Ammonium
nitrate, (NH4NO3), a salt of ammonia and nitric acid, used widely in
fertilizers and explosives. The commercial grade contains about 33.5 percent
nitrogen, all of which is in forms utilizable by plants; it is the most common
nitrogenous component of artificial fertilizers. Ammonium nitrate also is
employed to modify the detonation rate of other explosives, such as
nitroglycerin in the so-called ammonia dynamites, or as an oxidizing agent in
the ammonals, which are mixtures of ammonium nitrate and powdered aluminum.Ammonium nitrate is a colourless, crystalline substance (melting point 169.6° C
[337.3° F]).
Ammonium nitrate is often used as a substitute for
Potassium nitrate in smoke bombs, flash powders and gun powders. Ammonium
nitrate (often mixed with gun cotton) was considered superior to Potassium
nitrate for making gun powder used in cannons because it made less smoke and
produced less flash. This was the beginning of the production of
"smoke-less" gun powders.
One problem occurs when using Ammonium nitrate in
mixtures. The compound will absorb water from the atmosphere and so must be
kept sealed.
Ammonium nitrate, like potassium nitrate and most all
nitrates, is an oxidizer. In the case of gunpowder, potassium nitrate is the
oxidizer and charcoal and sulfur are the fuels.
In general, oxidizers themselves are not considered to
burn (there are some exceptions, like organic peroxides). Potassium nitrate
does not burn. Instead, it just accelerates burning of other substances.
Ammonium nitrate can do the same thing. There were
propellants called "ammonpulvers" that used ammonium nitrate in place of potassium nitrate. In the old days, they were
sometimes used instead of regular gunpowder in cannons, etc. One advantage was
that they produced less flash and smoke.
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