US3287189A - Coated explosive comprising ammonium nitrate - Google Patents

Coated explosive comprising ammonium nitrate Download PDF

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US3287189A
US3287189A US348853A US34885364A US3287189A US 3287189 A US3287189 A US 3287189A US 348853 A US348853 A US 348853A US 34885364 A US34885364 A US 34885364A US 3287189 A US3287189 A US 3287189A
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ammonium nitrate
water
percent
solution
water resistant
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John S Wilson
Kirby T Rapstein
Frank D Patrick
Charles F Schrieber
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Dow Chemical Co
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    • CCHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
    • C06EXPLOSIVES; MATCHES
    • C06BEXPLOSIVES OR THERMIC COMPOSITIONS; MANUFACTURE THEREOF; USE OF SINGLE SUBSTANCES AS EXPLOSIVES
    • C06B47/00Compositions in which the components are separately stored until the moment of burning or explosion, e.g. "Sprengel"-type explosives; Suspensions of solid component in a normally non-explosive liquid phase, including a thickened aqueous phase
    • C06B47/14Compositions in which the components are separately stored until the moment of burning or explosion, e.g. "Sprengel"-type explosives; Suspensions of solid component in a normally non-explosive liquid phase, including a thickened aqueous phase comprising a solid component and an aqueous phase

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  • This invention relates to explosives and more particularly is concerned with a novel process for preparing watervresistant ammonium nitrate based explosives and to novel explosive compositions prepared thereby.
  • liquid paraffinic hydrocarbons e.g. fuel oil
  • the resulting compositions which ordinarily contain about 6 weight percent oil, have a low density, about 0.8 gram per cubic centimeter, and rapidly and substantially completely are degraded when placed in contact with water because of dissolution of the nitrate prills.
  • These ammonium nitrate-fuel oil explosives (commonly called ANFO in the art) therefore can be used only in water containing bore holes or other wet areas when placed in bags or waterproof containers or otherwise protected from water contact.
  • the present invention comprises treating a porous, particulate ammonium nitrate with a grease-forming soap material, adding a liquid hydrocarbon to the so-treated ammonium nitrate and mixing the fuel and treated particulate ammonium nitrate thereby to provide in situ in the pores of and on the surface of the ammonium nitrate a protective water resistant grease coating.
  • the resulting grease coated ammonium nitrate can be mixed with an aqueous ammonium nitrate solution in proportions so as to provide either a paste-like or pourable slurry.
  • the resulting explosive composition is substantially water resistant and exhibits good explosive power upon detonation.
  • prilled ammonium nitrate is dusted or otherwise blended with from about 0.5 to about 2 weight percent, based on the weight of ammonium nitrate, of a finely divided alkaline earth or earth metal salt of an aliphatic carboxylic fatty acid having from about 8 to about 24 carbon atoms in the aliphatic group.
  • the mixture of fatty acid salt and porous prilled ammonium nitrate is thoroughly blended so as to provide a substantially uniform dispersion of the fatty acid salt in contact with the particulate ammonium nitrate.
  • a petrolic liquid preferably a liquid paraffinic oil of relatively low viscosity, such as a No. 2 diesel oil for example, is added to the blended ammonium nitrate and fatty acid salt and this mixture agitated to provide a substantially uniform dispersion of the petrolic liquid throughout the mixture.
  • the amount of petrolic liquid to be employed ranges from about 4 to about 8 weight percent of the total mix of ammonium nitrate, fatty acid salt and petrolic liquid.
  • the resulting hydrophobic grease produced by the interaction of the oil and fatty acid salt in accordance with the present novel process is distributed substantially completely over the surface and within the pores of the particulate porous ammonium nitrate.
  • the resulting grease coated prill provides directly a usable Water resistant ammonium nitrate explosive composition.
  • the water resistant grease composition provides fuel for the ammonium nitrate oxidizer in substantially the same manner as does the oil itself in the non-water resistant ANFO explosive composition of the art.
  • An added advantage of the present invention is that the grease coated porous particulate ammonium nitrate product can be admixed with an aqueous ammonium nitrate solution to provide an explosive wherein discrete particles of ammonium nitrate co-exist in the presence of an aqueous ammonium nitrate oxidizer solution.
  • grease coated prills produced by the present process are admixed with an aqueous solution of ammonium nitrate ordinarily containing a small amount of a thickening agent, e.g. a natural gum.
  • the ammonium nitrate concentration in the solution ranges from about 60 weight percent, based on total weight of the solution, up to the saturation level of the ammonium nitrate in the aqueous liquid.
  • the total amount of aqueous solution used is such that the amount of Water to be employed is at a maximum about 15 weight percent of the explosive composition. Ordinarily the water content ranges from about 3 to about 15 weight percent of the total weight.
  • Pourable slurry explosives result when the water content at a minimum is about 9 weight percent. With water concentrations less than about 9 percent, the resulting product exhibits good explosive power but is not in the form of a pourable slurry. At higher water concentrations than set forth hereinbefore, the resulting explosive product tends to become less sensitive to detonation.
