The combustion o [ l,, abbreviated here to UDMH) has been investigated in the gaseous phase. It is an endothermic compound and will undergo spontaneous ignition in both decomposition and oxidation. The critical conditions o] pressure and temperature and composition (critical limits) necessary ]or ex
Combustion, flame and explosion of hydrazine and ammonia I—The spontaneous ignition of pure gaseous hydrazine
✍ Scribed by P. Gray; J.C. Lee; M. Spencer
- Publisher
- Elsevier Science
- Year
- 1963
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 630 KB
- Volume
- 7
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0010-2180
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✦ Synopsis
The spontaneous ignition of hydrazine has been investigated in the gaseous phase. The critical conditions of temperature and pressure for decomposition to become explosive and the effect on them of inert diluents have been measured; product analyses have been carried out to determine the stoichiometry and exothermicity. especially in the immediate region of the explosion limit. The critical limit is simple in form, conditions under which pure hydrazine explodes spontaneously varying from 6.6 cm Hg at 585°C to 5.9 mm Hg at 807°C in a silica vessel (volume 250 cm3, surface 300 cmz). Helium increases and argon diminishes the difficulty of ignition.
As the limit is crossed, from just subcritical to just supercritical pressures, the stoichiometry changes. At 630°C:
.
Slow reaction
NsHb + 1.13 NH3+0.43 Nz+0.30 Hz AH= -35.1 kcal mole --I Explosive reaction NzH4 + 0.87 NHs+0.57 Nz-kO.72 Hz AH= -32.3 kcal mole-l The ignition satisfies qualitatively the criteria of thermal explosion: quantitatively, there are deviations from predicted behaviour. The deviations are thought to originate partly in interference from heterogeneous decompositzon but principally in complexities of the homogeneous reaction. A thermal mechanism is in accord with the behaviour of closely related systems.
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