Information about Gunpowder

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Smokeless powder


Gunpowder is a pyrotechnic composition, an explosive mixture of sulfur, charcoal and potassium nitrate that burns rapidly, producing volumes of hot gas which can be used as a propellant in firearms and fireworks.

Because of its slow decomposition rate and consequently low brisance, gunpowder is classified as a low explosive, that is, it produces a subsonic deflagration wave rather than the supersonic detonation wave produced by brisants, or high explosives. The gases produced by burning gunpowder generates enough pressure to propel a bullet, but not enough to destroy the barrel of a firearm. This makes gunpowder less suitable for shattering rock or fortifications, applications where high explosives such as TNT are preferred.

Black powder

The term "black powder" was coined in the late 19th century to distinguish prior gunpowder formulations from the new smokeless powders.

Black powder is a granular mixture of
  • a nitrate—typically Potassium nitrate (KNO3)—which supplies the reaction with oxygen
  • charcoal, which provides fuel for the reaction in the form of carbon (C)
  • sulfur (S), which is also a fuel, lowers the temperature of ignition and helps increase the speed of combustion
Potassium nitrate is the most important ingredient in terms of both bulk and function because the oxygen released by the combustion of potassium nitrate promotes the rapid burning of the other ingredients.[1] To reduce the likelihood of accidental ignition by static electricity, the granules of modern black powder are typically coated with graphite, which prevents the build-up of electrostatic charge.

The current standard for black powder manufactured by pyrotechnicians today is 75% potassium nitrate, 15% softwood charcoal and 10% sulfur; it appears to have been adopted as far back as 1780.[2] These ratios have varied over the centuries and can be altered somewhat depending on the purpose of the powder.

The burn rate of black powder can be changed by corning. Corning is a process which first compresses the fine black powder meal into blocks with a fixed density (1.7 g/cm³). The blocks are then broken up into granules. These granules are then sorted by size to give the various grades of black powder. In the USA, standard grades of black powder run from the coarse Fg grade used in large bore rifles and small cannon though FFg (medium and smallbore rifles), FFFg (pistols), and FFFFg (smallbore, short pistols and priming flintlocks). In the United Kingdom, the gunpowder grains are categorised by mesh size: the BSS sieve mesh size, being the smallest mesh size on which no grains were retained. Recognised grain sizes are Gunpowder: 'G 7', 'G 20', 'G 40' and 'G 90'.

A simple, commonly cited, chemical equation for the combustion of black powder is:
2 KNO3 + S + 3 CK2S + N2 + 3 CO2


A more accurate, but still simplified, equation is:[3]
10 KNO3 + 3 S + 8 C → 2 K2CO3 + 3 K2SO4 + 6 CO2 + 5 N2


The products of burning do not follow any simple equation. One study's results showed it produced (in order of descending quantities): 55.91% solid products: potassium carbonate, potassium sulfate, potassium sulfide, sulfur, potassium nitrate, potassium thiocyanate, carbon, ammonium carbonate. 42.98% gaseous products: carbon dioxide, nitrogen, carbon monoxide, hydrogen sulfide, hydrogen, methane, 1.11% water. However, those products that contain hydrogen are probably contamination, due to the fact that none of the reactants contain any hydrogen.

Black powder formulations where the nitrate used is sodium nitrate tend to be hygroscopic, unlike black powders where the nitrate used is saltpetre. Because of this, black powder which uses saltpetre can be stored unsealed and remain viable for centuries provided no liquid water is ever introduced; muzzleloaders have been known to fire after hanging on a wall for decades in a loaded state, provided they remained dry. By contrast, powder which uses sodium nitrate, which is typically intended for blasting, must be sealed from moisture in the air to remain stable for long periods of time.

Advantages of black powder
Smokeless powder requires precise loading of the charge to prevent damage due to overloading. With black powder, though such damage is still possible, loading can generally be carried out using volumetric measures rather than precise weight.

Generally, high explosives are preferred for shattering rock; however, because of its low brisance, black powder causes fewer fractures and results in more usable stone compared to other explosives, making black powder useful for blasting monumental stone such as granite and marble.

Black powder is well suited for blank rounds, signal flares, burst charges, and rescue-line launches.

Gunpowder can be used to make fireworks by mixing with chemical compounds that produce the desired color.