  • the slurry explosive of the present invention contains on a weight basis from about 9 to about 15 percent water, from about 2 /2 to about 8 percent liquid hydrocarbon fuel, from about 0.6 to about 1.8 percent alkaline earth metal or earth metal aliphatic carboxylic acid salt, from 0 to about 3 percent thickening agent, and balance ammonium nitrate.
  • Prilled ammonium nitrate products as produced for use in ANFO compositions, for fertilizers or other uses or other particulate porous ammonium nitrate forms all are suitable as oxidizer source material.
  • This material can be employed in the as prilled condition or can be ground and otherwise treated to provide a predetermined classification of particle size range.
  • alkaline earth metal as used herein with respect to the fatty acid metal salts includes magnesium, calcium, strontium and barium.
  • earth metal is meant to include aluminum, gallium, indium and thallium.
  • alkaline earth metaland earth metal fatty acid salts for use in the present inven- No apparent visual change in the sample was observed either with respect to the slurry consistency or dissolution of the particulate ammonium nitrate present therein.
  • tion are aluminum oleate, aluminum stearate, aluminum 5
  • An explosive charge (about 1000 grams) was prepared tallate, calcium stearate, calcium tallate, calcium oleate in accordance with the procedure and using the mix comdth 1ik ponents described directly hereinbefore.
  • the liquid fuel to be employed ordinarily is selected a second 1000 gram charge was prepared in a similar from petrolic liquids or fractionated petrolic liquid prodmanner except that the aluminum oleate compound and ucts.
  • Kerosene fuel oils, lubricating oils and other relacorrespondingly the aluminum oleate-blending operation tively high fiash point crude oil fractions, crude oil itself was omitted.
  • the plate in turn was centered on the top of a 3" X 3" thickeners.
  • cylindrical cast lead block The lead block was placed In the grease coated ammonium nitrate-aqueous amon a steel anvil.
  • a 40 gram pentolite wafer was placed monium nitrate explosive composition, a portion of the just below the upper surface of the charge.
  • the charge petrolic liquid fuel can be substituted by use of a water was detonated and the decrease in the height of the head soluble oxidizable carbon containing material which can block measured. With the water resistant composition be added to the ammonium nitrate solution.
  • the reduction in height of the monohydric and polyhydric alcohols, amines and amides lead block was found to be 1.31 inches.
  • the decrease in height of block upon detonation was sired, solid inorganic oxidizers such as the light metals, only 0.63 inch.
  • the marked reduction in explosive power e.g. magnesium, aluminum, and alloys and mixtures of demonstrated by the control is attributed to degradation these metals also can be incorporated into the explosive of the sample from Water during the relatively short term composition. Further, a minor portion, for example up storage period prior to detonation.
  • Example 2 About 95 parts by weight prilled ambe substituted by sodium nitrate or potassium nitrate. monium nitrate were dusted with about 1 part by weight
  • the following examples will serve to further illustrate powdered aluminum oleate to provide a visually the present invention but are not meant to limit it thereto. homogeneous mixture and about 4 parts by weight fuel
  • the resulting product exhibited a aqueous ammonia solution (28 percent NH was used in grease-like coating which appeared to be distributed suball cases as a cross-linking agent for the guar gum. stantially completely over and in the particulate am-
  • the resulting compositions were tested for water resistmonium nit-rate. ance by immersion in water and all found to exhibit the In a separate container about 284 grams of ammonium desired high resistance to physical degradation by water. nitrate were dissolved in about 120 grams of water, about The compositions also were tested for detonability 4 grams of a guar gum were added slowly to the aqueous using the submerged water lead block deformation test solution with continuous stirring. The grease-containprocedure reported in Example 1.
  • Table I presents the ing ammonium nitrate prills, and the ammonium nitrate composition formulation and explosive results obtained solution were mixed and about 2 milliliters of ammonium for various combinations of the grease covered ammohydroxide (28 percent NH was simultaneously intronium nitrate prills and the aqueous ammonium nitrate quizin. (This latter material acted as a crosssolution.
  • the resulting product was a pourable slurry and had a density of about 1.2 grams per cubic centimeter.
  • a sample of the resulting slurry was placed in water and observed at intervals over an extended period of time.
  • Example 3 In a separate study water resistant slurry explosives were prepared in accordance with the process of the present invention by admixing aluminum oleatefuel oil treated ammonium nitrate prills with an aqueous ammonium nitrate solution. In these studies, the amount of fuel oil and ammonium nitrate were varied in the preparation of the water resistant prill component.
  • the composition data and explosive results (lead block deformation test as described in Example 1) are summarized in Table II.
  • ground porous particulate ammonium nitrate can be blended with calcium stearate and this mixture in turn blended with kerosene to provide a water resistant particulate ammonium nitrate.
  • aluminum stearate and crude oil can be blended with a prilled fertilizer grade ammonium nitrate to produce a water resistant ammonium nitrate based composition.
