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Dictionary of Explosives

Chapter 4: DICTIONARY OF EXPLOSIVES
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This concise reference compiles definitions, compositions, and functional classifications of explosives and related materials, with an introductory discussion of nitrocellulose and distinctions between propellants, high explosives, and primary igniters. It surveys coal-mine, blasting, and military formulations, reports testing and permitted-list practices in different countries, and lists numerous proprietary and commercial names alongside indicative ingredient ranges. Entries emphasize safety, intended use, and manufacturing notes while acknowledging gaps and the evolving state of the trade. The volume is organized for quick technical lookup rather than narrative, aimed at practitioners and regulators working with explosive materials.

DICTIONARY OF EXPLOSIVES

ABBCITE.—A coal-mine explosive made by Kynoch, Ltd. The original composition which passed the Woolwich Test was—

Ammonium nitrate   80
Nitroglycerine 10
Wood meal 10

To enable it to pass the Rotherham Test sodium chloride was added, and a little dinitro-toluene was also introduced—

Abbcite No. 2.

Date of Permit 3-7-15
Ammonium nitrate 58  
Nitroglycerine 8·5
Wood meal 9  
Dinitro-toluene 1·5
Sodium chloride 23  

Limit charge

18 oz.
Power (swing of ballistic pendulum)   2·54”

The permit has now been repealed.

ABELITE.—A coal-mine explosive made by the Lancashire Explosives Co. Two formulas were approved—

  No. 1. No. 4. 
Date of Permit 7-4-14  15-1-15
Ammonium nitrate 68·5 67  
Dinitro-benzene 7   — 
Trinitro-toluene 7   14·5
Sodium chloride 17·5 7  
Starch —  11·5

Limit charge

14 oz.

18 oz.
Power (swing of ballistic pendulum)   2·85” 2·79”

The permits have now been repealed.

Abelite (without distinguishing number) is simply a mixture of ammonium nitrate and trinitro-toluene—

Ammonium nitrate   83
Trinitro-toluene 17

It is therefore a variety of Bellite in which the dinitro-benzene has been replaced by trinitro-toluene. It is used for filling grenades and general blasting purposes, but is not permitted in dangerous coal mines.

AEROLIT is a Danish ammonium nitrate explosive, e.g.

Ammonium nitrate 78·125
Potassium nitrate   7·5
Sulphur   8·75
Fat   2·5
Sago meal   1·25
Manganese dioxide     1·25
Resin   0·625

AETNA COAL POWDER is an American coal-mine powder on the Permissible List. Brands A, B and C are nitroglycerine explosives. AA and No. 2 are ammonium nitrate explosives.

AETNA POWDER.—A variety of American dynamite containing 15 to 65 per cent. of nitroglycerine mixed with wood pulp and sodium nitrate. Roasted flour has sometimes been substituted for wood pulp.

AJAX POWDER.—A coal-mine explosive made by Nobel’s Explosives Co.

Date of Permit 1-9-13
Nitroglycerine 22·3
Nitrocotton 0·7
Di- and trinitro-toluenes 3·5
Potassium perchlorate 37  
Wood meal 11·5
Ammonium oxalate 25  

Limit charge

12 oz.
Power (swing of ballistic pendulum)   2·69”

In 1914, 329,000 lbs. were used in coal mines, but the permit has now been repealed.

ALBIONITE.—A mixture of gelignite and ammonium oxalate. It was formerly on the Permitted List.

ALBIT.—A German chlorate explosive introduced in 1915 in consequence of the scarcity of nitrates due to the War. It is defined as consisting of not more than 80 per cent. sodium or potassium chlorate, not more than 4 per cent. nitroglycerine, and mono- or dinitro-hydrocarbons. It may also contain inorganic salts and carbon carriers such as vegetable meal, oils, soaps or carbohydrates. A variety made for use in coal mines is called Wetter-Albit or Kohlen-Albit.

ALDORFIT. See DORFIT.

ALKALSIT.—A German chlorate or perchlorate explosive made by the Dynamit A.-G. of Hamburg. It contains not more than 80 per cent. sodium or potassium chlorate, or not more than 80 per cent. sodium, potassium or ammonium perchlorate, and 19 per cent. of aromatic nitro-hydrocarbons and nitrocotton, also coal, hydrocarbons or carbohydrates, and nitrates. The chlorate mixtures must not contain ammonium salts. Alkalsit I contains not more than 27 per cent. of potassium perchlorate, ammonium nitrate, not more than 24 per cent. of sodium nitrate, not more than 8 per cent. of trinitro-toluene, also wood meal, flour and nitro-naphthalene. Alkalsit A contains not more than 55 per cent. of potassium perchlorate, ammonium nitrate, not more than 31 per cent. trinitro-toluene, and not more than 5 per cent. of a neutral liquid mixture of nitrated toluenes. Alkalsit B is similar except that it contains also ammonium nitrate.

