Jun Tao*,
Xiaofeng Wang*,
Hao Wang and
Kun Zhang
Xi'an Modern Chemistry Research Institute, Xi'an 710065, Shaanxi, People's Republic of China. E-mail: taojun4712230@126.com; wangxf_204@163.com
First published on 18th December 2020
In order to design and prepare hexanitrohexaazaisowurtzitane/aluminum (CL-20/Al) composites, the contact state of CL-20 with aluminum particles under different mixed solvent contents were calculated with the method of dissipative particle dynamics (DPD). Then the modified attachment energy (AE) model was applied to predict the morphologies of CL-20 in ethyl acetate, hexane and ethyl acetate/hexane mixed solvents. Furthermore, the morphologies, the surface element distribution, the sensitivity and the energy performance of CL-20/Al composites prepared with the solvent/non-solvent method were characterized, and the interaction mechanism were also obtained. The results achieved show that phase separation phenomenon becomes obvious with the decrease of ethyl acetate/n-hexane mixed solvent content. CL-20/aluminum particles will form the composites of aluminum particles embedded in CL-20 crystal when the solvent content is zero. The order of modified attachment energies for ethyl acetate/hexane mixed solvents on CL-20 faces is (011) > (110) > (101) ≈ (11−1) ≈ (10−1) > (002). Besides that, the crystalline morphology of CL-20 in acetate/hexane mixed solvents is spindle-shaped. There are many Al particles embedded in CL-20 crystals of CL-20/Al composites prepared by using solvent/non-solvent method. The calculated results agree well with the experimental results. In CL-20/Al composites, aluminum particles interact with CL-20 mainly through hydrogen bond and strong van der Waals force. The sensitivity of CL-20/Al composites decreased obviously compared with pure CL-20 and mechanical mixing composites. Besides, the CL-20/Al composites with embedded structure can increase the explosion reaction temperature to 791.2 K, which has obvious energy advantage compared with CL-20/Al physical mixture.
Among composite energetic materials, Al-based composite energetic materials are composed of Al particles and metal, non-metal oxides, organic compounds, etc. The contact between reactant particles in Al-based composite energetic materials is kept closer, which reduces the distance of mass and heat transfer in the reaction process.8–10 It has the advantages of low ignition temperature and energy, fast energy release rate, high energy utilization rate, fast combustion rate and high pressure output.11,12 In recent years, researchers have begun to prepare energetic composites of explosive/aluminum powder, to realize the close contact between aluminum powder and explosives, to improve the concentration of explosive/aluminum powder per unit volume, and to improve the reaction rate and reaction completeness of aluminum powder. Yang et al.13 prepared a core–shell energetic composites of KClO4@Al/CuO by coating Al/CuO nano-composite particles with KClO4 by using solvent/non-solvent method. The Al/CuO composites are uniformly mixed by mechanical ball milling process, and CuO was used as metal oxide catalyst. The flame sensitivity of the composites is much higher than that of traditional similar materials, and the burning rate is three times higher than that of traditional nano Al/CuO. Zhigach et al.14 prepared HMX/Al nanocomposites with 50 nm aluminum powder by using suspension atomization and mechanical dry mixing method. It was found that the nano-energetic composites prepared by suspension atomization were loose solid powders, and the HMX crystals would grow during the suspension atomization process. When the pressure range was 3−10 Mpa, the burning rate of the pressed samples increased from 19 mm s−1 to 55 mm s−1, and the pressure exponent was in the range of 0.34–0.84. In addition, the nano-energetic composites of RDX, HMX and CL-20 and Al were aslo prepared by using spray drying method.15 The nano aluminum was dispersed into the explosive solution to form suspension liquid. Then the nano-energetic composites with explosive particles of 1 μm were obtained. Slocik et al.16 prepared Al/ammonium perchlorate (AP) nano-energetic composites through layer by layer self-assembly method. AP can interact with the surface of nano Al particles after modified by ferritin, which shortens the mass transfer and diffusion distance in the reaction. The burning rate of Al/AP energetic composites is the fastest when the number of assembly layers is 1, and the combustion rate is 160 ms. Therefore, through the previous work, it can be seen that energetic composites can increase the reaction completeness and reaction rate of aluminum powder by reducing the diffusion distance and increasing the contact area between components. However, there is only a simple physical contact between CL-20 and Al particles in the CL-20/Al energetic composite reported in the present literature. Compared with the common physical mixture, the particle size of aluminum powder is only reduced from micron scale to nano scale. Moreover, the use of nano size aluminum powder will improve the sensitivity of energetic composite on the one hand, and the activity of aluminum powder will be limited on the other hand. Therefore, it is necessary to innovate the structure and preparation method of CL-20/Al energetic composites, further increasing the contact area between CL-20 and aluminum powder particles, and obtaining energetic composite with excellent energy and safety.
