1 / 24

“Detection of Ultra-Trace Concentrations of Explosives Using Fluorescent Polymers”

“Detection of Ultra-Trace Concentrations of Explosives Using Fluorescent Polymers”. Presented By Allen Luebbe. Overview. Brief history of explosives General explosive knowledge Energy of explosives Chemical fingerprints New fluorescent polymers. History of Explosives.

emelda
Download Presentation

“Detection of Ultra-Trace Concentrations of Explosives Using Fluorescent Polymers”

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. “Detection of Ultra-Trace Concentrations of Explosives Using Fluorescent Polymers” Presented By Allen Luebbe

  2. Overview • Brief history of explosives • General explosive knowledge • Energy of explosives • Chemical fingerprints • New fluorescent polymers

  3. History of Explosives • 1242 Roger Bacon publish optimum recipe for gunpowder • 1659 first ammonium nitrate synthesized by J.R. Glauber • 1846 Italian chemist Ascanio Sobrero synthesized nitroglycerine • 1866 Alfred Nobel invented dynamite • 1955 invention of ANFO • 2000 Philip Eaton synthesized octanitrocubane

  4. For A Chemical To Be An Explosive, It Must Exhibit All Of The Following • Formation of gases • Evolution of heat • Rapid rate of reaction

  5. Explosives • Most explosives are organic compounds and contain multiple nitro groups • In addition to these compounds explosives properties they are also toxic to humans

  6. Categories Of Explosives • High Explosives • Detonate (1000 to 8500m/s) • Differentiated by sensitivity • Primary - extremely sensitive to impact, heat, and friction • Secondary - less sensitive • Low Explosives • Used as propellants • Burn rapidly (up to 400m/s)

  7. Nitro Group • Many nitro compounds are unstable • The nitrogen atom is positively charged and each oxygen atom has a partial negative charge. • The nitro group has a powerful attraction for electrons

  8. Why do nitro groups lead to unstable compounds? • Nitrogen has charge of +1 and nitro groups have a strong tendency to withdraw electrons from other parts of the compound

  9. High Explosives

  10. Octanitrocubane

  11. Energy of Explosives • Chemical explosives must provide a means to transfer heat energy to mechanical energy

  12. Energy of Explosives • Total amount of energy released in an explosive reaction is called the heat of explosion • Calculated by comparing heats of formation before and after the reaction ∆E = ∆Ef(reactants) - ∆Ef(products)

  13. Heat Of Explosion for TNT ∆E = ∆Ef(reactants) - ∆Ef(products) ∆E = ∆Ef(-54.4kJ/mol) - ∆Ef(-670.8kJ/mol) ∆E = 616.4 kJ/mol ∆E > 0, rxn is exothermic (616.4 kJ/mol)(1000 J/1 kJ)(1 mol/227 g) = 2175 J/g

  14. TNT • Most commonly used explosive in landmines is TNT • Mines containing TNT or a mixture of TNT and other explosives accounts for 80% of all landmines manufactured world wide • 90% of landmines used in military operations contain TNT

  15. Compilation Of Explosives Used In Anti-personal Landmines

  16. Chemical Fingerprints • Explosives emit chemical signatures called fingerprints • Each explosive has its own distinct chemical fingerprint

  17. Chemical Fingerprint of TNT • Military grade TNT contains chemical contaminants • Contaminants are produced during the synthesis of TNT • Contaminants in TNT usually have a higher equilibrium vapor pressure than TNT • Examples of contaminants in TNT are dinitrotoluenes

  18. Detecting Explosives • Canines: canines can detect minute quantities for a variety of explosives. • Chemical Sensor: molecules are collected on a fiber and "ion mobility spectrometer" identifies type of explosive. • Neutron Beam: When neutrons contact contaminant, they instantly produce high energy gamma rays. Explosives are identified from energy of gamma rays. • Lasers: The interaction of laser radiation with traces of explosive causes micro bursts. Explosives are identified from light generated by bursts.

  19. Chromophore • chemical group capable of selective light absorption resulting in the coloration of certain organic compounds.

  20. Polymer detector

  21. Advantages of Polymer detector • Can detect concentrations of TNT in the parts per quadrillion • A single molecular binding event can change the fluorescence of an entire chain instead of just one molecule • Sensitivity of devices can be increased up to 10,000 times • Polymer receptor sites can be tuned to interact with only certain types of molecules

  22. Synthesis of (5-bromo-pyridin-2-yl)-(4-bromo-thiophen-2-ylmethylene)-amine

  23. Polymerization

  24. References • http://www.biochemtech.uni-halle.de/PPS2/projects/jonda/chromoph.htm • http://www.mn-net.com/web/ • Sheats, J. R. Science. 1997, 277, 191-192. • http://www.nomadics.com/Landmine_Detector/Brochures_white_papers/uxo2001.pdf • Chen, L; McBranch, D.; Wang, R.; Whitten, D. Chem Phys Lett., 330, 27-33, 2000. • http://www.fas.org/man/dod-101/navy/docs/es310/chemstry/chemstry.htm • http://www.umich.edu/~navyrotc/NS202/ExplosivesandWarheads.ppt

More Related