  • porous ammonium nitratealkaline earth metalor earth metal carboxylic fatty acid salt-liquid hydrocarbon blends prepared in accordance with the present invention can be admixed with aqueous ammonium nitrate solutions to provide high energy Water resistant ammonium nitrate based explosives.
  • solid fuels such as light metals, e.g. particulate magnesium, aluminum, magnesium alloys, aluminum alloys and mixtures thereof can be introduced into the explosive compositions of the present invention.
  • water soluble carbon-containing oxidizable materials can be dissolved in the ammonium nitrate solution and used in the preparation of these explosive compositions. These latter materials can be used to replace a part of the liquid hydrocarbon fuel used in the preparation of the water resistant prill.
  • a process for preparing a water-resistant ammonium nitrate based explosive composition which comprises,
  • porous particulate ammonium nitrate with a member selected from the group consisting of alkaline earth metaland earth metal salts of ali phatic carboxylic acids, the amount of said salt ranging from about 0.5 to about 2 weight percent based on the weight of said ammonium nitrate, said salt having from about 8 to about 24 carbon atoms in the aliphatic group,
  • a process for preparing a water-resistant, pourable slurry-type ammonium nitrate based explosive composition which comprises;
  • a pourable, slurry-type water resistant ammonium nitrate based explosive composition which comprises;
  • composition being further characterized in that 5 UNITED STATES PATENTS a portion of said ammonium nitrate is blended with 2 211 738 8/1940 Cairns 149 7 said aliphatic CEII'bOXYllC acid salt and said liquid hy- 3 0 4 572 11 19 2 Aitchison 102 23 drocarbon thereby to form a water resistant coating 3:160:536 12/1964 Aitchison 149 46 X in and on said particulate ammonium nitrate and the remainder of said ammonium nitrate is dissolved in 10 BENJAMIN R.
  • PADGETT Primary Examiner said water forming a solution ranging from about 60 percent to saturation with respect to said ammo- LEON ROSDOL Examiner nium nitrate, said solution being admixed with said L.
  • A. SEBASTIAN Assistant Examiner.

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  • Organic Chemistry (AREA)
  • Liquid Carbonaceous Fuels (AREA)

Description

United States Patent 3,287,189 COATED EXPLOSIVE COMPRISING AMMONIUM NITRATE John S. Wilson, Elberton, Ga., Kirby T. Rapstern and Frank D. Patrick, Freeport, and Charles F. Schrreber, Lake Jackson, Tex., assignors to The Dow Chemical Company, Midland, Mich., a corporation of Delaware No Drawing. Filed Mar. 2, 1964, Ser. No. 348,853
4 Claims. (Cl. 149-8) This invention relates to explosives and more particularly is concerned with a novel process for preparing watervresistant ammonium nitrate based explosives and to novel explosive compositions prepared thereby.
Prilled ammonium nitrate in admixture with liquid paraffinic hydrocarbons, e.g. fuel oil, has enjoyed large scale commercial usage as a blasting agent and explosive. However, the resulting compositions, which ordinarily contain about 6 weight percent oil, have a low density, about 0.8 gram per cubic centimeter, and rapidly and substantially completely are degraded when placed in contact with water because of dissolution of the nitrate prills. These ammonium nitrate-fuel oil explosives (commonly called ANFO in the art) therefore can be used only in water containing bore holes or other wet areas when placed in bags or waterproof containers or otherwise protected from water contact.
Heretofore attempts have been made to upgrade the water resistance of prilled ammonium nitrate by coating the surface of the prills with water repellant materials, e.g. grease, wax or clay. These direct surface treatments are not satisfactory since a substantially uniform and effective water resistant coating cannot readily be realized because of many small openings and irregularities present in the porous prills.
It is a principal object of the present invention to provide a novel process for preparing a water resistant particulate ammonium nitrate and explosive composition based thereon.
It is another object of the present invention to provide a method for forming in situ a water resistant protective coating for particulate porous ammonium nitrate which coating also provides fuel for use in an explosive composition.
It is another object of the present invention to provide an ammonium nitrate based explosive composition wherein prilled, porous ammonium nitrate can exist in the presence of water.
It is another objective of the present invention to provide a method for forming directly a grease within porous ammonium nitrate prills after a liquid fuel hydrocarbon has permeated the prill wherein the hydrocarbon thus transformed into the grease within the pores of the prill is not readily displaced by more dense water or aqueous solutions.
These and other objects and advantages readily will become apparent from the detailed description presented hereinafter.
The present invention comprises treating a porous, particulate ammonium nitrate with a grease-forming soap material, adding a liquid hydrocarbon to the so-treated ammonium nitrate and mixing the fuel and treated particulate ammonium nitrate thereby to provide in situ in the pores of and on the surface of the ammonium nitrate a protective water resistant grease coating.
The resulting grease coated ammonium nitrate can be mixed with an aqueous ammonium nitrate solution in proportions so as to provide either a paste-like or pourable slurry. The resulting explosive composition is substantially water resistant and exhibits good explosive power upon detonation.
