in industry and aerospace for generation of large volumes of gas in gas generators (e.g. in airbags), in pyrotechnic fasteners, and in other similar applications. They are also used in military pyrotechnics, when production of large amount of noise, light, or infrared radiation is required; e.g. missile decoy flares, flash powders, and stun grenades. A new class of reactive material compositions is now under investigation by military.

Many pyrotechnic compositions – especially involving aluminium and perchlorates – are often highly sensitive to friction, impact, and static electricity. Even as little as 0.1–10 millijoules spark can set off certain mixtures.

Materials used

Pyrotechnic compositions are usually homogenized mixtures of small particles of fuels and oxidizers. The particles can be grains or flakes. Generally, the higher the surface area of the particles, the higher the reaction rate and burning speed. For some purposes, binders are used to turn the powder into a solid material.

Fuels

Typical fuels are based on metal or metalloid powders. A flash powder composition may specify multiple different fuels. Some fuels can also serve as binders. Common fuels include:

When metallic fuels are used, the metal particle size is important. A larger surface area to volume ratio leads to a faster reaction; this means that smaller particle sizes produce a faster-burning composition. The shape also matters. Spherical particles, like those produced by atomizing molten metal, are undesirable. Thin and flat particles, like those produced by milling metal foil, have higher reaction surface and therefore are ideal when faster reaction is desired. Using nanoparticles can drastically affect the reaction rates; metastable intermolecular composites exploit this.

A suitable metal fuel may be dangerous on its own, even before it is mixed with an oxidizer. Careful handling is required to avoid the production of pyrophoric metal powders.

Oxidizers

Perchlorates, chlorates and nitrates are the most commonly used oxidizers for flash powders. Other possibilities include permanganates, chromates, and some oxides. Generally, the less the oxidizer, the slower the burning and the more light produced. For use at very high temperatures, sulfates can be used as oxidizers in combination with very strongly reducing fuels.

Oxidizers in use include:

Corresponding sodium salts can be substituted for potassium ones.

Additives

See also

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 B. J. Kosanke et al. Pyrotechnic Chemistry, Volume 4 of Pyrotechnic reference series, Journal of Pyrotechnics (2004) ISBN 1-889526-15-0 p. 30
  2. American Chemical Society. Chemistry.org. Retrieved on 2010-10-15.
  3. Barium – Elements in Fireworks. Chemistry.about.com (2010-06-11). Retrieved on 2010-10-15.
  4. Strontium – Elements in Fireworks. Chemistry.about.com (2010-06-11). Retrieved on 2010-10-15.
  5. Pyrotechnical delay charge – Patent 4419153. Freepatentsonline.com (1982-05-13). Retrieved on 2010-10-15.
  6. EnergyStorm – Titanium-boron mixtures as variable heat sources. Energystorm.us. Retrieved on 2010-10-15.

External links

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