Organic Chemistry of Explosives

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192 Synthetic Routes toN-Nitro


Nitrimines are a relatively minor group ofN-nitro compound. The nitro derivatives of


guanidine and related compounds are the most important examples of the nitrimine group.


Primary nitramines have acidic protons and are able to undergo condensation reactions


to form functionalized nitramines. These reactions are discussed in Section 5.13 because the


products have potential application as energetic polymer precursors or find use for the synthesis


of other explosives.


5.2 Nitramines, nitramides and nitrimines as explosives


The energetic nature of the N–NO 2 group means thatN-nitro-based explosives are some


of the most powerful explosives available and these have largely superseded aromaticC-nitro


compounds for military applications. Many nitramines exhibit high brisance and high chemical


stability in combination with a favourable low sensitivity to impact and friction compared to


nitrate ester explosives of similar power.


CH 3 NHNO 2
1
methylnitramine

O 2 NHN

NHNO 2

2
ethylenedinitramine
(EDNA)

Figure 5.2

The chemical properties of primary and secondary nitramines are important in relation to


their use as explosives. Primary nitramines contain acidic hydrogen in the form of−NHNO 2


and, consequently, in the presence of moisture, primary nitramines corrode metals and form


metal salts, some of which are primary explosives. This is one reason why powerful explosives


like methylnitramine (1) have not found practical use. Ethylenedinitramine (EDNA) (2) suffers


from similar problems but its high brisance (VOD∼8240 m/s,d= 1 .66 g/cm^3 ) and low


sensitivity to impact have seen it used for some applications.


In contrast, secondary nitramines have no acidic hydrogen and often exhibit a high chem-


ical stability in combination with acceptable thermal and impact sensitivity. Consequently,


secondary nitramines are often the explosives of choice for military use.


1,3,5-Trinitro-1,3,5-triazacyclohexane (RDX) (3) and 1,3,5,7-tetranitro-1,3,5,7-tetraazac-


yclooctane (HMX) (4) are the most important of the secondary nitramine explosives. RDX


exhibits both high brisance (VOD∼8440 m/s,d= 1 .70 g/cm^3 ) and stability, finding extensive


use as a military explosive in the form of compressed or cast mixtures with other explosives,


or in the form of PBXs (plastic bonded explosives) where it is incorporated into a polymer


matrix with added plasticizer. HMX (VOD∼9110 m/s,d= 1 .90 g/cm^3 ) exhibits higher per-


formance than RDX due to its higher density, but this is offset by its higher cost of production


compared to RDX. Consequently, HMX is restricted to military use, finding use in high per-


formance propellant and explosive formulations. Both RDX and HMX are discussed further in


Section 5.15.


Although RDX and HMX are adequate for military applications, they are by no means


perfect. The risk of premature detonation increases when such explosives are used in shells for


high calibre guns due to the higher ‘set-back’ force. Also of concern is the risk of catastrophic

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