ALSILITE S.G.P.—A Belgian coal-mine explosive on the list of Explosifs S.G.P. It is of the Ammonal type—

Ammonium nitrate 62
Trinitro-toluene 11
Ferro-silicon-aluminium   5
Sodium chloride 22

Charge limite

900 g.

ALUMATOL.—A mixture of ammonium nitrate, trinitro-toluene and a little aluminium powder, used for charging trench-mortar bombs, etc.

AMASITE.—A coal-mine explosive formerly on the Permitted List—

Ammonium perchlorate   34  
Sodium nitrate 31  
Myrobolans 34·7
Agar agar 0·3

It was made by the Société Anonyme de Vilvorde in Belgium, and was originally called Ugolite.

Rock Amasite and S.T. Amasite are non-permitted explosives of composition somewhat similar to the above.

AMATOL.—A mixture of ammonium nitrate and trinitro-toluene. The composition is shown by the figures placed after the name; thus Amatol 40/60 contains 40 per cent. ammonium nitrate and 60 per cent. trinitro-toluene, and Amatol 80/20 consists of 80 parts ammonium nitrate and 20 parts trinitro-toluene. These explosives are used very extensively for filling shell and other projectiles. The mixtures rich in trinitro-toluene can be cast after being heated to temperature above the melting-point of this constituent, but those rich in ammonium nitrate are stemmed into the projectile hot or pressed. Similar mixtures are used by the Germans and other powers under various names. In Germany it is called Füllpulver (q. v.).

AMATOXOL.—A mixture of ammonium nitrate and Toxol, which consists of trinitro-toluene and trinitro-xylene.

*AMBERITE.—A smokeless shot-gun powder made by Curtis’s and Harvey at Tonbridge. Amberite No. 1 contained nitroglycerine as well as nitrocotton and various other substances. According to “Arms and Explosives,” 1917, p. 78, a sample of Amberite No. 2 had the composition—

Insoluble nitrocotton 18·6
Soluble   ” 46·0
Nitrates of potassium and barium   28·0
Vaseline 6·0
Volatile matter 1·4

This is still on the market. It is a fibrous 42-grain bulk powder.

*AMIDE POWDER or Chilworth Special Powder was an early attempt at a smokeless powder. Under the name of Amidpulver it was used by the German artillery for some years in the ’eighties of the last century. Its composition was—

Ammonium nitrate   35-38
Potassium nitrate 40-46
Charcoal 14-22

See also Ammonpulver and Hebler Powder.

AMMONAL is a blasting explosive containing ammonium nitrate, aluminium powder, charcoal, and generally trinitro-toluene. It was patented in 1900 by G. Roth of Vienna, and the following are some of the compositions made by his firm at Felixdorf in Austria—

  a b  c  d 
Ammonium nitrate   80·75   90   88   80
Aluminium 15   4 8 18
Charcoal 4·25 6 4 2

More violent mixtures made by the same firm are—

  I II
Ammonium nitrate   46   32
Trinitro-toluene 30 50
Aluminium 22 16
Charcoal 2 2

and modifications of this have been used largely in the British service. It is not suitable for use in underground workings as it forms on explosion the poisonous gas carbon monoxide, unless the proportion of ammonium nitrate be large. It has been used for charging grenades, and by the Austrians for trench howitzer bombs.

When the explosive is detonated, the aluminium is converted into the oxide, evolving no gas, but a considerable amount of heat, which increases the power of the explosive. The aluminium powder also renders the explosive easier to detonate.

Three explosives of this type passed the Woolwich Test, and were on the old Permitted List for coal mines, namely, Ammonal B, Ripping Ammonal and Saint Helen’s Powder (q. v.).

 
Ammonal B.
Ripping
  Ammonal.
Ammonium nitrate 94·5   86    
Aluminium 3     8    
Charcoal 2·5   2·5  
Potassium bichromate   — 3·5  

No explosives containing aluminium are on the present Permitted List.

AMMONCAHUECIT }   CAHUECIT.
}   See    
AMMONCARBONIT }   CARBONIT.

AMMONIAKKRUT was the first ammonium nitrate explosive. It was invented by J. Ohlsson and J. H. Norrbin, two Swedes, and was protected by English Patent 2766 of 1869. It consisted of ammonium nitrate together with 5 or 10 per cent. of charcoal, coal dust, etc., to which mixture was added 10 to 30 per cent. of nitroglycerine to make it less difficult to detonate.

