michael walsh, marianne walsh, charles a. ramsey, sonia
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QUANTIFYING ENERGETICS CONTAMINATION FOR LIVE - FIRE TRAINING ON MILITARY RANGES
Michael Walsh, Marianne Walsh, Charles A. Ramsey,
Sonia Thiboutot, Guy Ampleman
21 May 2013
European Conference of
Defence and the Environment

Introduction
• Training with live ammunition is critical to maintain the combat efficiency of armed forces.
• This requires the expenditure of energetic materials at the firing points and downrange in impact areas.
• All energetics are not consumed during detonation, leaving residues on the range.
• Range managers and those involved with range sustainability need solid information on the impacts of live fire training on the environment.

Presentation Outline • Problem definition
• An effective method of determining deposition rates
• Test procedures
– High-order detonations
– Low-order detonations
– Blow-in-place field disposal
– Close-proximity detonations
• Results of tests conducted
– Conventional munitions
– Insensitive munitions
• Summary

Problem Definition
• Munitions contain explosive compounds that are detrimental to the water quality within training ranges.
• These compounds, when occurring above established limits, will adversely affect the environment and human health.
• If these compounds occur at high enough concentrations in groundwater, range use may be suspended, restricted, or terminated, and very expensive remediation (> €1B) may be required.
• An effective, defensible method to determine the environmental loading of various activities pertaining to training with live ordnance is needed.

Energetic Components Present In Military Explosives
Formulation Uses Major Energetic Chemical Ingredients
Composition B Howitzer rounds, mortar and
tank cartridges
60% Military-grade RDX (Contains ≈ 10% HMX)
39% Military-grade TNT (Contains ≈ 1% other
TNT isomers and DNTs)
Composition C4 Demolition explosive 91% Military-grade RDX
TNT Howitzer rounds Military-grade TNT
Composition A4 40-mm grenades; fuzes Military-grade RDX
Tritonal Air Force bombs Military-grade TNT, aluminum
Octol Antitank rockets, AAA Military-grade HMX and TNT
PAX-21 (IM) Mortar & Grenade munitions RDX, DNAN, Ammonium Perchlorate (AP)
IMX-101 (IM) Howitzer rounds DNAN, NQ, NTO
IMX-104 (IM) Mortar cartridges NTO, DNAN, RDX

Energetic Components Present In Military Propellants
Formulation Uses Major Energetic Chemical Ingredients
Single-base Howitzers NC, DNT
Double-base Mortars, Small Arms, Small
(<100 mm) Rockets
NC, NG (DNT, AP added to some formulations)
Triple-base Larger howitzer rounds NC, NG, NQ
Rocket propellant Large rockets AP, aluminum
Some of these compounds also appear in explosives

Sources of Residues from Training with Explosives on Impact Ranges
• Corrosion of surface and subsurface UXO
• Rupture of UXO items by detonations
• Low-order (partial) detonations
• UXO blow-in-place operations (BIPs)
• High-order detonations

Challenges to Sampling • Access to impact ranges
• Separation of past events from current tests
• Placement of rounds (live-fire tests)
• Determination of detonation (high- vs. low-order)
• Determination of affected area (plume)
• Obtaining a reproducible sample
• Presence of unexploded ordnance (UXO)

An Elegant Solution: Sampling on Snow-covered Ice
• Separated from previous activities (including UXO)
• Easy to set up tests
• Easy determination of plume on snow surface
• Easy to collect samples
• No dilution from soils: Good for low mass / concentrations
• Processing and analysis straightforward


Use MULTI – INCREMENT ® Sampling
• Collect samples with: – At least 40 increments
– We use ≈100 for research
• Sample increment locations: – ≈ Evenly distribute through the
sampling unit starting at a random location in the first cell
Path of travel
Increment collection points for two separate MI samples
Sampling
Unit
100-increment Sample Collection Pattern
MULTI INCREMENT ® is a registered trademark of EnviroStat, Inc.

