A comparison study of exploding a Cu wire in air, water, and solid powders

Ruoyu Han, Jiawei Wu, Weidong Ding, Haibin Zhou, Aici Qiu, Yanan Wang

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

12 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

In this paper, an experimental study on exploding a copper wire in air, water, incombustible powders, and energetic materials is performed. We examined the effects of the surrounding media on the explosion process and its related phenomena. Experiments were first carried out with copper wire explosions driven by microsecond timescale pulsed currents in air, water, and the half-half case. Then, the copper wires were exploded in air, water, SiO2 powders, quartz sand, NaCl powders, and energetic-material cylinders, respectively. Our experimental results indicated that the explosion process was significantly influenced by the surrounding media, resulting in noticeable differences in energy deposition, optical emission, and shock waves. In particular, incombustible powders could throttle the current flow completely when a fine wire was adopted. We also found that an air or incombustible-powder layer could drastically attenuate the shock wave generated by a wire explosion. As for energetic-material loads, obvious discrepancies were found in voltage/current waveforms from vaporization when compared with a wire explosion in air/water, which meant the metal vapor/liquid drops play a significant role in the ignition process.

Original languageEnglish
Article number113515
JournalPhysics of Plasmas
Volume24
Issue number11
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 1 Nov 2017
Externally publishedYes

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