AMMONITE is a coal-mine explosive of the Favier type, made by the Miners’ Safety Explosives Co. The original composition, which passed the Woolwich Test was—

Ammonium nitrate 88
Dinitro-naphthalene   12

To pass the more severe Rotherham Test a number of compositions have been made and approved, but some of them have been repealed. Those now on the Permitted List are—

  Ammonite
No. 1. 
  Ammonite.   Ammonite
No. 5. 
Date of Permit 29-8-14 5-11-17 2-8-18
Ammonium nitrate 74·5 73·5 74·5
Dinitro-naphthalene 5·5
Trinitro-naphthalene   5  
Trinitro-toluene 5  
Sodium chloride 20·5 21   20·5

Limit charge

24  

18  

26 oz.
Power (swing of ballistic pendulum)   2·42 2·44 2·41”

Ammonite No. 1 is used on a considerable scale in coal mines. A non-permitted explosive called Ripping Ammonite is also made.

*AMMONPULVER is a propellant which was used by the Austrians from 1890 to 1896 in guns of various calibres—

Ammonium nitrate   80-90
Charcoal 10-20

It was superseded by a powder of the ballistite type, but has been reintroduced recently by the Germans to replace a part of the charge of nitrocellulose powder in their field gun. The advantages claimed for it are small erosion of the gun, absence of muzzle flame, chemical stability, and cheapness. On the other hand, it gives high pressures, and if used by itself requires a gun with a specially large chamber; but the most serious objection to it is that on keeping, physical changes take place in the pellets, leading to the production of very high pressures. It is said that moisture promotes these changes. See also Amide Powder.

AMVIS.—A coal-mine explosive formerly on the Permitted List—

Ammonium nitrate 90
Wood meal 5
Dinitro-benzene     } 5
Chlorinated naphthalene }  

Neu ANAGON.—A German blasting explosive containing not more than 70 per cent. of ammonium nitrate, zinc-aluminium alloy and charcoal.

ANCHORITE.—A coal-mine explosive of the Favier type, formerly on the Permitted List. It was made by Kynoch-Arklow, Ltd.

Date of Permit 13-5-14
Ammonium nitrate 34·3
Sodium nitrate 33·3
Ammonium chloride   20·2
Trinitro-toluene 12·2

Limit charge

14 oz.
Power (swing of ballistic pendulum)   2·73”

ANILIT.—A German explosive containing not less than 70 per cent. of ammonium nitrate, not more than 5 per cent. of sugar, and copper sulphate-aniline or copper oxalate-aniline.

ANILITE.—A French liquid explosive of the Sprengel class used for aerial bombs.

ANTIGEL DE SÛRETÉ.—A Belgian coal-mine explosive—

Nitroglycerine 25
Sodium nitrate 20
Dinitro-toluene 15
Ammonium sulphate   5
Cellulose    } 35
Wood meal    }

The Charge limite is 900 grammes, which is equivalent to 524 grammes of dynamite No. 1. The composition is the same as that of Ingélite. It is a low-freezing nitroglycerine explosive.

APHOSITE.—A coal-mine explosive formerly on the Permitted List—

Ammonium nitrate   60  
Potassium nitrate 29·5
Charcoal 4  
Wood meal 4  
Sulphur 2·5

*APYRITE.—A nitrocellulose smokeless powder formerly made in Sweden by the Société Grakrut.

ARKITE.—A coal-mine explosive made by Kynoch, Ltd. The original composition which passed the Woolwich Test was—

Nitroglycerine 52·5
Nitrocotton 3·5
Potassium nitrate 22  
Wood meal 7  
Ammonium oxalate   15  

The proportions were modified, and the following passed the Rotherham Test, and was on the Permitted List—

Arkite No. 2.
Date of Permit 7-4-14
Nitroglycerine 32
Nitrocotton 1
Potassium nitrate 27
Wood meal 10
Ammonium oxalate 30

Limit charge

40 oz.
Power (swing of ballistic pendulum)   2·41”

It has now been repealed.

ASTRALIT.—An ammonium nitrate explosive containing a little blasting gelatine, made by the Dynamit A. G. Nobel of Hamburg. It has been used largely in Germany for a variety of purposes.

Astralit I and II are defined as consisting of ammonium nitrate, charcoal, vegetable meal, not more than 15 per cent. of aromatic nitro-bodies not more dangerous than trinitro-toluene, not more than 4 per cent. of blasting gelatine; also paraffin oil.

Astralit IV consists of ammonium nitrate, not more than 10 per cent. of aromatic nitro-bodies not more dangerous than dinitro-naphthalene, vegetable meal, and not more than 4 per cent. of blasting gelatine.

Astralit V, which has been introduced recently, contains up to 10 per cent. of potassium perchlorate in addition to ammonium nitrate, also vegetable meal, not more than 16 per cent. of aromatic nitro-compounds, and not more than 4 per cent. of nitroglycerine.

Gelatine-Astralit is a gelatinised or powdery mixture of the nitrates of ammonium and sodium (or potassium), not more than 50 per cent. of dinitro-chlorhydrin, not more than 5 per cent. of nitroglycerine, not more than 2 per cent. of collodion cotton, vegetable meal, aromatic nitro-bodies such as nitro-toluenes or nitro-naphthalenes, but not more than 4 per cent. of trinitro-toluene; also hydrocarbons.

