Nitro-Explosives: A Practical Treatise by P. Gerald Sanford
page 157 of 352 (44%)
page 157 of 352 (44%)
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quantities of roburite itself abroad, the Company also export to the
various colonies the two components, as manufactured in the chemical works, and which separately are quite non-explosive, and which, having arrived at their destination, can be easily mixed in the proper proportions. Among the special advantages claimed for roburite are:--First, that it is impossible to explode a cartridge by percussion, fire, or electric sparks. If a cartridge or layer be struck with a heavy hammer, the portion struck is decomposed, owing to the large amount of heat developed by the blow. The remaining explosive is not in the least affected, and no detonation whatever takes place. If roburite be mixed with gunpowder, and the gunpowder fired, the explosion simply scatters the roburite without affecting it in the least. In fact, the only way to explode roburite is to detonate it by means of a cap of fulminate, containing at least 1 gramme of fulminate of mercury. Secondly, its great safety for use in coal mines. Roburite has the great advantage of exploding by detonation at a very low temperature, indeed so low that a very slight amount of tamping is required when fired in the most explosive mixture of air and coal gas possible, and not at all in a mixture of air and coal dust--a condition in which the use of gunpowder is highly dangerous. Mr W.J. Orsman, F.I.C., in a paper read at the University College, Nottingham, in 1893, gives the temperature of detonation of roburite as below 2,100° C., and of ammonium nitrate as 1,130° C., whereas that of blasting gelatine is as much as 3,220° C. With regard to the composition of the fumes formed by the explosion of roburite, Mr Orsman says: "With certain safety explosives--roburite, for instance--an excess of the oxidising material is added, namely, nitrate of ammonia; but in this case the excess of oxygen here causes a diminution of temperature, as the |
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