Prediction of reaction kinetics for CL-20 and host-guest crystals under high temperature and pressure using neuroevolution potential

Zhi Qiang Hu*, Yi Fan Xie, Rui Liu*, Jian Li Shao, Peng Wan Chen

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

The energetic host-guest approach has been successfully applied to design various novel crystal structures. A neuroevolution potential was proposed to predict the reactive kinetics of CL-20 crystals under high temperature and pressure. In this study, molecular dynamics simulations were conducted to investigate the shock compression and thermal decomposition behaviors. During the shock compression process, temperature monitoring revealed the transition of the crystal from the unreacted Hugoniot state to the reacted Hugoniot state, which occurred after the decomposition of CL-20 molecules. The temperature rise in the reacted state followed the order: N2O > CO2 > H2O2 > NCCH3 > β > α > γ > ϵ. These indicate that guest molecules facilitate the reaction under shock conditions. During the thermal decomposition process, monitoring the potential energy evolution showed that the initial decomposition of CL-20 molecules is an endothermic reaction, primarily producing NO2. As the temperature increased, NO2 was further consumed, and CL-20 underwent a ring-opening reaction, primarily generating CO2. NCCH3 and H2O2 molecules were consumed during the endothermic process, showing the largest and smallest potential energy changes, respectively. N2O molecules were consumed during the formation of final products, while CO2 and H2O were the final products and were not consumed. The activation energy ranking of the reactions was ϵ > β > γ > NCCH3 > N2O > CO2 > α > H2O2. These results provide an atomic-level perspective for controlling the detonation performance of energetic materials under high temperature and pressure.

Original languageEnglish
Article number174503
JournalJournal of Chemical Physics
Volume162
Issue number17
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 7 May 2025
Externally publishedYes

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