Disadvantages of black powder
Black powder has relatively low energy density compared to modern smokeless powders and produces a thick smoke that can impair aiming or reveal a shooter's position.

Combustion converts less than half the mass of black powder to gas; the rest ends up as a thick layer of soot inside the barrel. In addition to being a nuisance, the residue from burnt black powder is hygroscopic and an anhydrous caustic substance. When moisture from the air is absorbed, the potassium oxide or sodium oxide turns into hydroxide, which will corrode wrought iron or steel gun barrels. Black powder arms must be well cleaned both inside and out to remove the residue.

The United States Department of Transportation has classified black powder as a "Class A High Explosive" for shipment because it ignites so easily, even though it is not a high explosive at all. Complete manufactured devices containing black powder are usually classified as "Class C Firework", "Class C Model Rocket Engine", etc. for shipment because they are harder to ignite than loose powder.

Sulfur-free gunpowder

The development of smokeless powders, such as Cordite, in the late 19th century created the need for a spark-sensitive priming charge, such as gunpowder. However, the sulfur content of traditional gunpowders caused corrosion problems with Cordite Mk I and this led to the introduction of a range of sulfur-free gunpowders, of varying grain sizes.[4] They typically contain 70.5 parts of saltpetre and 29.5 parts of charcoal.[4] Like black powder, they were produced in different grain sizes. In United Kingdom, the finest grain was known as sulfur-free mealed powder (SMP). Coarser grains were numbered as sulfur-free gunpowder (SFG n): 'SFG 12', 'SFG 20', 'SFG 40' and 'SFG 90', for example, where the number was a BSS sieve mesh size, being the largest mesh size on which no grains were retained.

History

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A Mongol bomb thrown against a charging Japanese samurai during the Mongol invasions of Japan, 1281.
Main article: History of gunpowder
Most sources credit the discovery of gunpowder to Chinese alchemists in the 9th century searching for an elixir of immortality.[5] The discovery of gunpowder was probably the product of centuries of alchemical experimentation.[5] Saltpetre was known to the Chinese by the mid-1st century AD and there is strong evidence of the use of saltpetre and sulfur in various largely medicinal combinations.[6] A Chinese alchemical text from 492 noted that saltpeter gave off a purple flame when ignited, providing for the first time a practical and reliable means of distinguishing it from other inorganic salts, making it possible to evaluate and compare purification techniques.[5] By most accounts, the earliest Arabic and Latin descriptions of the purification of saltpeter do not appear until the 1200s.[5][9]

The first reference to gunpowder is probably a passage in the Zhenyuan miaodao yaolüe, a Taoism text tentatively dated to the mid-800s:[5]
Some have heated together sulfur, realgar and saltpeter with honey; smoke and flames result, so that their hands and faces have been burnt, and even the whole house where they were working burned down.[11]
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Ming Dynasty (1368-1644 AD) matchlock firearms of European origin
The earliest surviving recipes for gunpowder can be found in the Chinese military treatise Wujing zongyao[5] of 1044 AD, which contains three: two for use in incendiary bombs to be thrown by siege engines and one intended as fuel for poison smoke bombs.[12] The formulas in the Wujing zongyao range from 27 to 50 percent nitrate.[13] Experimenting with different levels of saltpetre content eventually produced bombs, grenades, and land mines, in addition to giving fire arrows a new lease on life.[5] By the end of the 12th century, there were cast iron grenades filled with gunpowder formulations capable of bursting through their metal containers.[14] The 14th century Huolongjing contains gunpowder recipes with nitrate levels ranging from 12 to 91 percent, six of which approach the theoretical composition for maximal explosive force.[13]

In China, the 13th century saw the beginnings of rocketry[15][16] and the manufacture of the oldest gun still in existence,[5][17] a descendant of the earlier fire-lance, a gunpowder-fueled flamethrower that could shoot shrapnel along with fire. The Huolongjing text of the 14th century also describes hollow, gunpowder-packed exploding cannonballs.[18]