Wetter-Astralit is a coal-mine explosive, and differs from Astralit in that part of the ammonium nitrate is replaced by sodium chloride.

Wetter-Gelatine-Astralit is also a coal-mine explosive, and differs from Gelatine-Astralit in that it contains also fatty oils and neutral salts, such as potassium chloride, sodium chloride or an oxalate.

The following percentage compositions have been given—

  Astralit. Wetter-
  Astralit.
Nitroglycerine 4   4  
Ammonium nitrate 84·5 74·5
Trinitro-toluene 7   7  
Wood meal 1   1  
Charcoal 1   1  
Paraffin oil 2·5 2·5
Sodium chloride —   10  
   
  Gelatine-
Wetter-
Astralit.
Nitroglycerine 4  
Dinitro-chlorhydrin 16  
Nitrocotton 0·5
Ammonium nitrate 40  
Sodium nitrate 7·5
Dinitro-toluene 4  
Nitro-toluene 1  
Wood meal 0·5
Potato meal 8  
Rape oil 2  
Ammonium oxalate   2·5
Sodium chloride 14  

Explosives of the Astralit type have also been used extensively by the Germans for filling trench howitzer shell and similar projectiles. The following is approximately the composition used for this purpose—

Nitroglycerine 3  
Nitrocotton 0·5
Ammonium nitrate   77  
Trinitro-toluene 16  
Wood meal 3·5

This explosive was authorised in England under the name of Australite.

ATLAS POWDER.—A brand of American straight dynamite.

AUSTRALITE. See ASTRALIT.

*AXITE. A smokeless powder made by Kynoch, Ltd., and used for sporting rifles. It is a sort of Cordite MD, with a little of the guncotton replaced by potassium nitrate, and is in the form of flat strips. A sample had the composition—

Nitroglycerine 29·7
Guncotton 63·1
Potassium nitrate   1·9
Mineral jelly 5·1
Volatile matter 0·2

*B.—Poudre B is the French service propellant. It consists of nitrocotton gelatinised with ether-alcohol, in which it is partly soluble. A little diphenylamine is added to increase the stability. Formerly, various other additions have been made. A letter or letters are added to show the size of the powder and the purpose for which it is used—

Poudre   BF for rifles (from fusil).
  BNF a later powder for rifles (from nouveau).
  BC for field guns (from campagne).
  BSP for siege howitzers (from siège et place).
  BGC for larger military guns (from gros calibre).
  BM for naval ordnance (from marine); a figure is added to show the size.

Further letters and figures are added to show other particulars about the powder; D2 means 2 per cent. of diphenylamine has been added as a stabiliser, or AM8, 8 per cent. of amyl alcohol. The place and date of manufacture are similarly indicated.

BAELENITE.—A Belgian mining explosive—

  I.   II.
Ammonium nitrate   85 95
Trinitro-toluene 15 5

Charge limite

0

75

It is authorised for manufacture in, or importation into the United Kingdom.

*BALLISTITE.—One of the first military smokeless powders, invented by Nobel. It consisted of about equal parts of nitroglycerine and soluble nitrocotton incorporated together under water, then passed repeatedly through rolls and cut into flakes. It was adopted by a number of Continental powers, but in consequence of the severe erosion of the guns which it caused, it has been modified or abandoned. The percentage of nitroglycerine is reduced, and consequently it is necessary to use a solvent such as acetone. A little mineral jelly or other stabiliser is sometimes added.

BARATOL.—A mixture of barium nitrate and trinitro-toluene.

BARBARIT.—A German chlorate explosive made at the Sprengstoff-fabriken Kriewald bei Gleinitz.

Potassium chlorate 90-92
High-boiling petroleum   8-10

The petroleum has a flash point not below 105° C., and commences to boil not below 242°.

Gelatine-Barbarit has the composition—

Potassium chlorate 80
Trinitro-toluene 10
Liquid mono- and dinitro-toluenes       }   10
  gelatinised with 5 per cent. collodion cotton}

BARKING POWDER.—A mixture of ammonium perchlorate and nitrated naphthalene, formerly used in coal mines.

BAUTZENER SICHERHEITSPULVER.—A German coal-mine explosive containing not less than 70 per cent. of ammonium nitrate, barium nitrate, and not more than 15 per cent. of trinitro-toluene.

BAVARIT.—A German coal-mine explosive similar to Grisounite. It contains 90 per cent. of ammonium nitrate together with nitrated naphthalene; charcoal may be added.

