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- Panclastite abstract "Panclastites are a class of Sprengel explosives similar to oxyliquits. They were first suggested in 1881 by Eugène Turpin, a French chemist. They are a mixture of liquid dinitrogen tetroxide serving as oxidizer with a suitable fuel, e.g. carbon disulfide, in the 3:2 volume ratio. [1] Other fuel being used is nitrobenzene. Possible alternative fuels are e.g. nitrotoluene, gasoline, nitromethane, or halocarbons.Panclastites are shock-sensitive and difficult to handle, requiring their mixing immediately before use; also the dinitrogen tetroxide is highly corrosive and explodes in contact with some chemicals. Despite their brisance and detonation velocity being comparable with TNT, panclastites have virtually no use today.During World War I, due to shortages of other explosives, French used some panclastite-class mixtures, which they called anilites, in small aircraft bombs. The mixing of the chemicals was triggered by airflow spinning a propeller on the nose of the bomb after it was dropped, mixing the previously separated chemicals inside. The resulting mixture was so sensitive the bombs did not need a fuze to explode on impact.In the 1880s, Germans were testing torpedoes with panclastite warhead. Carbon disulfide and nitrogen tetroxide were stored in separate glass compartments, which were broken when the torpedo was launched and the chemicals mixed, and later were detonated by a contact fuse.".
- Panclastite wikiPageExternalLink ee9290d4d7f92421.
- Panclastite wikiPageExternalLink panclastite.htm.
- Panclastite wikiPageID "5736157".
- Panclastite wikiPageLength "2254".
- Panclastite wikiPageOutDegree "19".
- Panclastite wikiPageRevisionID "638812040".
- Panclastite wikiPageWikiLink Brisance.
- Panclastite wikiPageWikiLink Carbon_disulfide.
- Panclastite wikiPageWikiLink Category:Explosives.
- Panclastite wikiPageWikiLink Category:Liquid_explosives.
- Panclastite wikiPageWikiLink Contact_fuse.
- Panclastite wikiPageWikiLink Contact_fuze.
- Panclastite wikiPageWikiLink Detonation_velocity.
- Panclastite wikiPageWikiLink Dinitrogen_tetroxide.
- Panclastite wikiPageWikiLink Eugène_Turpin.
- Panclastite wikiPageWikiLink Gasoline.
- Panclastite wikiPageWikiLink Halocarbon.
- Panclastite wikiPageWikiLink Mononitrotoluene.
- Panclastite wikiPageWikiLink Nitrobenzene.
- Panclastite wikiPageWikiLink Nitromethane.
- Panclastite wikiPageWikiLink Nitrotoluene.
- Panclastite wikiPageWikiLink Oxidizer.
- Panclastite wikiPageWikiLink Oxidizing_agent.
- Panclastite wikiPageWikiLink Oxyliquit.
- Panclastite wikiPageWikiLink Sprengel_explosive.
- Panclastite wikiPageWikiLink Torpedo.
- Panclastite wikiPageWikiLink Trinitrotoluene.
- Panclastite wikiPageWikiLink Warhead.
- Panclastite wikiPageWikiLinkText "Panclastite".
- Panclastite wikiPageWikiLinkText "panclastite".
- Panclastite hasPhotoCollection Panclastite.
- Panclastite wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Explosive-stub.
- Panclastite wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Reflist.
- Panclastite subject Category:Explosives.
- Panclastite subject Category:Liquid_explosives.
- Panclastite hypernym Explosives.
- Panclastite type Liquid.
- Panclastite type Source.
- Panclastite comment "Panclastites are a class of Sprengel explosives similar to oxyliquits. They were first suggested in 1881 by Eugène Turpin, a French chemist. They are a mixture of liquid dinitrogen tetroxide serving as oxidizer with a suitable fuel, e.g. carbon disulfide, in the 3:2 volume ratio. [1] Other fuel being used is nitrobenzene. Possible alternative fuels are e.g.".
- Panclastite label "Panclastite".
- Panclastite sameAs Panklastitas.
- Panclastite sameAs m.0f1_87.
- Panclastite sameAs Панкластит.
- Panclastite sameAs Q4344082.
- Panclastite sameAs Q4344082.
- Panclastite wasDerivedFrom Panclastite?oldid=638812040.
- Panclastite isPrimaryTopicOf Panclastite.