Testing of Munitions High-order Detonations
• Live rounds fired onto
ice-covered impact area
– OR –
• Use of fuze simulator to
mimic explosive train
• Snow surface sampled
for residues
• 7 – 10 detonations
sampled per test

Testing of Munitions Low-order Detonations
• More difficult – Few,
random occurrences
• Impact points observed
• Soil surface sampled
for residues
– OR –
• Use fuze simulator to
mimic functional low-
order dets

Testing of Munitions BIP Detonations
• External donor charge
• Fuzed rounds
• Spaced det points
• Snow surface
sampled for residues
• Can vary donor
charge and orientation

Testing of Munitions Close-proximity Detonations
• Simulated a detonating
fired round (fuze sim.)
• Orientation / location of
“UXO” controlled
• Post detonation
characterization of
UXO
• Post-detonation
characterization of
residues
• Mass balance
UXO
UXO
Detonating
Round

Test Results
Conventional Rounds – Comp B, TNT
Insensitive Munitions – PAX-21, IMX-104

Test Results Conventional Rounds: High-Order Detonations
Weapon
System
Number
tested
Analyte
Plume
Area (m2)
Mass of
Analyte* (mg)
Residue per
Round**
Mortars
60-mm 7 RDX/HMX 214 0.073 3.2E-05 %
81-mm 14 RDX/HMX 230 8.5 1.4E-03 %
120-mm 8 RDX/HMX 450 19 1.1E-03 %
Howitzers
105-mm 13 RDX/HMX 530 0.095 7.3E-06 %
155-mm 7 RDX/HMX 757 0.30 7.1E-06 %
7 TNT 938 BDL —
Rockets
203-mm 6 RDX — BDL —
* Mass of analyte per round estimated in plume
** As a percentage of the original mass of the analyte in the round

Test Results Conventional Rounds: Low-Order Detonations
Weapon
System
Site
Analyte
Plume
Area (m2)
Mass of
Analyte*
(mg)
Residue per
Round**
Mortars
120-mm 1 RDX/HMX 250 130,000 4.4 %
2 RDX/HMX 150 450,000 15 %
3 RDX/HMX 380 650,000 22 % * Mass of analyte per round estimated in plume (Collected chunks + analysis)
** As a percentage of the original mass of the analyte in the round
One low-order detonation = 1,000 high-order dets

Test Results Conventional Rounds: Blow-In-Place Detonations
Weapon
System
Number
tested
Analyte
Plume
Area (m2)
Mass of
Analyte* (mg)
Residue per
Round**
Mortars
60-mm 7 RDX/HMX 500 200 2.7E-02 %
81-mm 7 RDX/HMX 820 150 1.4E-02 %
120-mm 7 RDX/HMX 1500 25 1.1E-03 %
Howitzers
105-mm 7 RDX/HMX 860 50 2.8E-03 %
155-mm 7 RDX/HMX 1600 16 3.2E-06 %
7 TNT 2000 15 8.9E-05 %
Demolitions
C4 Block 13 RDX 138 5.9 1.1E-03 %
* Mass of analyte per round estimated in plume
** As a percentage of the original mass of the analyte in the round + donor block

Test Results Conventional Rounds: Close-Proximity Detonations
Weapon
System
Damage Descriptor*
Number of
Rounds
Distance from
Detonating
Round
Mortars
81-mm Intact: Surface damage 4 0.5 – 0.8 m
Pierced to HE filler 9 0.5 – 1.2 m
Low-order / Partial detonation 7 0.3 – 0.6 m
High-order detonation 1 0.5 m
Not recovered** 2 0.3 – 0.5 m * Visual assessment of damage to recovered “UXO”
** Round was ejected from the test area

Low Order Detonations
Pierced
Round
Partial
Detonations
UXO Damage from Close-Proximity Detonations

Test Results Conventional Rounds: Close-Proximity Detonations
Round
Distance
From
Detonation
Damage
Assessment*
Pieces
Recovered
Mass of HE
Recovered**
Deposition
Area (m2)
% Analyte
Recovered
4b 0.3 m Partial det 839 220 g 600 20%***
8a 0.5 m Low-order det 12 26 g — 1.1%
8b 0.5 m Pierced body 20 22 g 2 1.8%
9a 0.5 m Partial det 11 12 g — 1.0%
10a 0.5 m Low-order det 16 60 g 140 5.5%
* Visual assessment of damage to recovered “UXO”
** Mass recovered external to and intact munition
*** Percent of original mass of analyte in HE filler

Test Results: Conventional Munitions
Summary
• High-order detonations will leave very little
residues: 10-3 to 10-6 % of original HE load
• Blow-in-place will leave slightly higher levels
of residues: 10-2 to 10-6 % of original HE load
• Low order detonations will leave high levels
of HE over a large area
• Close-proximity detonation outcomes varied
but most UXO compromised