In this paper, the mesoscopic morphologies of CL-20 with aluminum particles were calculated by dissipative particle dynamics (DPD) method, and the attachment energy (AE) model was applied to predict the crystal morphologies of CL-20 in solvents. Then CL-20/Al composites were prepared by using solvent/non-solvent method. The morphology, surface element distribution, sensitivity, energy performance and interaction mechanism of CL-20/Al composites were researched. CL-20/Al composites with embedded structure has obvious advantages of energy and sensitivity, whose application prospect is very good. The results are helpful to provide certain reference for the preparation and design of CL-20/Al composites.
Eb = k2(b − b0)2 + k3(b − b0)3 + k4(b − b0)4 | (1) |
The bending energy and twist energy of the bond angle also adopt three force field constants of the sum of three terms. Several cross terms are added to the stress field, including bond angle bending/torsion, bond stretching/torsion, bond stretching/bond stretching and so on.17,18 As for the non-bonding energy term, the van der Waals energy of the force field adopts the Lennard-Jones-9–6 function, and the specific expression is shown in Formula (2):
(2) |
The MD simulated results by the COMPASS force field are listed in Table 1. It is found that our calculated results for the lattice parameters agree well with the experiments. Their deviations are 1.29%, 2.48% and 1.56% for a, b, and c, and 4.73% for ρ of ε-CL-20, respectively. Besides, the deviations are 0.04%, 0.04% and 0.22% for a, b, and c, and 0.12% for ρ of Al2O3, respectively. The small discrepancy suggests that the COMPASS force field is appropriate to simulate the chosen crystal systems here.
System | Data analysis | a | b | c | α | β | γ | ρ |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
CL-20 | COMPASS | 8.727 | 12.250 | 13.149 | 90 | 105.337 | 90 | 2.147 |
Experimental19 | 8.841 | 12.562 | 13.358 | 90 | 106.820 | 90 | 2.050 | |
Deviation (%) | 1.29 | 2.48 | 1.56 | 0 | 1.39 | 0 | 4.73 | |
Al2O3 | COMPASS | 4.761 | 4.761 | 12.962 | 90 | 90 | 120 | 3.992 |
Experimental20,21 | 4.759 | 4.759 | 12.991 | 90 | 90 | 120 | 3.987 | |
Deviation (%) | 0.04 | 0.04 | 0.22 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0.12 |
The key to establishing DPD is to obtain the interaction parameters between the four kinds of beads. The repulsion force parameter aij is obtained based on the Flory Huggins mixing theory. The density of the simulation system is set as ρ = 3, and the interaction parameter between similar beads is aii = 25kbt. The interaction parameter aij between different beads can be calculated by formula aii ≈ aii + 3.27χij. The calculation results are shown in Table S1.†
In the model, considering the influence of the solvent layer, the calibration factor Es for vacuum attachment energy is introduced, which describes the binding energy of solvent on the (hkl) face of HMX crystal. It can be calculated as follows:
(3) |
The solvent attachment energy can be described using Formula (4):
(4) |
The growth rate of each crystal face is proportional to the solvent attachment energy of the crystal (as shown in Formula (5)), which is raised by Hartman in the modified morphology theoretic.
(5) |
The amorphous cell module was applied to build the solvent layer containing 200 random acetate molecules with a target density of 0.900 g cm−3, the solvent layer containing 200 random hexane molecules with a target density of 0.692 g cm−3, and the solvent layer containing 50 random acetate molecules and 150 random hexane molecules with a target density of 0.734 g cm−3. The size of the periodic cell for the acetone layer must consistent with the size of the CL-20 periodic cell. Further geometry optimization and MD simulation in the NPT ensemble were carried out for acetone molecules by using the Andersen thermostat.