BELLITE is essentially a mixture of ammonium nitrate and metadinitro-benzene. It has been used extensively as a coal-mine explosive, and was patented by C. Lamm of Stockholm in 1885. Two varieties passed the Woolwich Test and were on the old Permitted List—

    No. 1.   No. 3.
Ammonium nitrate 83·5  93·5 
Dinitro-benzene 16·5  6·5 

No. 1 contains just enough oxygen for complete combustion, and No. 3 contains a large excess of oxygen. To enable the explosive to pass the Rotherham Test sodium chloride has been added. There were four varieties on the present Permitted List, but all except the following, No. 1, have been repealed—

  No. 1.
Date of Permit 3-2-16
Ammonium nitrate 63·5
Dinitro-benzene 15  
Sodium chloride 16·5
Starch 5  

Limit charge

20  
Power (swing of ballistic pendulum)   2·74

BENTAL COAL POWDER.—An American coal-mine explosive on the Permissible List. It is an ammonium nitrate explosive.

BITUMINITE.—There are several coal-mine explosives of this name on the American Permissible List. Nos. 1, 3, 4 and 8 L.F. are nitroglycerine explosives. No. 5 is an ammonium nitrate explosive.

BLACK DIAMOND.—There are several coal-mine explosives of this name on the American Permissible List. Nos. 2A, 3A and 6 L.F. are nitroglycerine explosives, whereas Nos. 5, 7 and 8 are ammonium nitrate explosives.

BLACK POWDER is a name for ordinary gunpowder, a mixture of potassium nitrate, sulphur and charcoal.

BLASTINE is a high explosive having approximately the composition—

Ammonium perchlorate   60
Sodium nitrate 23
Dinitro-toluene 11
Paraffin wax 6

As the sodium nitrate in the above is not equivalent to the ammonium perchlorate, part of the chlorine is given off in the form of the poisonous gas, hydrogen chloride (hydrochloric acid).

BLASTING GELATINE.—Nitroglycerine, stiffened by having collodion cotton dissolved in it. Discovered by Nobel in 1875. It contains about—

Nitroglycerine 93
Collodion cotton   7

and also often a fraction of a percentage of calcium or magnesium carbonate to increase its stability. This is the most powerful of all the explosives in common use.

BOBBINITE.—The only explosive of the gunpowder class the use of which is permitted in coal mines in England. In most foreign countries explosives of this class are not allowed to be used in them at all. The permission is only temporary, but has been extended to the end of 1920, and is restricted to mines that are not gassy or dangerous from coal dust. There are two definitions, but the second is the one that is generally manufactured apparently—

  First.   Second.
Potassium nitrate 63·5 65  
Charcoal 18·5 20  
Sulphur 2   2  
Sulphates of ammonium and copper   15   —  
Rice or maize starch —  9  
Paraffin wax —  3  
Moisture 1   1  

More than a million pounds of this explosive are used in coal mines every year. It shatters the coal less than high explosives do.

BOMLIT.—A German potassium perchlorate blasting explosive made by Wolff et Cie. at Walsrode. It contains also ammonium nitrate, trinitro-toluene and guncotton. Other ingredients that may be present are potassium and sodium nitrates, starch meal, vaseline, naphthalene and other hydrocarbons, charcoal and castor oil.

BRITONITE.—A coal-mine explosive of the Carbonite type, made by the British Explosives Syndicate, Ltd., Pitsea. The original composition passed the Woolwich Test and was on the list of Permitted Explosives, but on the introduction of the Rotherham Test it became necessary to add ammonium oxalate or sodium chloride. Nos. 2 and 3 were on the Permitted List, but have now been repealed.

    No. 2. No. 3.
Date of Permit     1-9-13   28-1-15
Nitroglycerine 26   24 24·5
Sodium nitrate 28  
Potassium nitrate 32·7 30
Wood meal 41   38 35·5
Sodium carbonate 0·3
Ammonium oxalate 8
Sodium chloride 12  

Limit charge


24

24 oz.
Power (swing of ballistic pendulum)   2·26 2·17”

BROWN POWDER. See COCOA POWDER.

BRUGÈRE’S POWDER consisted of—

Ammonium picrate   54
Potassium nitrate 46

It was stated to give good results in the Chassepôt rifle, but picrate mixtures are liable to detonate, and are therefore dangerous to use as propellants.

BULL DOG Gunpowder Pellets were used in coal mines. They contained the same constituents as Bobbinite, which superseded them, but in different proportions.

Explosifs  C  were mixtures of ammonium cresylate with ammonium or sodium nitrate. They were made in France at one time, but their manufacture was dropped, as they were more expensive to make than Grisounite, and no more powerful.

CAHUECIT.—This was invented in the ’seventies of the last century by R. Cahuc, and was manufactured at Dartford in Kent under the name of Safety Blasting Powder or Carboazotine. It is still made in Germany. The ingredients are—

    English.   German.
Potassium nitrate 64   70  
Sulphur flowers 12   12  
Lampblack or soot 7   8  
Bark or wood pulp 17   10  

to which are added a few per cent. of sulphate of iron. The incorporation is carried out with the assistance of a considerable quantity of water, which is afterwards evaporated off. The mixing is not very thorough. The explosive is a comparatively mild one, but is used sometimes for blasting basalt. In the German explosive the potassium nitrate may be replaced by the corresponding sodium salt.

