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The Chemistry of Powder and Explosives - Sciencemadness Dot Org

The Chemistry of Powder and Explosives - Sciencemadness Dot Org

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238 NITRIC ESTERS<br />

Kast 66 has reported a velocity <strong>of</strong> detonation <strong>of</strong> 8260 meters<br />

per second for nitromannite compressed to a density <strong>of</strong> 1.73 in a<br />

column 12.8 mm. in diameter.<br />

Nitromannite is about as sensitive as nitroglycerin to shock<br />

<strong>and</strong> to friction. It detonates under a 4-cm. drop <strong>of</strong> a 2-kilogram<br />

weight, <strong>and</strong> may be exploded readily on a concrete surface by a<br />

blow <strong>of</strong> a carpenter's hammer. It is not fired by the spit <strong>of</strong> a<br />

fuse, but is made to detonate by the flame <strong>of</strong> a match which<br />

causes local overheating. It is almost, but not quite, a primary<br />

explosive. It is used as the high-explosive charge in compound<br />

detonators which contain the relatively safe diazodinitrophenol<br />

as the primary explosive. A mixture <strong>of</strong> nitromannite <strong>and</strong> tetracene<br />

is a powerful <strong>and</strong> brisant primary explosive which detonates<br />

from moderate heat.<br />

Nitrodulcite (Dulcitol hexanitrate)<br />

Dulcite is obtained from Madagascar manna by extraction<br />

with water <strong>and</strong> recrystallizing, large monoclinic prisms, m.p.<br />

188°, less soluble than mannite. It may also be procured by the<br />

action <strong>of</strong> sodium amalgam on aqueous solutions <strong>of</strong> lactose <strong>and</strong><br />

<strong>of</strong> d-galactose. Nitrodulcite, isomeric with nitromannite, crystallizes<br />

from alcohol in needles which melt at 94-95°.<br />

Nitrosorbite (Sorbitol hexanitrate)<br />

d-Sorbite occurs in the berries <strong>of</strong> the mountain ash, but is more<br />

readily procured by the electrolytic reduction <strong>of</strong> d-glucose. It<br />

crystallizes with one molecule <strong>of</strong> water in small crystals which<br />

lose their water when heated <strong>and</strong> melt at about 110°. Nitrosorbite,<br />

isomeric with nitromannite, exists as a viscous liquid <strong>and</strong><br />

has never been obtained in the crystalline state. It is used in nonfreezing<br />

dynamites.<br />

Nitrated Sugar Mixtures<br />

<strong>The</strong> sugars are polyhydric alcohols which contain an aldehyde<br />

or a ketone group or a cyclic acetal or ketal arrangement within<br />

the molecule. <strong>The</strong>y yield nitric esters which are perhaps less<br />

stable than the nitric esters <strong>of</strong> the simple polyhydric alcohols but<br />

which probably owe part <strong>of</strong> their reputation for instability to the<br />

« 6 Z. angew. Chem., 36, 74 (1923).

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