The adsorption models for CL-20 face-acetate, CL-20 face-hexane and CL-20 face-acetate/hexane were built based on a CL-20 layer and a solvent (acetate, hexane and acetate/hexane) layer. The solvent layer was placed along the c axis on the CL-20 surface and a 30 Å vacuum was built above the solvent layer. The initial configuration of CL-20-solvent was optimized, and annealing (300−500 K, 1000000 steps) was operated to the CL-20-solvent configuration so as to eliminate unreasonable conformations. The configurations were taken after annealing to the MD simulation in the constant-pressure and constant-temperature (NPT) ensemble at 298 K for 1000 ps. Also, Andersen thermostat was used.19–22
Then the Al2O3 original cell was built, optimizing the original structure on the basis of the forceit module. A 3 × 3 × 3 super cell was built based on the optimized original cell, cutting crystal along (001), (010) and (100) face, respectively. Three CL-20 supercells were constructed according to the surface area of Al2O3(001), Al2O3(010) and Al2O3(100) supercells, which must guarantee that CL-20 molecule could completely cover the crystal face of Al2O3. The adsorption models for Al2O3(001)-CL-20, Al2O3(010)-CL-20 and Al2O3(100)-CL-20 were built from an Al2O3 layer and a CL-20 layer. The solvent layer was placed along the c axis on the Al2O3 surface and a 30 Å vacuum was built above the solvent layer. The initial configuration of Al2O3-CL-20 (displayed in Fig. S1†) was optimized, and annealing (300–500 K, 1000000 steps) was operated to the Al2O3(100)-CL-20 configuration so as to eliminate unreasonable conformations. The configurations were taken after annealing to the MD simulation in the constant-pressure and constant-temperature (NPT) ensemble at 298 K for 1000 ps. Also, Andersen thermostat was used.
The contact state between CL-20 and aluminum powder particles under different solvent conditions was further studied, as shown in Fig. 3. With the decrease of ethyl acetate/n-hexane mixed solvent content, the phase separation in the system becomes gradually obvious. When the solvent content is 28%, there are two phases in the system, one is the mixture of CL-20 and ethyl acetate, and the other is a mixture of aluminum particles and n-hexane. When the solvent content is further reduced to 0, there are only CL-20 and Al2O3 in the system, and there are two phases in the system. The Al2O3 phase tends to form spherical aggregates embedded in the CL-20 phase.
Furthermore, nine periodic chambers of mesoscopic morphology of CL-20/Al2O3 composites with no solvent were superimposed to form a larger mesoscopic morphology, as shown in Fig. 4. It can be seen that with the solvent filtration or evaporation, CL-20 and aluminum particles will form the composites of aluminum particles embedded in CL-20 crystal.
In order to understand the adsorption characteristics of ethyl acetate, hexane and ethyl acetate/hexane mixed solvents on different cystalline surfaces of CL-20, the binding energies between CL-20 and different solvents were calculated, the equilibrium conformations are shown in Fig. S3.† The predicted results are displayed in Table S3.† Take (011) face as an example. The binding energies of ethyl acetate, hexane and ethyl acetate/hexane on CL-20 (011) face are 1023.93 kJ mol−1, 735.64 kJ mol−1 and 1364.31 kJ mol−1, respectively, all of which are positive. It suggests that all ethyl acetate, hexane and ethyl acetate/hexane mixed solvents can adsorb on CL-20 (011) face steadily. The adsorption characteristics of ethyl acetate, hexane and ethyl acetate/hexane mixed solvents on other crystalline surfaces of CL-20 are similar to those of CL-20 (011) face.
Based on the results of the crystalline surface characteristics of CL-20 and the interaction between CL-20 and solvents, the crystalline growth parameters for CL-20 in ethyl acetate, hexane and ethyl acetate/hexane mixed solvents were calculated, as displayed in Table S4.† For ethyl acetate, the order of the solvent attachment energy for CL-20 faces is: (101) > (10−1) > (011) > (110) > (11−1) > (002). For hexane, (101) face has the greatest solvent attachment energy (Es) value (−281.41 kJ mol−1); (110) face has the lowest Es value, which is only −792.19 kJ mol−1. There is little difference among the Es value for hexane on different faces of CL-20. For acetate/hexane mixed solvents, the order of the Es value for CL-20 faces is as follows: (011) > (110) > (101) ≈ (11−1) ≈ (10−1) > (002). The results suggest that the interaction intensities of the (101) face with ethyl acetate and hexane are the greatest. The solvent adsorption capability of (101) face for acetate and hexane is the strongest. The adsorption capability is mainly determined by two factors, one is the number of the exposed polar groups on the crystalline surface; and the other is the roughness of the crystal surface. However, for ethyl acetate/hexane mixed solvent, the interaction intensity of it on the (011) face is the greatest. It shows that the use of mixed solvents in the crystallization process of CL-20 is not simply a physical addition. The mixing of solvents can create different properties for CL-20 such as crystalline morphology that the single solvent can not possess.