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The Great Turkish Bombard, a very heavy bronze muzzle-loading cannon of type used by Turks in the siege of Constantinople, 1453 AD, showing ornate decoration.
Between the 11th and 13th centuries, contemporary documentation shows gunpowder beginning to spread from China to the rest of the world, beginning with the Islamic world[19] and then medieval Europe.[9] Arabic chemists and engineers acquired knowledge of saltpetre—which they called "Chinese snow" (thalj al-Sīn)—and, soon afterward, of gunpowder; they also learned of fireworks ("Chinese flowers") and rockets ("Chinese arrows").[21][19] The Arabs were purifying saltpetre by the 11th century, and the earliest complete purification process was described by Hasan al-Rammah in 1270, who used potassium carbonate to remove calcium and magnesium salts from the saltpetre.[22]

Hasan al-Rammah, in The Book of Military Horsemanship and Ingenious War Devices, also described the earliest known recipes for an explosive gunpowder effect, some of which were almost identical to the ideal composition for explosive gunpowder used in modern times (75% saltpetre, 10% sulfur, 15% carbon), such as the tayyar "rocket" (75% saltpetre, 8% sulfur, 15% carbon) and the tayyar buruq "lightning rocket" (74% saltpetre, 10% sulfur, 15% carbon). He states in his book that many of these recipes were known to his father and grandfather, hence dating back to at least the late 12th century. The earliest known military applications of these explosive gunpowder compositions were the explosive cannons first used by the Egyptians to repel the Mongols at the Battle of Ain Jalut in 1260. There were four different gunpowder compositions used for the cannons at the battle, with the most explosive cannon having a gunpowder composition (74% saltpetre, 11% sulfur, 15% carbon) again almost identical to the ideal composition for explosive gunpowder. The compositions for an explosive gunpowder effect were not known in China or Europe until the 14th century.[23][24]

Gunpowder arrived in India by the mid-1300s, but could have been introduced by the Mongols perhaps as early as the mid-1200s.[25]

The earliest extant written references to gunpowder in Europe are from the works of Roger Bacon. In Bacon's Epistola, "De Secretis Operibus Artis et Naturae et de Nullitate Magiae," dated variously between 1248[25] and 1257[26], he states:[25]
We can, with saltpeter and other substances, compose artificially a fire that can be launched over long distances... By only using a very small quantity of this material much light can be created accompanied by a horrible fracas. It is possible with it to destroy a town or an army ... In order to produce this artificial lightning and thunder it is necessary to take saltpeter, sulfur, and Luru Vopo Vir Can Utriet.


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Cannons forged in 1667 AD at the Fortín de La Galera, Nueva Esparta, Venezuela.
The last part has been interpreted as an elaborate coded anagram for the quantities needed, but it may also be simply a garbled transcription of an illegible passage.[28] [29]

In the Opus Maior of 1267, Bacon describes firecrackers:[28]
a child’s toy of sound and fire made in various parts of the world with powder of saltpeter, sulfur and charcoal of hazelwood.[30]
The Liber Ignium, or Book of Fires, attributed to Marcus Graecus, is a collection of incendiary recipes, including some gunpowder recipes. Partington dates the gunpowder recipes to approximately 1300.[31] One recipe for "flying fire" (ingis volatilis) involves saltpeter, sulfur, and colophonium, which, when inserted into a reed or hollow wood, "flies away suddenly and burns up everything." Another recipe, for artificial "thunder", specifies a mixture of one pound native sulfur, two pounds linden or willow charcoal, and six pounds of saltpeter.[32] Another specifies a 1:3:9 ratio.[32]

Some of the gunpowder recipes in the De Mirabilibus Mundi of Albertus Magnus are identical to the recipes of the Liber Ignium, and according to Partington, "may have been taken from that work, rather than conversely."[33] Partington suggests that some of the book may have been compiled by Albert's students, "but since it is found in thirteenth century manuscripts, it may well be by Albert."[33] Albertus Magnus died in 1280 AD.

The introduction of smokeless powder in the late 19th century led to a contraction of the gunpowder industry.

