Ignition and combustion of Al·Mg alloy powders prepared by different techniques
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
4-1-2015
Abstract
Alloys of aluminum and magnesium have long been explored as potential reactive materials and replacements of pure aluminum powders in energetic formulations. It has been recently shown that mechanical alloying (MA) can be used to prepare a range of Al·Mg powders with different compositions and particle sizes. Conventionally, such alloys are prepared by melt processing; however, no direct comparisons of combustion characteristics of such alloys prepared using different methods are available. This work is aimed at comparing the oxidation, ignition, and combustion characteristics for MA and cast-alloyed (CA) Al·Mg powders with similar bulk compositions and particle sizes. Particle size distributions are measured using low-angle laser light scattering. Electron microscopy and X-ray diffraction are used to examine particle morphology and phase makeup, respectively. Thermal analysis is used to identify the low-temperature reactions that could affect ignition. Ignition behavior of the two powders is studied using a heated filament ignition apparatus. Constant volume explosion experiments are performed to compare effectiveness and rate of combustion of the aerosolized alloy particles. A laser ignition setup is used to characterize combustion rates and temperatures for individual alloy particles. Low-temperature exothermic features were observed for the MA powder but not for the CA powder in thermo-analytical experiments. MA powders had slightly lower ignition temperatures than CA powders. Aerosol combustion experiments showed a substantial increase in both the maximum pressure and rate of pressure rise for the MA powders as compared to the CA powders. In single particle laser ignition experiments, MA particles ignited more readily than CA particles. MA powders burned in a staged sequence, with the first stage dominated by combustion of Mg and the second stage primarily representing combustion of Al. No similar staged combustion behavior was observed for the CA powders, which generated very short emission pulses with a relatively low brightness, and thus might not have burned completely. It is proposed that the difference in the structure and morphology between the MA and CA particles results in different ignition and combustion scenarios.
Identifier
84924279177 (Scopus)
Publication Title
Combustion and Flame
External Full Text Location
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.combustflame.2014.11.010
e-ISSN
15562921
ISSN
00102180
First Page
1440
Last Page
1447
Issue
4
Volume
162
Fund Ref
Defense Threat Reduction Agency
Recommended Citation
Aly, Yasmine and Dreizin, Edward L., "Ignition and combustion of Al·Mg alloy powders prepared by different techniques" (2015). Faculty Publications. 7074.
https://digitalcommons.njit.edu/fac_pubs/7074
