4.8 Article

Activating Aluminum Reactivity with Fluoropolymer Coatings for Improved Energetic Composite Combustion

Journal

ACS APPLIED MATERIALS & INTERFACES
Volume 7, Issue 33, Pages 18742-18749

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acsami.5b05238

Keywords

aluminum powder; fluorine; combustion; aluminum fluoride; oligomers; energetic materials; exothermic surface chemistry; preignition reaction

Funding

  1. Army Research Office [W911NF-11-10439, W911NF-14-10250, 65092EGRIP]

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Aluminum (Al) particles are passivated by an aluminum oxide (Al2O3) shell. Energetic blends of nanometer-sized Al particles with liquid perfluorocarbon-based oxidizers such as perfluoropolyethers (PFPE) excite surface exothermic reaction between fluorine and the Al2O3 shell. The surface reaction promotes Al particle reactivity. Many Al-fueled composites use solid oxidizers that induce no Al2O3 surface exothermicity, such as molybdenum trioxide (MoO3) or copper oxide (CuO). This study investigates a perfluorinated polymer additive, PFPE, incorporated to activate Al reactivity in Al-CuO and Al-MoO3. Flame speeds, differential scanning calorimetry (DSC), and quadrupole mass spectrometry (QMS) were performed for varying percentages of PFPE blended with Al/MoO3 or Al/CuO to examine reaction kinetics and combustion performance. X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS) was performed to identify product species. Results show that the performance of the thermite-PFPE blends is highly dependent on the bond dissociation energy of the metal oxide. Fluorine-Al-based surface reaction with MoO3 produces an increase in reactivity, whereas the blends with CuO show a decline when the PFPE concentration is increased. These results provide new evidence that optimizing Al combustion can be achieved through activating exothermic Al surface reactions.

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