3,287,189 Patented Nov. 22, 1966 More particularly in accordance with the present invention, prilled ammonium nitrate is dusted or otherwise blended with from about 0.5 to about 2 weight percent, based on the weight of ammonium nitrate, of a finely divided alkaline earth or earth metal salt of an aliphatic carboxylic fatty acid having from about 8 to about 24 carbon atoms in the aliphatic group. The mixture of fatty acid salt and porous prilled ammonium nitrate is thoroughly blended so as to provide a substantially uniform dispersion of the fatty acid salt in contact with the particulate ammonium nitrate. A petrolic liquid, preferably a liquid paraffinic oil of relatively low viscosity, such as a No. 2 diesel oil for example, is added to the blended ammonium nitrate and fatty acid salt and this mixture agitated to provide a substantially uniform dispersion of the petrolic liquid throughout the mixture. The amount of petrolic liquid to be employed ranges from about 4 to about 8 weight percent of the total mix of ammonium nitrate, fatty acid salt and petrolic liquid. The resulting hydrophobic grease produced by the interaction of the oil and fatty acid salt in accordance with the present novel process is distributed substantially completely over the surface and within the pores of the particulate porous ammonium nitrate. The resulting grease coated prill provides directly a usable Water resistant ammonium nitrate explosive composition. The water resistant grease composition provides fuel for the ammonium nitrate oxidizer in substantially the same manner as does the oil itself in the non-water resistant ANFO explosive composition of the art.
An added advantage of the present invention is that the grease coated porous particulate ammonium nitrate product can be admixed with an aqueous ammonium nitrate solution to provide an explosive wherein discrete particles of ammonium nitrate co-exist in the presence of an aqueous ammonium nitrate oxidizer solution. In preparing this latter composition, grease coated prills produced by the present process are admixed with an aqueous solution of ammonium nitrate ordinarily containing a small amount of a thickening agent, e.g. a natural gum. The ammonium nitrate concentration in the solution ranges from about 60 weight percent, based on total weight of the solution, up to the saturation level of the ammonium nitrate in the aqueous liquid. The total amount of aqueous solution used is such that the amount of Water to be employed is at a maximum about 15 weight percent of the explosive composition. Ordinarily the water content ranges from about 3 to about 15 weight percent of the total weight. Pourable slurry explosives result when the water content at a minimum is about 9 weight percent. With water concentrations less than about 9 percent, the resulting product exhibits good explosive power but is not in the form of a pourable slurry. At higher water concentrations than set forth hereinbefore, the resulting explosive product tends to become less sensitive to detonation. Ordinarily, the slurry explosive of the present invention contains on a weight basis from about 9 to about 15 percent water, from about 2 /2 to about 8 percent liquid hydrocarbon fuel, from about 0.6 to about 1.8 percent alkaline earth metal or earth metal aliphatic carboxylic acid salt, from 0 to about 3 percent thickening agent, and balance ammonium nitrate.
Prilled ammonium nitrate products as produced for use in ANFO compositions, for fertilizers or other uses or other particulate porous ammonium nitrate forms all are suitable as oxidizer source material. This material can be employed in the as prilled condition or can be ground and otherwise treated to provide a predetermined classification of particle size range.
The term alkaline earth metal as used herein with respect to the fatty acid metal salts includes magnesium, calcium, strontium and barium. The term earth metal is meant to include aluminum, gallium, indium and thallium.
Specific examples of suitable alkaline earth metaland earth metal fatty acid salts for use in the present inven- No apparent visual change in the sample was observed either with respect to the slurry consistency or dissolution of the particulate ammonium nitrate present therein.
tion are aluminum oleate, aluminum stearate, aluminum 5 An explosive charge (about 1000 grams) was prepared tallate, calcium stearate, calcium tallate, calcium oleate in accordance with the procedure and using the mix comdth 1ik ponents described directly hereinbefore. As a control, The liquid fuel to be employed ordinarily is selected a second 1000 gram charge was prepared in a similar from petrolic liquids or fractionated petrolic liquid prodmanner except that the aluminum oleate compound and ucts. Kerosene fuel oils, lubricating oils and other relacorrespondingly the aluminum oleate-blending operation tively high fiash point crude oil fractions, crude oil itself was omitted. and the like are particularly suitable hydrocarbons for Each of the charges was placed in a 5 inch diameter use in the present process and composition. water-proof paper container. The charge filled the con- Thickening agents particularly suitable for use with t-ainer to a height of about 9 inches. An additional 9 the aqueous ammonium nitrate solution in preparing the inches of water was then placed on top of the charge. water resistant prill-aqueous ammonium nitrate composi- Both charges were allowed to stand in the presence of tion of the present invention are the natural gums, althe water for about 1 /2 hours. After this time, each though other thickene-rs can be employed. Guar gum carton was centered on