According to the AE model theory, CL-20 interacts with solvent layers, which will change the vacuum attachment energy. Therefore, the modified attachment energy was calculated. As displayed in Table S4,† the order of modified attachment energy for ethyl acetate on CL-20 faces is: (101) > (10−1) > (011) > (110) > (11−1) > (002). Therefore, the (002) face has the greatest morphological importance for its slowest growth rate. Due to the fast growth rate, the area of (101) and (10−1) faces will reduce in the final crystalline morphology of CL-20. Similarly, the (110) face has the greatest morphological importance for CL-20 in hexane; the (002) face has the greatest morphological importance for CL-20 in acetate/hexane mixed solvents. The morphologies of CL-20 in ethyl acetate, hexane and ethyl acetate/hexane mixed solvents are displayed in Fig. S4,† which are predicted by the AE model. The shape and the area distributions of the crystalline morphology are very different for ethyl acetate, hexane and ethyl acetate/hexane mixed solvents. The crystalline morphology of CL-20 in hexane is spindle-shaped, which is very close to that in vacuum. The crystalline morphology of CL-20 in acetate/hexane mixed solvents is also spindle-shaped. However, the shape is more flat, and the proportion of the surface area of (002) face is larger.
Based on the results of miscibility calculation and morphology prediction, the morphology of CL-20/Al energetic composites was predicted. As shown in Fig. S5,† the existence of aluminum particles has little effect on the crystal morphology of CL-20. However, CL-20 will adsorb and crystallize on the aluminum powder particles. Moreover, during the growth of CL-20 crystal, aluminum particles will contact with CL-20 crystal surface under the action of mechanical energy. The aluminum particles will be embedded in the crystal. Finally, a large amount of aluminum powder embedded in the inner and surface of CL-20 crystal will be formed.
Fig. 7 shows the sensitivities of CL-20 and CL-20/Al composites. From Fig. 7, it can be seen that the impact sensitivity and friction sensitivity of CL-20/Al composites prepared with the mechanical mixing method are 100%. However, the impact sensitivity and friction sensitivity of CL-20/Al composites prepared with the solvent/non-solvent method are 42% and 56%, respectively. Compared with pure CL-20 and CL-20/Al composites prepared through mechanical mixing, the sensitivities decreased significantly. It is thought that the main reason is the change of micro-structure of CL-20 and Al, which leads to the decrease of CL-20 sensitivity. Many aluminum particles are tightly combined with the surface of CL-20 in CL-20/Al composites prepared with the solvent/non-solvent method. Al is a non-explosive material, which can isolate the external friction and impact to a certain extent, as well as protect the internal CL-20. According to Bowden's hot spot theory,23 under the external mechanical stimulation, the first material to be stimulated is aluminum powder particles, which will change into heat after the mechanical stimulation applied to aluminum powder. Aluminum powder is an inert material. The heat generated by stimulation will be lost from aluminum powder to CL-20 explosive. This will lead to the reduction of ignition energy of CL-20, and the probability of ignition naturally decrease. Therefore, the sensitivity of CL-20/Al energetic composites with outer cladding and inner embedding structure is significantly lower than that of CL-20 and mechanical mixing composites.
Furthermore, the explosion energy performance of CL-20/Al energetic composites with embedded structure and CL-20/Al physical mixture were compared and studied, and the content of aluminum powder in the composite is 15%. The temperature change of aluminized explosive with CL-20/Al energetic composite and CL-20/Al physical mixture was tested in a closed explosion device, and the test results are shown in Fig. 8. The maximum temperature of CL-20/Al composite based explosive is 2.14 V (791.2 K), and that of CL-20/Al mixture based explosive is 1.47 V (632.5 K). The CL-20/Al composites with embedded structure can improve the reaction completeness of aluminum powder in the composites with aluminum content of 15%, which is an effective way to control the detonation reaction characteristics of aluminized explosives.
Footnote |
† Electronic supplementary information (ESI) available. See DOI: 10.1039/d0ra07602c |
This journal is © The Royal Society of Chemistry 2020 |