AMMONCAHUECIT.—In this explosive the potassium nitrate is replaced mainly or wholly by ammonium nitrate, and it contains not more than 15 per cent. of trinitro-toluene or trinitro-naphthalene or other nitro-body.

The brand labelled “Fram” contains ammonium nitrate, not more than 25 per cent. of trinitro-toluene gelatinised with 4 per cent. collodion cotton, wood meal or other vegetable meal and neutral stable salts. The brand “Indra” is similar, except that it contains also not more than 10 per cent. potassium nitrate, and the percentage of trinitro-toluene may be raised to 20.

CAMBRITE is a coal-mine explosive of the Carbonite type made by Nobels at Ardeer. It consists practically of Nobel Carbonite, to which 8 per cent. of a cooling agent has been added. Unlike most of the explosives on the old Permitted List, it passed the Rotherham Test with practically no alteration—

  Cambrite. No. 2.
Date of Permit 1-9-13   1-4-15
Nitroglycerine 23   23  
Barium nitrate 4   4  
Potassium nitrate 27·5 27·5
Wood meal 37·2 37  
Calcium carbonate 0·3 0·5
Ammonium oxalate 8   —  
Potassium chloride —   8  

Limit charge

30  

24 oz.
Power (swing of ballistic pendulum)   1·98 2·00”

Only No. 2 is now on the Permitted List.

CAMERON MINE POWDER.—There are a number of coal-mine explosives of this name on the American Permissible List. Nos. 1a, 2a and 2a LF are ammonium nitrate explosives, whereas Nos. 3a and 5a are nitroglycerine explosives.

*CANNONITE was a smokeless powder made by a firm called the War and Sporting Smokeless Powder Syndicate, Ltd. It consisted of about 86 per cent. of nitrocellulose mostly insoluble in ether-alcohol, and a few per cent. of barium nitrate, together with small quantities of some of the following: potassium nitrate, charcoal, lampblack, vaseline, rosin, stearine, dinitro-benzene, trinitro-toluene, potassium ferro-cyanide, graphite. For shot-guns the powder was of the forty-two grain type, dense and gelatinised. The rifle powder was colloidal. These powders were made in the ’nineties of the last century.

CARBITE D’ABLON is a sort of Carbonite made in France—

Nitroglycerine 26
Potassium nitrate 33
Wood meal or flour   41

CARBOAZOTINE. See CAHUECIT.

CARBO-DYNAMITE was an explosive patented by W. D. Borland. It differed from ordinary dynamite in that the nitroglycerine was absorbed in cork charcoal instead of kieselguhr. One part of the charcoal sufficed to absorb nine parts of nitroglycerine.

CARBONITE (or Karbonit) was one of the earliest and one of the most successful coal-mine explosives. It was first made by Bichel and Schmidt at Schlebusch in Germany in 1885, and after some modifications gave satisfactory results at the Neunkirchen testing station in 1887. It contains about 26 per cent. of nitroglycerine, 33 per cent. of a nitrate, and 40 per cent. of wood meal or starch flour, and small quantities of other substances. Nobel Carbonite passed the Woolwich Test and had the composition—

Nitroglycerine 26   
Barium nitrate 4   
Potassium nitrate 29   
Wood meal 40·5 
“Sulphuretted benzol” 0·25
Sodium and calcium carbonates   0·25

The Carbonite made at the works of the Carbonite Syndicate at Schlebusch, and imported into Great Britain, was practically the same as this, but they also made another explosive which passed the Woolwich Test, and contained 35 per cent. of nitroglycerine gelatinised with nitrocotton, and smaller proportions of nitrates and wood meal than are given above: this was called Extra-Carbonite. They have also made explosives to numerous modifications of this formula for use on the Continent. The essential feature of all of them is that they contain so much of the combustible constituents, such as wood meal, that most of the carbon appears in the products of explosion as carbon monoxide, and the temperature of the gases is consequently low.

Nobels at Ardeer also made a low freezing explosive in which part of the nitroglycerine was replaced by a nitro-compound. This was called Arctic Carbonite—

Nitroglycerine 15·5
Nitro-hydrocarbon 10·5
Potassium nitrate 42  
Wood meal 31·7
Calcium carbonate   0·3

Various manufacturers have made explosives of the type of Carbonite and placed them on the market under different names, such as Tutol, Kolax, Kohlen-Carbonite, Minite and Colinite. These, however, do not pass the Rotherham Test for Permitted Explosives, unless ammonium oxalate or other cooling agent be added, as in the case of Cambrite, Super-Kolax and Britonite No. 2.

On the Continent, explosives similar to Arctic Carbonite have been produced under the names Antigel de Sûreté and Ingélite.