a 9" x 9" x 0.75" steel plate. and par-aya gum are specific examples of suitable gum The plate in turn was centered on the top of a 3" X 3" thickeners. cylindrical cast lead block. The lead block was placed In the grease coated ammonium nitrate-aqueous amon a steel anvil. A 40 gram pentolite wafer was placed monium nitrate explosive composition, a portion of the just below the upper surface of the charge. The charge petrolic liquid fuel can be substituted by use of a water was detonated and the decrease in the height of the head soluble oxidizable carbon containing material which can block measured. With the water resistant composition be added to the ammonium nitrate solution. Sugars, of the present invention, the reduction in height of the monohydric and polyhydric alcohols, amines and amides lead block was found to be 1.31 inches. For the conare examples of such fuel materials. Additionally, if detrol, the decrease in height of block upon detonation was sired, solid inorganic oxidizers such as the light metals, only 0.63 inch. The marked reduction in explosive power e.g. magnesium, aluminum, and alloys and mixtures of demonstrated by the control is attributed to degradation these metals also can be incorporated into the explosive of the sample from Water during the relatively short term composition. Further, a minor portion, for example up storage period prior to detonation. to about 20 weight percent of the ammonium nitrate can Example 2.About 95 parts by weight prilled ambe substituted by sodium nitrate or potassium nitrate. monium nitrate were dusted with about 1 part by weight The following examples will serve to further illustrate powdered aluminum oleate to provide a visually the present invention but are not meant to limit it thereto. homogeneous mixture and about 4 parts by weight fuel Example 1.-About 562 grams of ammonium nitrate oil blended therewith in accordance with the procedure prills and about 5.9 grams of powdered aluminum oleate set forth in Example 1. were weighed into .a flexible plastic bag. The two com- Separately about 69.5 parts by weight ammonium niponents were thoroughly blended, as ascertained by vistrate was dissolved in about 29.5 parts by weight water ual inspection, by kneading and tumbling the bag. When and about 1 part by weight guar gum blended therein. the finely divided aluminum oleate appeared to be sub- These two mixtures in turn were blended in various stantially homogeneously dispersed with respect to the proportions to provide explosive compositions having a ammonium nitrate prills, about 24.1 grams of No. 2 total water content in the final mixture of from about 3 diesel oil was introduced into the bag and the mix proto about 15 weight percent. About 0.01 part by weight cedure repeated. The resulting product exhibited a aqueous ammonia solution (28 percent NH was used in grease-like coating which appeared to be distributed suball cases as a cross-linking agent for the guar gum. stantially completely over and in the particulate am- The resulting compositions were tested for water resistmonium nit-rate. ance by immersion in water and all found to exhibit the In a separate container about 284 grams of ammonium desired high resistance to physical degradation by water. nitrate were dissolved in about 120 grams of water, about The compositions also were tested for detonability 4 grams of a guar gum were added slowly to the aqueous using the submerged water lead block deformation test solution with continuous stirring. The grease-containprocedure reported in Example 1. Table I presents the ing ammonium nitrate prills, and the ammonium nitrate composition formulation and explosive results obtained solution were mixed and about 2 milliliters of ammonium for various combinations of the grease covered ammohydroxide (28 percent NH was simultaneously intronium nitrate prills and the aqueous ammonium nitrate duced therein. (This latter material acted as a crosssolution.
TABLE I Grease Coated ggg gfi Components, Wt. percent of Total Composition Explosive R N g i trate Solution Density, Results Lead un o. ercen 0 (Wt percent gJcc Block De- Remarks gz ll tg 'g t z i NHiNOa Fuel on AlOleate ((533: Water @32 89.8 10.2 0.95 92.4 3.6 0.9 0.1 3.0 1.87 Thick paste. 79.6 20.4 1.06 89.9 3.2 0.8 0.2 6.0 2. 25 Paste. 69.4 30.6 1.12 87.2 2.8 0.7 0.3 9.0 0. 94 Pourable slurry. 59. 2 40. s 1. 20 84. 6 2. 4 0.6 0. 4 12. 0 1. 06 Do.
linking agent for the guar gum.) The resulting product was a pourable slurry and had a density of about 1.2 grams per cubic centimeter.
A sample of the resulting slurry was placed in water and observed at intervals over an extended period of time.
Example 3.In a separate study water resistant slurry explosives were prepared in accordance with the process of the present invention by admixing aluminum oleatefuel oil treated ammonium nitrate prills with an aqueous ammonium nitrate solution. In these studies, the amount of fuel oil and ammonium nitrate were varied in the preparation of the water resistant prill component. The composition data and explosive results (lead block deformation test as described in Example 1) are summarized in Table II.
TABLE II Water Resistant Prllls Com- Aqueous Ammonium Nitrate Solution Corn- Explosive ponent Welght percent 1 ponent, Weight percent 1 Results Run No. Lead Block Detonation, NH-iNO3 Al Fuel NH4NO3 Guar Water Inches Oleate Oil Guru 58. 4 0. 6 28. 0. 4 l2. 1 0. 57. 2 0. 6 1 2 28. 5 0. 4 12. 1 0. 81 56. 1 0. 6 2. 4 28. 5 0. 4 12. 1 1. 06 54. 9 0. 6 3. 5 28. 5 0. 4 l2. 1 0. 94 53. 7 0. 5 4. 7 28. 5 0.4 12. 1 1. 12 52. 5 0. 5 5 9 28, 5 0.4 12. l 1. l2
1 Based on total composition weight.
cubic centimeter.
