High pressure study of a highly energetic nitrogen-rich carbon nitride, cyanuric triazide

Abstract

Cyanuric triazide (CTA), a nitrogen-rich energetic material, was compressed in a diamond anvil cell up to 63.2 GPa. Samples were characterized by x-ray diffraction, Raman, and infrared spectroscopy. A phase transition occurring between 29.8 and 30.7 GPa was found by all three techniques. The bulk modulus and its pressure derivative of the low pressure phase were determined by fitting the 300 K isothermal compression data to the Birch-Murnaghan equation of state. Due to the strong photosensitivity of CTA, synchrotron generated x-rays and visible laser radiation both lead to the progressive conversion of CTA into a two dimensional amorphous C=N network, starting from 9.2 GPa. As a result of the conversion, increasingly weak and broad x-ray diffraction lines were recorded from crystalline CTA as a function of pressure. Hence, a definite structure could not be obtained for the high pressure phase of CTA. Results from infrared spectroscopy carried out to 40.5 GPa suggest the high pressure formation of a lattice built of tri-tetrazole molecular units. The decompression study showed stability of the high pressure phase down to 13.9 GPa. Finally, two CTA samples, one loaded with neon and the other with nitrogen, used as pressure transmitting media, were laser-heated to approximately 1100 K and 1500 K while compressed at 37.7 GPa and 42.0 GPa, respectively. In both cases CTA decomposed resulting in amorphous compounds, as recovered at ambient conditions.

Document Details

Document Type
Pub Defense Publication
Publication Date
Dec 18, 2014
Source ID
10.1063/1.4902984

Entities

People

  • Didier Savard
  • Dominique Laniel
  • Jesse S Smith
  • Laura E. Downie
  • Muralee Murugesu
  • Serge Desgreniers

Organizations

  • Carnegie Institution for Science
  • Dalhousie University
  • Defence Research and Development Canada
  • Defense Threat Reduction Agency
  • Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council
  • University of Ottawa

Tags

Fields of Study

  • Physics

Readers

  • Powder metallurgy of Titanium alloys.
  • Rocket Propulsion.
  • Thin Film Deposition Science.

Technology Areas

  • Directed Energy
  • Directed Energy - Lasers
  • Directed Energy - Pulsed-Laser Deposition