Insensitive Munitions Tests
• 60-mm Mortar Rounds
– PAX-21 IHE filler
– IMX-104 IHE filler
• 81-mm Mortar Rounds
– IMX-104 IHE filler
• Series of four tests
– High-order
– Low-order
– BIP: C4 Donor block
– BIP: Shaped charge

IM Tests
• High-order and BIP w/
C4 donor block
– Snow-covered ice
– Residues deposition
• Low-order and BIP
w/EFP or shaped
charge
– Cleared ice pad
– Particles & chunks
• BIPs fuzed
• HO & LO used fuze
simulators

Results: PAX-21
Low-order Detonations
• 33 – 34 g per detonation
• 12% of IHE
EFP BIPS
• 21 – 70 g per detonation
• 15% of IHE
High-order Detonations Donor Chg. BIP Detonations
Mass (g) Efficiency* Mass (g) Efficiency*
Organic Compounds
RDX 0.009 99.99% 0.87 99.9%
DNAN 0.007 99.99% 0.74 99.4%
Inorganic Compound
AP 14 85% 35 62%
1
10
100
1000
10000
0.001 0.01 0.1 1 10 100 1000 10000
Cumula
venumberpar
cles
Mass(g)
PAX21LO4
PAX21LO1
PAX21LO8
PAX21LO6
PAX21LO2&3
TNTLO
CompBLO
Donor Charge BIPs
*Percent of compound consumed during detonation

Results: PAX-21
• Photomicroscopy
– Characterization of AP
– AP Particles ≈400μm
• Raman spectroscopy
– Developed method for
perchlorate (935 nm)
– Confirmed AP crystals
935 nm
Courtesy David Ringelberg, CRREL

Results: PAX-21
• Dissolution Testing
- 98%+ of detected AP in
melted samples (0°C
water)
- Rapid dissolution of AP
from post-detonation
particles
- Leaves weakened RDX
/DNAN matrix
1 mL Water -
Drip Dissolution
Test
AP
Courtesy of Dr. Susan Taylor, CRREL / Dartmouth
Size ≈ 2 x 3 mm
Dartmouth µCT Scan
Voids

Results: PAX-21
• Organic Energetics
– Slightly higher deposition rates
– Consistent with hypothesis
• Perchlorates
– Very high deposition rates
– Loosely tied to organic deposition rates
– Severe implications for range sustainability
• Drinking water limits very low (≈2 ppb)
• 98% of mass recovered in aqueous portion of sample at
0.1°C
• High-orders: 3 – 13 million L of water contaminated per round
• BIPs: 10 to 27 million L of water contaminated per round

Results: IMX-104
Compound
High-order Detonations Donor Chg. BIP Detonations
Mass (g) Efficiency* Mass (g) Efficiency*
60-mm Mortar Rounds
RDX 0.005 99.99% 4.3 99.3%
DNAN 0.005 99.99% 10 90%
NTO 2.2 98.8% 15 74%
81-mm Mortar Rounds
RDX 0.016 99.99% 20 97%
DNAN 0.027 99.99% 45 83%
NTO 1.9 99.6% 233 45%
*Percent of original compound consumed during detonation

Results: IMX-104
• Photomicroscopy
– NTO Particles ≈400μm
– Very irregular shapes
• Dissolution Testing
– 99%+ of NTO in the
melted samples
– Rapid dissolution of NTO
from post-detonation
particles
– Leaves weakened
RDX/DNAN matrix Courtesy Dr. Susan Taylor, CRREL / Dartmouth
NTO
8 mL Water -
Drip Dissolution
Test
Dartmouth µCT Scan
Dissolution
Voids
Size ≈ 2 x 3 mm

Results: IMX-104
• RDX / HMX / DNAN
– Slightly higher deposition rates
– Consistent with hypothesis
• NTO
– Very high deposition rates
– Correlates with but much higher than other compounds
– Implications for range sustainability?
• High solubility in water
• 99% of mass recovered in aqueous portion of sample
• Toxicology tests not complete
• Do we take the chance?

Research Products • Developed method to obtain per-round post-
detonation energetic residue mass
• Developed method to detonate munitions
high order without firing or external charges
• Conducted first close-proximity detonation
tests to assess UXO damage
• Able to simulate LO detonations
• Built detonation efficiency / residues table for
detonation and BIP of common munitions
• Field data will enable range managers to
assess impacts of training with live
munitions
• Data is proving critical to weapons designers

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