In a manner similar to that described for the foregoing 25 examples, ground porous particulate ammonium nitrate can be blended with calcium stearate and this mixture in turn blended with kerosene to provide a water resistant particulate ammonium nitrate. Similarly aluminum stearate and crude oil can be blended with a prilled fertilizer grade ammonium nitrate to produce a water resistant ammonium nitrate based composition. These and other porous ammonium nitratealkaline earth metalor earth metal carboxylic fatty acid salt-liquid hydrocarbon blends prepared in accordance with the present invention can be admixed with aqueous ammonium nitrate solutions to provide high energy Water resistant ammonium nitrate based explosives. Additionally, if desired other solid fuels such as light metals, e.g. particulate magnesium, aluminum, magnesium alloys, aluminum alloys and mixtures thereof can be introduced into the explosive compositions of the present invention. Also water soluble carbon-containing oxidizable materials can be dissolved in the ammonium nitrate solution and used in the preparation of these explosive compositions. These latter materials can be used to replace a part of the liquid hydrocarbon fuel used in the preparation of the water resistant prill.
Various modifications can be made in the present invention without departing from the spirit or scope thereof for it is understood that we limit ourselves only as defined in the appended claims.
We claim:
1. A process for preparing a water-resistant ammonium nitrate based explosive composition which comprises,
(a) blending porous particulate ammonium nitrate with a member selected from the group consisting of alkaline earth metaland earth metal salts of ali phatic carboxylic acids, the amount of said salt ranging from about 0.5 to about 2 weight percent based on the weight of said ammonium nitrate, said salt having from about 8 to about 24 carbon atoms in the aliphatic group,
(b) adding a petrolic liquid to the blend of said fatty acid salt and said ammonium nitrate, the amount of said petrolic liquid ranging from about 4 to about 8 weight percent of the total mixture,
(0) mixing said petrolic liquid and the blend of said fatty acid salt and particulated ammonium nitrate thereby to provide in situ in and on said ammonium nitrate a protective, water resistant coating, and
(d) admixing the so-prepared water resistant coated porous ammonium nitrate with an aqueous solution of ammonium nitrate, said solution ranging in am monium nitrate concentration from about 60 weight percent of said solution up to the saturation level (a) blending porous particulate ammonium nitrate with a member selected from the group consisting of alkaline earth metaland earth metal salts of aliphatic carboxylic acids, the amount of saidsalt ranging from about 0.5 to about 2 weight percent based on the weight of said ammonium nitrate, said salt having from about 8 to about 24 carbon atoms in the aliphatic group,
(b) adding a petrolic liquid to the blend of said fatty acid salt and said ammonium nitrate, the amount of said petrolic liquid ranging from about 4 to about 8 weight percent of the total mixture,
(c) mixing said petrolic liquid and the blend of said fatty acid salt and particulated ammonium nitrate thereby to provide in situ in and on said ammonium nitrate a protective, water resistant coating, and
(d) admixing the so-prepared Water resistant coated porous ammonium nitrate with an aqueous solution of ammonium nitrate, said solution ranging in ammonium nitrate concentration from about 60 weight percent of said solution up to the saturation level, and the amount of water ranging from about 9 to about 15 weight percent of the total slurry-type explosive composition.
3. A process for preparing a water-resistant, pourable slurry-type ammonium nitrate based explosive composition which comprises;
(a) blending about 100 parts by weight prilled ammonium nitrate With about 1 part by weight powdered aluminum oleate,
(b) admixing about 5 parts by weight fuel oil with the blend of said aluminum oleate and said prilled ammonium nitrate,
(c) mixing said fuel oil with said aluminum oleateammonium nitrate blend thereby to provide a water resistant coating in the pores of and on the surface of said prilled ammonium nitrate; and
(d) adding with agitation about parts by weight of an aqueous ammonium nitrate solution to said coated water resistant ammonium nitrate prills, said aqueous solution comprising about 57 parts by weight ammonium nitrate, about 22 parts by weight water and about 1 part by weight gum.
4. A pourable, slurry-type water resistant ammonium nitrate based explosive composition which comprises;
(a) on a weight basis from about 0.6 to about 1.8 percent of a member selected from the group consisting of alkaline earth metal and earth metal aliphatic carboxylic acid salt, the aliphatic group of said salt having from about 8 to about 24 carbon atoms;
(b) from about 2.5 to about 8 percent liquid hydrocarbon fuel,
7 8 (c) from about 9 to about 15 percent water, Water resistant coating containing particulate am- (d) a maximum of about 3 percent thickening agent, monium nitrate.
and (e) balance, porous particulate ammonium nitrate, References C'ted by the Examiner said composition being further characterized in that 5 UNITED STATES PATENTS a portion of said ammonium nitrate is blended with 2 211 738 8/1940 Cairns 149 7 said aliphatic CEII'bOXYllC acid salt and said liquid hy- 3 0 4 572 11 19 2 Aitchison 102 23 drocarbon thereby to form a water resistant coating 3:160:536 12/1964 Aitchison 149 46 X in and on said particulate ammonium nitrate and the remainder of said ammonium nitrate is dissolved in 10 BENJAMIN R. PADGETT, Primary Examiner said water forming a solution ranging from about 60 percent to saturation with respect to said ammo- LEON ROSDOL Examiner nium nitrate, said solution being admixed with said L. A. SEBASTIAN, Assistant Examiner.