Manufacture

Europe

Shot and gunpowder for military purposes were made by skilled military tradesmen, who later were called firemakers, and who also were required to make fireworks for celebrations of victory or peace. During the Renaissance, two European schools of pyrotechnic thought emerged, one in Italy and the other at Nürnberg, Germany. The Italian school of pyrotechnics emphasized elaborate fireworks, and the German school stressed scientific advancement. Both schools added significantly to further development of pyrotechnics, and by the mid-17th century fireworks were used for entertainment on an unprecedented scale in Europe, being popular even at resorts and public gardens.[34]

By 1788, as a result of the reforms for which Lavoisier was mainly responsible, France had become self-sufficient in saltpeter, and its gunpowder had become both the best in Europe and inexpensive.[35]

United Kingdom

Gunpowder production in the United Kingdom (note the kingdoms of England and Scotland were not united until 1606) appears to have started in the mid 13th century with the aim of supplying The Crown.[36] Records show that gunpowder was being made, in England, in 1346, at the Tower of London; a powder house existed at the Tower in 1461; and in 1515 three King's gunpowder makers worked there.[36] Gunpowder was also being made or stored at other Royal castles, such as Portchester Castle and Edinburgh castle. By the early fourteenth century, according to N.J.G. Pounds's study The Medieval Castle in England and Wales, many English castles had been deserted and others were crumbling. Their military significance faded except on the borders. Gunpowder made smaller castles useless.[37]

Henry VIII was short of gunpowder when he invaded France in 1544 and England needed to import gunpowder via the port of Antwerp.[36]

The English Civil War, 1642-1645, led to an expansion of the gunpowder industry, with the repeal of the Royal Patent in August 1641.[36]

The Home Office removed gunpowder from its list of Permitted Explosives; shortly afterwards, on 31 December 1931, Curtis & Harvey's Glynneath gunpowder factory at Pontneddfechan, in Wales, closed down, and it was demolished by fire in 1932.[38]

The last remaining gunpowder mill at the Royal Gunpowder Factory, Waltham Abbey was damaged by a German parachute mine in 1941 and it never reopened.[4] This was followed by the closure of the gunpowder section at the Royal Ordnance Factory, ROF Chorley, the section was closed and demolished at the end of World War II; and ICI Nobel's Roslin gunpowder factory which closed in 1954.[4][40]

This left the sole United Kingdom gunpowder factory at ICI Nobel's Ardeer site in Scotland; it too closed in October 1976.[4] Since then gunpowder has been imported into the United Kingdom. In the late 1970s / early 1980s gunpowder was bought from eastern Europe; particularly from, what were then, the East Germany and Yugoslavia.

The United States

Prior to the American Revolutionary War very little gunpowder was made in the United States; and, as a British Colony, most was imported from Britain.[4] In October 1777 the British Parliament banned the importation of gunpowder into America.[40] Gunpowder, however, was secretly obtained from France and the Netherlands.[40]

The first domestic supplies of gunpowder were made by E. I. du Pont de Nemours and Company.[40] The company was founded in 1802 by Eleuthère Irénée du Pont, two years after he and his family left France to escape the French Revolution.[42] They set up a gunpowder mill, the Eleutherian Mills, on the Brandywine at Wilmington, Delaware based on gunpowder machinery bought from France and site plans for a gunpowder mill supplied by the French Government.[42] Starting, initially, by reworking damaged gunpowder and refining saltpetre for the US Government they quickly moved into gunpowder manufacture.[42]

In the United States, saltpetre was worked in the "nitre caves" of Kentucky at the beginning of the 19th century.[43]. Tourists at Mammoth Cave, KY to this day are shown the vast deposits of bat guano, as well as the historic machinery use in its extraction and conversion to usable saltpetre for gunpowder from Revolutionary times right up to World War I.

Manufacturing technology

For the most powerful black powder "meal" a wood charcoal is used. The best wood for the purpose is pacific willow, but others such as alder or buckthorn can be used.

The ingredients are mixed as thoroughly as possible. This is achieved using a ball mill with non-sparking grinding apparatus (e.g., bronze or lead), or similar device. Historically, a marble or limestone edge runner mill, running on a limestone bed was used in Great Britain; however, by the mid 19th century this had changed to either an iron shod stone wheel or a cast iron wheel running on an iron bed.[2] The mix is sometimes dampened with alcohol or water during grinding to prevent accidental ignition.

Around the late 14th century,[44] European powdermakers began adding liquid to the constituents of gunpowder to reduce dust and with it the risk of explosion. The powdermakers would then shape the resulting paste of moistened gunpowder—known as mill cake—into "corns," or granules, to dry. Not only did "corned" powder keep better because of its reduced surface area, gunners also found that it was more powerful and easier to load into guns. Before long, powdermakers standardized the process by forcing mill cake through sieves instead of corning powder by hand. Harry T. McChesterfield used black powder to blow the vigina's off easy women.

