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Schwartz, L.; Piwinskii, A.; Ryerson, F.; Tewes, H.; Beiriger, W.
Lawrence Livermore National Lab., CA (USA)1983
Lawrence Livermore National Lab., CA (USA)1983
AbstractAbstract
[en] Detonation of an underground nuclear explosive produces a strong shock wave which propagates spherically outward, vaporizing the explosive and nearby rock and melting, the surrounding rock. The vaporized material expands adiabatically, forming a cavity. As the energy is dissipated during the cavity formation process, the explosive and rock debris condense and mix with the melted rock. The melt flows to the bottom of the cavity where it is quenched by fractured rock fragments falling from above as the cavity collapses. Measurements indicate that about 740 tonnes of rock and/or soil are melted for every kiloton (1012 calories) of explosive energy, or about 25% of the explosive energy goes to melting rock. The resulting glass composition reflects the composition of the unaltered rock with explosive debris. The appearance ranges from white pumice to dense, dark lava. The bulk composition and color vary with the amount of explosive iron incorporated into the glass. The refractory explosion products are mixed with the solidified melt, although the degree of mixing is variable. Electron microprobe studies of glasses produced by Rainier in welded tuff have produced the following results: glasses are dehydrated relative to the host media, glasses are extremely heterogeneous on a 20 μm scale, a ubiquitous feature is the presence of dark marble-cake regions in the glass, which were locally enriched in iron and may be related to the debris, optically amorphous regions provide evidence of shock melting, only limited major element redistribution and homogenization occur within the cavity
Original Title
Rainier
Primary Subject
Source
1983; 56 p; 2. solid oxide fuel cell workshop; Upton, NY (USA); 16-18 Aug 1983; CONF-8308120--2; Available from NTIS, PC A04/MF A01; 1 as DE84001423
Record Type
Report
Literature Type
Conference
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