Claims (2)

1. A PROCESS FOR PREPARING A WATER-RESISTANT AMMONIUM NITRATE BASED EXPLOSIVE COMPOSITION WHICH COMPRISES, (A) BLENDING POROUS PARTICULATE AMMONIUM NITRATE WITH A MEMBER SELECTED FROM THE GROUP CONSISTING OF ALKALINE EARTH METAL AND EARTH METAL SALTS OF ALIPHATIC CARBOXYLIC ACIDS, THE AMOUNT OF SAID SALT RANGING FROM ABOUT 0.5 TO ABOUT 2 WEIGHT PERCENT BASED ON THE WEIGHT OF SAID AMMONIUM NITRATE, SAID SALT HAVING FROM ABOUT 8 TO ABOUT 24 CARBON ATOMS, IN THE ALIPHATIC GROUP, (B) ADDING A PETROLIC LIQUID TO THE BLEND OF SAID FATTY ACID SALT AND SAID AMMONIUM NITRATE, THE AMOUNT OF SAID PETROLIC LIQUID RANGING FROM ABOUT 4 TO ABOUT 8 WEIGHT PERCENT OF THE TOTAL MIXTURE, (C) MIXING SAID PETROLIC LIQUID AND THE BLEND OF SAID FATTY ACID SALT AND PARTICULATED AMMONIUM NITRATE THEREBY TO PROVIDE IN SITU IN AND ON SAID AMMONIUM NITRATE A PROTECTIVE, WATER RESISTANT COATING, AND (D) ADMIXING THE SO-PREPARED WATER RESISTANT COATED POROUS AMMONIUM NITRATE WITH AN AQUEOUS SOLUTION OF AMMONIUM NITRATE, SAID SOLUTION RANGING IN AMMONIUM NITRATE CONCENTRATION FROM ABOUT 60 WEIGHT PERCENT OF SAID SOLUTION UP TO THE SATURATION LEVEL AND THE TOTAL AMOUNT OF WATER AT A MAXIMUM IS ABOUT 15 WEIGHT PERCENT OF THE TOTAL EXPLOSIVE COMPOSITION.
4. A POURABLE, SLURRY-TYPE WATER RESISTANT AMMONIUM NITRATE BASED EXPLOSIVE COMPOSITION WHICH COMPRISES; (A) ON A WEIGHT BASIS FROM ABOUT 0.6 TO ABOUT 1.8 PERCENT OF A MEMBER SELECTED FROM THE GROUP CONSISTING OF ALKALINE EARTH METAL AND EARTH METAL ALIPHATIC CARBOXYLIC ACID SALT, THE ALIPHATIC GROUP OF SAID SALT HAVING FROM ABOUT 8 TO ABOUT 24 CARBON ATOMS; (B) FROM ABOUT 2.5 TO ABOUT 8 PERCENT LIQUID HYDROCARBON FUEL, (C) FROM ABOUT 9 TO ABOUT 15 PERCENT WATER, (D) A MAXIMUM OF ABOUT 3 PERCENT THICKENING AGENT, AND (E) BALANCE, POROUS PARTICULATE AMMONIUM NITRATE, SAID COMPOSITION BEING FURTHER CHARACTERIZED IN THAT A PORTION OF SAID AMMONIUM NITRATE IS BLENDED WITH SAID ALIPHATIC CARBOXYLIC ACID SALT AND SAID LIQUID HYDROCARBON THEREBY TO FORM A WATER RESISTANT COATING IN AND ON SAID PARTICULATE AMMONIUM NITRATE AND THE REMAINDER OF SAID AMMONIUM NITRATE IS DISSOLVED IN SAID WATER FORMING A SOLUTION RANGING FROM ABOUT 60 PERCENT TO SATURATION WITH RESPECT TO SAID AMMONIUM NITRATE,SAID SOLUTION BEING ADMIXED WITH SAID WATER RESISTANT COATING CONTAINING PARTICULATE AMMONIUM NITRATE.