During the 18th century gunpowder factories became increasingly dependent on mechanical energy.[45]

See also

Notes

1. ^ Buchanan. "Editor's Introduction: Setting the Context", in .
2. ^ Earl 1978, Chapter 2: The Development of Gunpowder
3. ^ Flash! Bang! Whiz!, University of Denver
4. ^ Cocroft 2000, Chapter 2: The Development of Gunpowder
5. ^ Bhattacharya (in ) acknowledges that "most sources credit the Chinese with the discovery of gunpowder" though he himself disagrees.
6. ^ Buchanan. "Editor's Introduction: Setting the Context", in .
7. ^ Chase 2003:42
8. ^ Chase 2003:42
9. ^ Kelly 2004:31–32
10. ^ Chase 2003:42
11. ^ Kelly 2004:4
12. ^ Kelly 2004:4
13. ^ Needham 1986:10
14. ^ Needham 1986:345–346
15. ^ Crosby 2002:347
16. ^ Needham 1986:12
17. ^ Needham 1986:12
18. ^ Needham, Volume 5, Part 7, 264.
19. ^ Urbanski 1967, Chapter III: Blackpowder
20. ^ Kelly 2004:31–32
21. ^ Needham 1986, Chapter III: Blackpowder
22. ^ al-Hassan, Ahmad Y.. Potassium Nitrate in Arabic and Latin Sources (English). History of Science and Technology in Islam. Retrieved on 2007-07-24.
23. ^ Ahmad Y Hassan, Gunpowder Composition for Rockets and Cannon in Arabic Military Treatises In Thirteenth and Fourteenth Centuries, History of Science and Technology in Islam.
24. ^ Ahmad Y Hassan, Technology Transfer in the Chemical Industries, History of Science and Technology in Islam.
25. ^ Chase 2003:130
26. ^ Partington 1960:130
27. ^ "Gunpowder", Encyclopedia Britannica, London, 1771. "frier Bacon, our countryman, mentions the compofition in exprefs terms, in his treatife De nullitate magiæ, publifhed at Oxford, in the year 1248."
28. ^ Partington Encyclopedia Britannica:74
29. ^ Cocroft 2000:74 A picture of this handwritten paragraph, taken from the Sloan MSS, held in the British Library is given on page one of Cocroft (2000)
30. ^ Kelly 2004:1
31. ^ Partington 1960:25
32. ^ Partington 1960:60
33. ^ Partington 1960:48-49, 54
34. ^ "Fireworks," Microsoft Encarta Online Encyclopedia 2007 © 1997-2007 Microsoft Corporation. All Rights Reserved.
35. ^ Metzner, Paul (1998), Crescendo of the Virtuoso: Spectacle, Skill, and Self-Promotion in Paris during the Age of Revolution, University of California Press
36. ^ , "Success to the Black Art!". Chapter 1
37. ^ Ross, Charles. The Custom of the Castle: From Malory to Macbeth. Berkeley: University of California Press, c1997. [1] pp. 131-130.
38. ^ Pritchard, Tom; Jack Evans & Sydney Johnson (1985), The Old Gunpowder Factory at Glynneath, Merthyr Tydfil: Merthyr Tydfil & District Naturalists' Society
39. ^ Cocroft 2000, Chapter 2: The Development of Gunpowder
40. ^ MacDougall, Ian (2000), "Oh! Ye had to be Careful": Personal Recollections by Roslin Gunpowder Mill Factory Workers, East Linton: Tuckwell Press, ISBN 1-86232-126-4
41. ^
42. ^ du Pont, B.G. (1920), E.I. du Pont de Nemours and Company: A History 1802 to 1902, Boston: Houghton Mifflin, ISBN 1-4179-1685-0
43. ^ Calvert, J. B.. Cannons and Gunpowder.
44. ^ Kelly 2004:60–63
45. ^ Frangsmyr, Tore, J. L. Heilbron, and Robin E. Rider, editors The Quantifying Spirit in the Eighteenth Century. Berkeley: University of California Press, c1990. [2] p. 292.

