Investigation of the Soil Cratering Equivalence of C-4 and ANFO for Above-Ground Detonations

- Organization:
- International Society of Explosives Engineers
- Pages:
- 10
- File Size:
- 207 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 2008
Abstract
With the growing concerns about terrorism world-wide, numerous agencies conduct experiments to investigate the effects of terrorist vehicle bombs. In many cases, the vehicle bomb of interest utilizes some form of ammonium nitrate/fuel oil (ANFO) as the explosive source. Due to the high cost of fullscale testing, it is advantageous to conduct at least some vehicle bomb experiments at reduced scale. Extensive testing has shown that ANFO is a non-ideal explosive, and its explosive output does not scale reliably at explosive masses below approximately 400 lb (182 kg). Most scale-model testing requires explosive masses 1 to 5 orders of magnitude smaller. Thus, scale-model testing is typically conducted with “ideal” explosives, such as composition C-4, which perform in a scalable manner at virtually any charge mass. The utilization of an ideal explosive to model ANFO requires the existence of an accurate means of equating the performance of the two explosives. The airblast equivalence of C-4 and ANFO has been well established. However, the cratering equivalence of these explosives is not thoroughly quantified. This is especially true for the case of an above-ground detonation, which is precisely the scenario of interest in vehicle bomb studies. A study has been conducted to better define the cratering equivalence of C-4 and ANFO for above-ground detonations. This paper presents a discussion of results from this research.
Citation
APA:
(2008) Investigation of the Soil Cratering Equivalence of C-4 and ANFO for Above-Ground DetonationsMLA: Investigation of the Soil Cratering Equivalence of C-4 and ANFO for Above-Ground Detonations. International Society of Explosives Engineers, 2008.