There are several Carbonites on the American Permissible List. Of these Nos. 1 to 4 are in order of diminishing violence: Nos. 5 and 6 are low freezing varieties. There are also a number of other explosives of the Carbonite type on the List.

Ammonkarbonit is a German coal-mine explosive, containing about 80 per cent. of ammonium nitrate and 4 per cent. of blasting gelatine, together with 5 or 10 per cent. of potassium nitrate, and a combustible such as flour, starch or coal dust. Sodium or potassium chloride may be added as a cooling agent. It has been used for blasting clay.

Gelatine-Karbonit is a Carbonite containing ammonium nitrate, and a considerable proportion of nitroglycerine gelatinised with collodion cotton.

Halokarbonit is similar to Ammonkarbonit, except that a considerable proportion of the ammonium nitrate is replaced by other nitrates.

CARLSONITE was the first ammonium perchlorate explosive submitted to H.M. Inspectors of Explosives. It was proposed in 1898 by Carlson of Stockholm, and some of the mixtures were reported on favourably, but no licence was ever taken out in the United Kingdom for this explosive.

C.E. (Composition Exploding) is the same as Tetryl.

CELTITE was a coal-mine explosive made by Dr. R. Nahnsen & Co., Hamburg, and formerly permitted for use in British coal mines, having passed the Woolwich Test.

Nitroglycerine 57
Nitrocotton 3
Potassium nitrate 19
Wood meal 9
Ammonium oxalate   12

It was also called Zeltit.

*CENTRALITE is not an explosive, but is a name given to a substance which has been used to modify the surface of smokeless powder, and make it burn progressively. The substance is dimethyl-diphenyl-urea. (See Brit. Pat. 29,882 of 1909.) It acts also as a stabiliser.

CHEDDITE is a chlorate explosive which has been rendered less sensitive by having the particles of chlorate coated with castor oil or paraffin wax. It is manufactured by the French Government at the Vonges Powder Works, and has also been made in other countries. The two types that have been most used in France are—

  O2 or No. 4.   O5 or No. 1.
Potassium chlorate 79
Sodium chlorate 79
Castor oil   5   5
Mononitro-naphthalene   1
Dinitro-toluene 15 16

*CHEESA STICKS are sticks of cordite coated with powdered ammonium oxalate and shellac. They are used in South Africa as fuses for blasting charges. They are authorised in England only for manufacture and immediate export.

*CHILWORTH SMOKELESS POWDER. See C.S.P.

*CHILWORTH SPECIAL POWDER. See AMIDE POWDER.

CHLORATIT is an Austrian explosive, which was permitted for use in coal mines during the War.

CHLORATZIT.—A German explosive containing potassium chlorate or perchlorate, aromatic nitro-bodies, resins and carbohydrates. For use in coal mines neutral salts are added as cooling agents, and the name then has WETTER or KOHLEN prefixed to it.

CHROMAMONIT was a coal-mine explosive formerly made in Germany—

Ammonium nitrate 63·25
Potassium nitrate 17·5  
Collodion cotton 9·25
Chromium ammonium alum   9·5  
Vaseline 0·5  

*CLERMONITE.—A Belgian shot-gun powder made by the Cooppal Co. It is a 40-grain fibrous powder of the bulk type and coloured green.

CLIFFITE was a coal-mine explosive made by Curtis’s and Harvey, and formerly on the Permitted List—

Nitroglycerine 47
Collodion cotton   3
Starch 50

SUPER-CLIFFITE differs considerably from this. There are two formulæ which have passed the Rotherham Test, but only No. 2 is still on the Permitted List—

  No. 1. No. 2.
Date of Permit 21-9-16   21-9-16
Nitroglycerine 9·5 9·5
Collodion cotton 0·5 0·5
Ammonium nitrate 59   59·5
Wood meal 6   6  
Sodium chloride 15   19·5
Ammonium oxalate 10   5  

Limit charge

26

30 oz.
Power (swing of ballistic pendulum)   2·53 2·53”

CLYDITE was a coal-mine explosive formerly made by Nobels at Ardeer. It was similar to Nobel Carbonite, but the potassium nitrate was replaced by the barium salt, and it might contain up to 8 per cent. of ammonium oxalate.

COALITE.—There is a series of coal-mine explosives of this name on the American Permissible List. Varieties X, 3X, and 3XC are ammonium nitrate explosives; whereas 1, 2D, 2DL and 2MLF are nitroglycerine explosives.

COAL SPECIAL are American coal-mine explosives on the Permissible List. They are all nitroglycerine explosives.

COCOA POWDER or Brown Powder was a variety of gunpowder made with a brown charcoal prepared from straw—

Potassium nitrate   79
Sulphur 3
Straw charcoal 18

It was compressed to a density of 1·8 into prisms or grains of considerable size, and was used in guns of large calibre. E.X.E. and S.B.C. were special varieties of this.