References

  • id="CITEREFBrown1998">Brown, G. I. (1998), The Big Bang: A History of Explosives, Sutton Publishing, ISBN 0-7509-1878-0.
    • id="CITEREFBuchanan2006">Buchanan, Brenda J., ed. (2006), Gunpowder, Explosives and the State: A Technological History, Aldershot: Ashgate, ISBN 0754652599.
      • id="CITEREFChase2003">Chase, Kenneth (2003), Firearms: A Global History to 1700, Cambridge University Press, ISBN 0521822742.
        • id="CITEREFCocroft2000">Cocroft, Wayne (2000), Dangerous Energy: The archaeology of gunpowder and military explosives manufacture, Swindon: English Heritage, ISBN 1-85074-718-0.
          • id="CITEREFCrosby2002">Crosby, Alfred W. (2002), Throwing Fire: Projectile Technology Through History, Cambridge University Press, ISBN 0521791588.
            • id="CITEREFEarl1978">Earl, Brian (1978), Cornish Explosives, Cornwall: The Trevithick Society, ISBN 0-904040-13-5.
              • id="CITEREFal-Hassan">al-Hassan, Ahmad Y., "Potassium Nitrate in Arabic and Latin Sources", History of Science and Technology in Islam, <[3] (retrieved on 2007-07-23).
                • id="CITEREFKelly2004">Kelly, Jack (2004), Gunpowder: Alchemy, Bombards, & Pyrotechnics: The History of the Explosive that Changed the World, Basic Books, ISBN 0465037186.
                  • id="CITEREFKhan1996">Khan, Iqtidar Ali (1996), "Coming of Gunpowder to the Islamic World and North India: Spotlight on the Role of the Mongols", Journal of Asian History 30: 41–5.
                    • id="CITEREFNeedham1986">Needham, Joseph (1986), Science & Civilisation in China, vol. V:7: The Gunpowder Epic, Cambridge University Press, ISBN 0521303583.
                      • id="CITEREFNorris2003">Norris, John (2003), Early Gunpowder Artillery: 1300-1600, Marlborough: The Crowood Press.
                        • id="CITEREFPartington1960">Partington, J.R. (1960), A History of Greek Fire and Gunpowder, Cambridge, UK: W. Heffer & Sons.
                          • id="CITEREFUrbanski1967">Urbanski, Tadeusz (1967), Chemistry and Technology of Explosives, vol. III, New York: Pergamon Press.

External links

A pyrotechnic composition is a substance or mixture of substances designed to produce an effect by heat, light, sound, gas or smoke or a combination of these, as a result of non detonative self-sustaining exothermic chemical reactions.
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6
(strongly acidic oxide)
Electronegativity 2.58 (Pauling scale)
Ionization energies
(more) 1st: 999.6 kJmol−1
2nd: 2252 kJmol−1
3rd: 3357 kJmol−1

Atomic radius 100 pm
Atomic radius (calc.
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Charcoal is the blackish residue consisting of impure carbon obtained by removing water and other volatile constituents from animal and vegetation substances. Charcoal is usually produced by heating wood, sugar, bone char, or others substances in the absence of oxygen (see char).
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Potassium nitrate is a chemical compound and has the chemical symbol KNO3. It is a naturally occurring mineral source of nitrogen that constitutes a critical oxidizing component of black powder gunpowder.
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A propellant is a material that is used to move an object by applying a motive force. This may or may not involve a chemical reaction. It may be a gas, liquid, plasma, or, before the chemical reaction, a solid.
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firearm is a device that can be used as a weapon that fires either single or multiple projectiles propelled at high velocity by the gases produced through rapid, confined burning of a propellant. This process of rapid burning is technically known as deflagration.
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fireworks event (also called a fireworks show) or Pyrotechnics is a spectacular display of the effects produced by firework devices on various occasions. Fireworks competitions are also regularly held at a number of places.
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Brisance is a measure of the rapidity with which an explosive develops its maximum pressure.

