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- ANFOS
- ANFO is an acronym for Ammonium Nitrate - Fuel Oil Solution. An ANFO
- solves the only other major problem with ammonium nitrate: its tendency to
- pick up water vapor from the air. This results in the explosive failing to
- detonate when such an attempt is made. This is rectified by mixing 94% (by
- weight) ammonium nitrate with 6% fuel oil, or kerosene. The kerosene keeps
- the ammonium nitrate from absorbing moisture from the air. An ANFO also
- requires a large shockwave to set it off.
- About ANFO (From Dean S.)
- Lately there was been a lot said about various ANFO mixtures. These are
- mixtures of Ammonium Nitrate with Fuel Oil. This forms a reasonably powerful
- commercial explosive, with its primary benifit being the fact that it is
- cheap. Bulk ANFO should run somewhere around 9-12 cents the pound. This is
- dirt cheap compared to 40% nitro gel dynamites at 1 to 2 dollars the pound. To
- keep the cost down, it is frequently mixed at the borehole by a bulk truck,
- which has a pneumatic delivery hopper of AN prills (thats pellets to most of
- the world) and a tank of fuel oil. It is strongly recommended that a dye of
- some sort, preferably red be added to the fuel oil to make it easier to
- distinguish treated AN explosive from untreated oxidizer.
- ANFO is not without its problems. To begin with, it is not that sensitive
- to detonation. Number eight caps are not reliable when used with ANFO.
- Booster charges must be used to avoid dud blast holes. Common boosters
- include sticks of various dynamites, small pours of water gel explosives,
- dupont's detaprime cast boosters, and Atlas's power primer cast explosive. The
- need to use boosters raises the cost. Secondly, ANFO is very water
- susceptable. It dissolves in it, or absorbes it from the atmosphere, and
- becomes quite worthless real quick. It must be protected from water with
- borehole liners, and still must be shot real quick. Third, ANFO has a low
- density, somewhere around .85. This means ANFO sacks float, which is no good,
- and additionally, the low density means the power is somewhat low. Generally,
- the more weight of explosive one can place in a hole, the more effective.
- ANFO blown into the hole with a pneumatic system fractures as it is places,
- raising the density to about .9 or .92. The delivery system adds to the cost,
- and must be anti static in nature. Aluminum is added to some commercial,
- cartridge packaged ANFOs to raise the density---this also raises power
- considerable, and a few of these mixtures are reliablly cap sensitive.
- Now than, for formulations. An earlier article mentioned 2.5 kilos of
- ammonium nitrate, and I believe 5 to 6 liters of diesel. This mixture is
- extremely over fueled, and I'd be surprised if it worked. Dupont recommends a
- AN to FO ratio of 93% AN to 7% FO by weight. Hardly any oil at all. More oil
- makes the mixture less explosive by absorbing detonation energy, and excess
- fuel makes detonation byproducts health hazzards as the mixture is oxygen
- poor. Note that commercial fertilizer products do not work as well as the
- porous AN prills dupont sells, because fertilizers are coated with various
- materials meant to seal them from moisture, which keep the oil from being
- absorbed.
- Another problem with ANFO: for reliable detonation, it needs confinement,
- either from a casing, borehole, etc, or from the mass of the charge. Thus, a
- pile of the stuff with a booster in it is likely to scatter and burn rather
- than explode when the booster is shot. In boreholes, or reasonable strong
- casings (cardboard, or heavy plastic film sacks) the stuff detonated quite
- well. So will big piles. Thats how the explosive potential was discovered: a
- small oil freighter rammed a bulk chemical ship. Over several hours the
- cargoes intermixed to some degree, and reached critical mass. Real big bang.
- A useful way to obtain the containment needed is to replace the fuel oil with
- a wax fuel. Mix the AN with just enough melted wax to form a cohesive
- mixture, mold into shape. The wax fuels, and retains the mixture. This is
- what the US military uses as a man placed cratering charge. The military
- literature states this can be set off by a blasting cap, but it is important
- to remember the military blasting caps are considerable more powerful than
- commercial ones. The military rightly insists on reliability, and thus a
- strong cap (maybe 70-80 percent stronger than commercial). They also tend to
- go overboard when calculating demolition charges...., but then hey, who
- doesn't....
- Two manuals of interest: Duponts "Blaster's Handbook", a $20 manual mainly
- useful for rock and seismographic operations. Atlas's "Powder Manual" or
- "Manual of Rock Blasting" (I forget the title, its in the office). This is a
- $60 book, well worth the cash, dealing with the above two topics, plus
- demolitions, and non-quarry blasting.
- Incidently, combining fuel oil and ammonium nitrate constitutes the
- manufacture of a high explosive, and requires a federal permit to manufacture
- and store. Even the mines that mix it on site require the permit to
- manufacture. Those who don't manufacture only need permits to store. Those
- who don't store need no permits, which includes most of us: anyone, at least
- in the US may purchase explosives, provided they are 21 or older, and have no
- criminal record. Note they ought to be used immediately, because you do need
- a liscence to store. Note also that commercial explosives contain quantities
- of tracing agents, which make it real easy for the FBI to trace the explosion
- to the purchaser, so please, nobody blow up any banks, orphanages, or old
- folks homes, okay.
- D. S.- Civil Engineer at large.
- Brought to you in the CookBook IV..
- -= Exodus =-
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