Grants and Contracts Details
Description
The destructive power of ammonium nitrate (AN) has been graphically demonstrated in a
number of malicious attacks from the Alfred P. Murrah Federal building in Oklahoma City to the
Marriott Hotel in Jakarta. AN mixed with fuel oil creates a powerful explosive, ANFO, which is
often a weapon of choice for acts of terrorism due to its relatively low cost, ready availability,
ease of assembly, and magnitude of destructive force unleashed upon detonation. Despite its
critical and beneficial role in agriculture, AN has become a vehicle for spreading chaos and an
ominous threat to society.
This document describes a proposed continuation of research that was initiated in an NIHSfunded
project titled Reduction of the Explosion Potential of Ammonium Nitrate by Coating with
Low-Cost, Coal Combustion By-Products (2006-07). The initial project focused on an
evaluation of CCB coatings as blast mitigants with only a cursory look at the impact such
material might have on agriculture or the environment. Results from the prior study
demonstrated that AN fertilizer coated with anyone ofthree coal combustion byproducts (CCBs)
at 15% or greater by weight was sufficient to stop the propagation of an AN explosion. In this
proposal, we intend to extend and broaden that research by focusing on a number of issues that
must be addressed before this technology can be considered suitable for agricultural use.
Accordingly, the major objectives of the proposed project will be to 1) more fully evaluate the
impact of CCB-coated AN fertilizer on agricultural use (plant growth, elemental uptake,
application in existing farm equipment), 2) identify potentially harmful environment effects (soil
migration and leaching of hazardous elements), 3) obtain independent verification of the
reduction in explosivity of coated AN that was observed in the prior study, 4) demonstrate the
industrial-scale viability of the proposed CCB/AN coating process, and 5) prepare cost estimates
for the commercial production of CCB-coated AN. Assuming favorable findings, it is our
overall objective that at the conclusion of this project, no serious technical issues or questions
will remain that would impede the commercial implementation of the proposed technology.
4
Status | Finished |
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Effective start/end date | 11/10/10 → 10/9/11 |
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