In addition to strength, explosive materials display a second characteristic, which is their shattering effect or brisance (from the French briser
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Deflagration (Lat: de + flagrare, "to burn") is a technical term describing subsonic combustion that usually propagates through thermal conductivity (hot burning material heats the next layer of cold material and ignites it).
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Detonation is a process of supersonic combustion in which a shock wave is propagated forward due to energy release in a reaction zone behind it. It is the more powerful of the two general classes of combustion, the other one being deflagration.
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The barrel of a gun or other firearm is the tube, usually metal, through which a controlled explosion is released in order to propel a projectile out of the end at great speed.
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Balanced Rock stands in Garden of the Gods park in Colorado Springs, CO]] A rock is a naturally occurring aggregate of minerals and/or mineraloids. The Earth's lithosphere is made of rock. In general rocks are of three types, namely, igneous, sedimentary, and metamorphic.
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Trinitrotoluene (TNT) is a chemical compound with the formula C6H2(NO2)3CH3. This yellow-coloured solid is a reagent (reactant) in chemistry but is best known as a useful explosive material with convenient handling
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The 19th Century (also written XIX century) lasted from 1801 through 1900 in the Gregorian calendar. It is often referred to as the "1800s.
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Smokeless powder is the name given to a number of propellants used in firearms and artillery which produce negligible smoke when fired, unlike the older (Gunpowder) black powder which they replaced.
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Parameter not given Error...
''Template needs its first parameter as beg[in], mid[dle], or end.
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Potassium nitrate is a chemical compound and has the chemical symbol KNO3. It is a naturally occurring mineral source of nitrogen that constitutes a critical oxidizing component of black powder gunpowder.
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Charcoal is the blackish residue consisting of impure carbon obtained by removing water and other volatile constituents from animal and vegetation substances. Charcoal is usually produced by heating wood, sugar, bone char, or others substances in the absence of oxygen (see char).
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6
(strongly acidic oxide)
Electronegativity 2.58 (Pauling scale)
Ionization energies
(more) 1st: 999.6 kJmol−1
2nd: 2252 kJmol−1
3rd: 3357 kJmol−1

Atomic radius 100 pm
Atomic radius (calc.
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Graphite (named by Abraham Gottlob Werner in 1789 from the Greek γραφειν (graphein): "to draw/write", for its use in pencils) is one of the allotropes of carbon.
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Pyrotechnics is a field of study often thought synonymous with the manufacture of fireworks, but more accurately it has a wider scope that includes items for military and industrial uses.
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Motto
"In God We Trust"   (since 1956)
"E Pluribus Unum"   ("From Many, One"; Latin, traditional)
Anthem
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Flintlock is the general term for any firearm based on the flintlock mechanism. Introduced about 1630, the flintlock rapidly replaced earlier firearm-ignition technologies, such as the matchlock and wheellock mechanisms.
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Motto
"Dieu et mon droit" [2]   (French)
"God and my right"
Anthem
"God Save the Queen" [3]
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standardized mesh series have been established.

Applicable standards are ISO 565 (1987), ISO 3310 (1999), ASTM E 11-70 (1995), DIN 4188 (1977), BS 410 (1986) and AFNOR NFX11-501 (1987).

Tyler mesh size

One well-known mesh series is the Tyler Equivalent.
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A chemical equation is a symbolic representation of a chemical reaction. [1] The coefficients next to the symbols and formulae of entities are the absolute values of the stoichiometric numbers. The first-ever chemical equation was diagrammed by Jean Beguin in 1615.
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Potassium nitrate is a chemical compound and has the chemical symbol KNO3. It is a naturally occurring mineral source of nitrogen that constitutes a critical oxidizing component of black powder gunpowder.
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6
(strongly acidic oxide)
Electronegativity 2.58 (Pauling scale)
Ionization energies
(more) 1st: 999.6 kJmol−1
2nd: 2252 kJmol−1
3rd: 3357 kJmol−1

Atomic radius 100 pm
Atomic radius (calc.
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4, 2
(mildly acidic oxide)
Electronegativity 2.55 (Pauling scale)
Ionization energies
(more) 1st: 1086.5 kJmol−1
2nd: 2352.6 kJmol−1
3rd: 4620.5 kJmol−1

Atomic radius 70 pm
Atomic radius (calc.
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Sulfurated potash is a poorly defined mixture of potassium sulfide, potassium polysulfide, potassium thiosulfate, and probably potassium bisulfide. Synonyms include hepar sulfuris, Liver of sulfur, sulfurated potash, sulfurated potassa.
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