COLINIT ANTIGRISOUTEUSE.—A Belgian coal-mine explosive of the Carbonite type. The ordinary formula is practically the same as that of Kohlencarbonite and Minerite. Type B consists of—

Blasting gelatine 26
Potassium perchlorate 6
Ammonium nitrate 20
Trinitro-toluene 12
Rye flour and cellulose    29
Magnesium sulphate 7

COLLIER POWDER.—There are a number of coal-mine explosives of this name on the American Permissible List. Varieties BNF, KN, X, XLF, 5, 5LF, 5 Special, 9, 11, and 11LF are ammonium nitrate explosives whereas 2 and 6LF are nitroglycerine explosives.

COLLODION COTTON is a variety of nitrocotton of low nitration, almost completely soluble in a mixture of ether and alcohol. It contains not more than 12·3 per cent. of nitrogen. It also dissolves in nitroglycerine and liquid nitro-compounds, rendering them gelatinous and so preventing their exudation.

*COOPPAL’S POWDER.—A Belgian smokeless shot-gun powder. Formerly it was much the same as Schultze Powder, consisting of nitrolignin carefully purified, and mixed with nitrates with or without the addition of starch. The following analyses were published in “Arms and Explosives” for July 1917—

  No. 1.
1892.
Fibrous
42-grain
bulk.
No. 2.
1900.
  Gelatinised
30-grain
dense.
Nitrocellulose, insoluble 13·0 71·1  
”    soluble 60·5 20·1  
Metallic nitrates 21·3 2·0  
Shellac 3·2 —   
Nitro-hydrocarbons 5·5  
Moisture 2·0 1·3  

CORDITE is the principal smokeless powder of the British Services. It was originally adopted in 1888, and is made by mixing nitroglycerine with guncotton and mineral jelly (a sort of crude vaseline), and incorporating them together with the aid of acetone, which gelatinises the guncotton. In consequence of the severe erosion of the guns experienced during the South African War the proportions were altered, some of the nitroglycerine being replaced by guncotton. The propellant thus “modified” is called Cordite M.D., whereas that of the original composition is Cordite Mk.I. Both are still in use, especially M.D.—

  Mk. I.   M.D.
Guncotton 37 65
Nitroglycerine   58 30
Mineral jelly  5  5

During the great European War a further variety was introduced to extend the basis of supply of solvents. This is called Cordite R.D.B. (Research Department B), and contains a nitrocotton of comparatively low nitration that can be gelatinised by means of a mixture of ether and alcohol—

Nitrocotton 52
Nitroglycerine   42
Mineral jelly 6

It is designed to give about the same ballistics as Cordite M.D. A further letter is sometimes added to show the form of the powder. Thus Cordite M.D.T. is M.D. pressed into tubes; S. stands for strip. The size is indicated by a numeral, which shows the diameter in hundredths of an inch of the die through which it has been pressed. In the case of tubular powder both the external and internal diameters are given approximately: e. g. Cordite M.D.T. 5-2.

Poudre blanche CORNIL.—A Belgian coal-mine explosive containing ammonium nitrate, potassium or sodium nitrate, dinitro-naphthalene and lead chromate, with or without the addition of ammonium chloride.

CORNISH POWDER.—A coal-mine explosive which passed the Woolwich Test and was formerly on the Permitted List, made by the National Explosives Co., Ltd.—

Nitroglycerine 55
Nitrocotton 3
Potassium nitrate 18
Wood meal 7
Magnesium sulphate   17

CORONITE was a coal-mine explosive of the Carbonite type, which was on the Permitted List at one time. It had also been called Permittite.

Picric acid has been called by this name in Sweden.

See also KORONIT.

COSILIT.—A German coal-mine explosive of the Carbonite type made by Nahnsen. A published analysis gives its composition as—

Nitroglycerine 30  
Sodium nitrate 22·3
Vegetable meal 40·5
Sodium chloride   7·2

COTTON POWDER. See TONITE, also CP.

CP1 and CP2 are varieties of nitrocotton (Coton Poudre) made in France, principally for the manufacture of Poudre B and other smokeless powders. CP1 is a guncotton containing about 13 per cent. of nitrogen, and only about 10 per cent. of matter soluble in ether-alcohol. CP2 is almost completely soluble in ether-alcohol, and contains about 12 per cent. of nitrogen.

CRÉSYLITE.—A French high explosive used for filling shell and other military purposes. Crésylite 60/40 consists of picric acid and nitrated cresol in about the proportions of 40 of the former to 60 of the latter. It melts below the temperature of boiling water. The nitrated cresol consists largely of trinitro-metacresol.
  Crésylite No. 2 is simply crude trinitro-meta-cresol.

CRONITE is an American coal-mine explosive. There are two varieties on the Permissible List, Nos. 1 and 5, both of which are ammonium nitrate explosives.