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Cited By (14)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3779821A (en) * 1971-09-27 1973-12-18 Mitsubishi Chem Ind Prilled ammonium nitrate composition of improved anti-scattering properties
US3830672A (en) * 1966-08-30 1974-08-20 Aerojet General Co Solid porous, coated oxidizer, method of preparation and novel propellant compositions
US4528049A (en) * 1984-07-09 1985-07-09 Udy Lex L Seismic explosive composition
US4637849A (en) * 1985-09-03 1987-01-20 Celanese Corporation Waterproof ammonium nitrate fuel oil explosives
EP0256669A2 (en) * 1986-08-05 1988-02-24 Exxon Chemical Patents Inc. Improved dry ammonium nitrate blasting agents
US4758289A (en) * 1987-06-18 1988-07-19 Ireco Incorporated Blasting agent in microcapsule form
US5049212A (en) * 1991-03-27 1991-09-17 The United States Of America As Represented By The Secretary Of The Navy High energy explosive yield enhancer using microencapsulation
USRE33788E (en) * 1977-09-19 1992-01-07 Hanex Products, Inc. Water-in-oil blasting composition
US5976283A (en) * 1995-07-07 1999-11-02 Canbro Inc. Residue wax coated nitrate salt
US20020108415A1 (en) * 2000-01-21 2002-08-15 Greg Volgas Manufacture and use of an deposition aid
US20050067075A1 (en) * 2003-08-25 2005-03-31 Eti Holdings Corp. Storage stable ANFO explosive compositions containing chemical coupling agents and method for producing same
US20080289733A1 (en) * 2005-02-10 2008-11-27 Alon Gany High-Energy Materials with Encapsulated Fluid Components
EP2780302A4 (en) * 2011-11-17 2015-07-22 Dyno Nobel Asia Pacific Pty Ltd Blasting compositions
AU2013204063B2 (en) * 2012-08-22 2016-05-05 BELLAIRS, Jennifer Annette Water Resistant ANFO Equivalent and Method of Use

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US2211738A (en) * 1937-07-08 1940-08-13 Hercules Powder Co Ltd Blasting explosive
US3064572A (en) * 1958-01-13 1962-11-20 Union Carbide Corp Method of and means for providing a charge of water sensitive explosive in a blast hole
US3160536A (en) * 1958-01-13 1964-12-08 Union Carbide Corp Blasting explosive

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US2211738A (en) * 1937-07-08 1940-08-13 Hercules Powder Co Ltd Blasting explosive
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US3160536A (en) * 1958-01-13 1964-12-08 Union Carbide Corp Blasting explosive

Cited By (21)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3830672A (en) * 1966-08-30 1974-08-20 Aerojet General Co Solid porous, coated oxidizer, method of preparation and novel propellant compositions
US3779821A (en) * 1971-09-27 1973-12-18 Mitsubishi Chem Ind Prilled ammonium nitrate composition of improved anti-scattering properties
USRE33788E (en) * 1977-09-19 1992-01-07 Hanex Products, Inc. Water-in-oil blasting composition
US4528049A (en) * 1984-07-09 1985-07-09 Udy Lex L Seismic explosive composition
US4637849A (en) * 1985-09-03 1987-01-20 Celanese Corporation Waterproof ammonium nitrate fuel oil explosives
US4736683A (en) * 1986-08-05 1988-04-12 Exxon Chemical Patents Inc. Dry ammonium nitrate blasting agents
EP0256669A3 (en) * 1986-08-05 1991-10-16 Exxon Chemical Patents Inc. Improved dry ammonium nitrate blasting agents
EP0256669A2 (en) * 1986-08-05 1988-02-24 Exxon Chemical Patents Inc. Improved dry ammonium nitrate blasting agents
US4758289A (en) * 1987-06-18 1988-07-19 Ireco Incorporated Blasting agent in microcapsule form
AU613612B2 (en) * 1987-06-18 1991-08-08 Ireco Incorporated Blasting agent in microcapsule form
US5049212A (en) * 1991-03-27 1991-09-17 The United States Of America As Represented By The Secretary Of The Navy High energy explosive yield enhancer using microencapsulation
US5976283A (en) * 1995-07-07 1999-11-02 Canbro Inc. Residue wax coated nitrate salt
US20020108415A1 (en) * 2000-01-21 2002-08-15 Greg Volgas Manufacture and use of an deposition aid
US6939555B2 (en) * 2000-01-21 2005-09-06 Helena Holding Company Manufacture and use of an deposition aid
US20050067075A1 (en) * 2003-08-25 2005-03-31 Eti Holdings Corp. Storage stable ANFO explosive compositions containing chemical coupling agents and method for producing same
US8623157B2 (en) * 2003-08-25 2014-01-07 Eti Canada Inc. Storage stable ANFO explosive compositions containing chemical coupling agents and method for producing same
US20080289733A1 (en) * 2005-02-10 2008-11-27 Alon Gany High-Energy Materials with Encapsulated Fluid Components
EP2780302A4 (en) * 2011-11-17 2015-07-22 Dyno Nobel Asia Pacific Pty Ltd Blasting compositions
AU2012339627B2 (en) * 2011-11-17 2016-12-15 Dyno Nobel Asia Pacific Pty Limited Blasting compositions
US10723670B2 (en) 2011-11-17 2020-07-28 Dyno Nobel Asia Pacific Pty Limited Blasting compositions
AU2013204063B2 (en) * 2012-08-22 2016-05-05 BELLAIRS, Jennifer Annette Water Resistant ANFO Equivalent and Method of Use

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