How Thermal Aging Affects Ignition and Combustion Properties of Reactive Al/CuO Nanolaminates: A Joint Theoretical/Experimental Study

The paper reports a joint experimental/theoretical study on the aging of reactive Al/CuO nanolaminates, investigating both structural modifications and combustion properties of aged systems. We first show theoretically that the long-term storage (over several decades) in ambient temperature marginal...

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Main Authors: A. Estève, G. Lahiner, B. Julien, S. Vivies, N. Richard, C. Rossi
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2020-10-01
Series:Nanomaterials
Subjects:
Al
CuO
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2079-4991/10/10/2087
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spelling doaj-2f79c1ef03e94a33ba850242ef9b3a6a2020-11-25T03:03:53ZengMDPI AGNanomaterials2079-49912020-10-01102087208710.3390/nano10102087How Thermal Aging Affects Ignition and Combustion Properties of Reactive Al/CuO Nanolaminates: A Joint Theoretical/Experimental StudyA. Estève0G. Lahiner1B. Julien2S. Vivies3N. Richard4C. Rossi5LAAS-CNRS, University of Toulouse, 7 Avenue du colonel Roche, 31077 Toulouse, FranceLAAS-CNRS, University of Toulouse, 7 Avenue du colonel Roche, 31077 Toulouse, FranceLAAS-CNRS, University of Toulouse, 7 Avenue du colonel Roche, 31077 Toulouse, FranceLAAS-CNRS, University of Toulouse, 7 Avenue du colonel Roche, 31077 Toulouse, FranceCEA-DAM, DIF, 91297 Arpajon, FranceLAAS-CNRS, University of Toulouse, 7 Avenue du colonel Roche, 31077 Toulouse, FranceThe paper reports a joint experimental/theoretical study on the aging of reactive Al/CuO nanolaminates, investigating both structural modifications and combustion properties of aged systems. We first show theoretically that the long-term storage (over several decades) in ambient temperature marginally affects nanolaminates structural properties with an increase in an interfacial layer of only 0.3 nm after 30 years. Then, we observe that the first thermal aging step occurs after 14 days at 200 °C, which corresponds to the replacement of the natural Al/CuO interfaces by a proper ~11 nm thick amorphous alumina. We show that this aging step does impact the nanolaminates structure, leading, for thin bilayer thicknesses, to a substantial loss of the energetic reservoir: considering a stoichiometric Al/CuO stack, the heat of reaction can be reduced by 6–40% depending on the bilayer thickness ranging from 150 nm (40%) to 1 µm (6%). The impact of such thermal aging (14 days at 200 °C) and interfacial modification on the initiation and combustion properties have been evaluated experimentally and theoretically. Varying Al to CuO ratio of nanolaminates from 1 to 3, we show that ignition time of aged systems does not increase over 10% at initiation power densities superior to 15 W·mm<sup>−2</sup>. In contrast, burn rate can be greatly impacted depending on the bilayer thickness: annealing a stoichiometric nanolaminates with a bilayer thickness of 300 nm at 200 °C for 14 days lowers its burn rate by ~25%, whereas annealing a fuel rich nanolaminates with the same bilayer thickness under the same thermal conditions leads to a burn rate decrease of 20%. When bilayer thickness is greater than 500 nm, the burn rate is not really affected by the thermal aging. Finally, this paper also proposes a time–temperature diagram to perform accelerated thermal aging.https://www.mdpi.com/2079-4991/10/10/2087nanothermiteAlCuOagingcombustioninitiation
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author A. Estève
G. Lahiner
B. Julien
S. Vivies
N. Richard
C. Rossi
spellingShingle A. Estève
G. Lahiner
B. Julien
S. Vivies
N. Richard
C. Rossi
How Thermal Aging Affects Ignition and Combustion Properties of Reactive Al/CuO Nanolaminates: A Joint Theoretical/Experimental Study
Nanomaterials
nanothermite
Al
CuO
aging
combustion
initiation
author_facet A. Estève
G. Lahiner
B. Julien
S. Vivies
N. Richard
C. Rossi
author_sort A. Estève
title How Thermal Aging Affects Ignition and Combustion Properties of Reactive Al/CuO Nanolaminates: A Joint Theoretical/Experimental Study
title_short How Thermal Aging Affects Ignition and Combustion Properties of Reactive Al/CuO Nanolaminates: A Joint Theoretical/Experimental Study
title_full How Thermal Aging Affects Ignition and Combustion Properties of Reactive Al/CuO Nanolaminates: A Joint Theoretical/Experimental Study
title_fullStr How Thermal Aging Affects Ignition and Combustion Properties of Reactive Al/CuO Nanolaminates: A Joint Theoretical/Experimental Study
title_full_unstemmed How Thermal Aging Affects Ignition and Combustion Properties of Reactive Al/CuO Nanolaminates: A Joint Theoretical/Experimental Study
title_sort how thermal aging affects ignition and combustion properties of reactive al/cuo nanolaminates: a joint theoretical/experimental study
publisher MDPI AG
series Nanomaterials
issn 2079-4991
publishDate 2020-10-01
description The paper reports a joint experimental/theoretical study on the aging of reactive Al/CuO nanolaminates, investigating both structural modifications and combustion properties of aged systems. We first show theoretically that the long-term storage (over several decades) in ambient temperature marginally affects nanolaminates structural properties with an increase in an interfacial layer of only 0.3 nm after 30 years. Then, we observe that the first thermal aging step occurs after 14 days at 200 °C, which corresponds to the replacement of the natural Al/CuO interfaces by a proper ~11 nm thick amorphous alumina. We show that this aging step does impact the nanolaminates structure, leading, for thin bilayer thicknesses, to a substantial loss of the energetic reservoir: considering a stoichiometric Al/CuO stack, the heat of reaction can be reduced by 6–40% depending on the bilayer thickness ranging from 150 nm (40%) to 1 µm (6%). The impact of such thermal aging (14 days at 200 °C) and interfacial modification on the initiation and combustion properties have been evaluated experimentally and theoretically. Varying Al to CuO ratio of nanolaminates from 1 to 3, we show that ignition time of aged systems does not increase over 10% at initiation power densities superior to 15 W·mm<sup>−2</sup>. In contrast, burn rate can be greatly impacted depending on the bilayer thickness: annealing a stoichiometric nanolaminates with a bilayer thickness of 300 nm at 200 °C for 14 days lowers its burn rate by ~25%, whereas annealing a fuel rich nanolaminates with the same bilayer thickness under the same thermal conditions leads to a burn rate decrease of 20%. When bilayer thickness is greater than 500 nm, the burn rate is not really affected by the thermal aging. Finally, this paper also proposes a time–temperature diagram to perform accelerated thermal aging.
topic nanothermite
Al
CuO
aging
combustion
initiation
url https://www.mdpi.com/2079-4991/10/10/2087
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