San Francisco Paper - Shot Firing by Electricity (with Discussion)

The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
N. S. Greensfelder
Organization:
The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Pages:
25
File Size:
1052 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1923

Abstract

The firing of explosive charges by electricity dates back to 1745 when a Doctor Watson is said to have used an electric spark for igniting gunpowder. His method failed in practical application because, to ignite blasting powder, heat must be applied for a period longer than the duration of an electrostatic spark; Wheatstone found that this does not exceed 1/24000 sec. The usual result, therefore, of an electrical discharge in gunpowder is to scatter the grains, without igniting them. Benjamin Franklin partly overcame this difficulty by confining the powder and crushing grains that lay in the line of discharge. In 1822, after the primary cell had been discovered by Volta, Robert Hare, professor of chemistry at the University of Philadelphia, noticed the heating of a short piece of wire placed in the circuit of a voltaic battery. Later work by Oersted, Faraday, Wheatstone, and Henley resulted in the developmcnt of the magneto blasting machines. Fulminates of gold and silver are thought to have been discovcrcd by Cornelius Drebbel, about 1600. Pepys, in his diary for November 11, 1663, recounts a conversation with Doctor Allen, who told him about aurium fulminans "of which a grain ... put in a silver spoon and fired, will give a blow like a musquett and strike a hole through the silvel spoon downward, without the least force upward.'ll This fallacious belief that explosives act downwards only is still held by many who should know better. Fulminate of mercury was discovered by Howard in 1799. J. Shaw of Philadelphia is said to have invented a fulminate-of-mercury cap in 1814; his idea was later adopted by gunmakers in England and France. The principal advantages of mercury fulminate for use in detonators are the simplicity of exploding it and the great shock developed by its explosion.
Citation

APA: N. S. Greensfelder  (1923)  San Francisco Paper - Shot Firing by Electricity (with Discussion)

MLA: N. S. Greensfelder San Francisco Paper - Shot Firing by Electricity (with Discussion). The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1923.

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