The present invention is directed at an electrical igniter for incendiary and explosive devices. In particular, an electrical igniter assembly comprising two component parts including a cap and well where an ignition or detonation mixture may then be positioned within the well along with electrical leads.
Thermite destructive devices are reported in the art. For example, U.S. Pat. No. 8,453,573 discloses a primer adapter for a hand grenade of different configurations to use the same primer for ignition of their explosive trains. European Patent Application 0 189 627 discloses an electric fired pyrotechnic grenade, for the generation of a smoke screen, comprising propellant and disperser charges ignitable by an electric squib. U.S. Pat. No. 5,698,812 discloses a destructive device containing a thermite-type composition having a core burning configuration.
Thermite grenades are a type of explosive incendiary ordinance. Thermite ignition can present various problems, as the ignition can be unreliable. For example, thermite can require temperatures of over 3,000° F. to start the explosive reaction. Typical ignition of thermite relies upon a magnesium ribbon sparkler which can reach temperatures sufficiently high for thermite ignition.
Accordingly, there remains a continuing need to develop new grenade igniters, and in particular, it would be highly useful to develop an electrical igniter that provides reliable remote detonation or ignition of incendiary or explosive devices via electrical impulses.
An igniter assembly for incendiary or explosive devices comprising an igniter cap configured to mechanically engage with an igniter body well portion, the igniter cap including one or a plurality of openings for one or a plurality of electrical wire connection leads and an interior hollow projection that is configured to project into at least a portion of the igniter body well portion. The igniter assembly also includes an igniter body well portion that is configured to mechanically engage with the igniter cap and to receive the igniter cap hollow projection, wherein the igniter cap with the interior hollow projection, when engaged to the igniter body well portion, defines a variable volume chamber to contain a selected amount of ignition or detonation compositions.
A method for providing an incendiary or explosive device for detonation comprising supplying an igniter cap configured to mechanically engage with an igniter body well portion, the igniter cap including one or a plurality of openings for one or a plurality of electrical wire connection leads and an interior hollow projection that is configured to project into at least a portion of the igniter body well portion. One also supplies an igniter body well portion that is configured to mechanically engage with the igniter cap and to receive the igniter cap hollow projection wherein the igniter cap with the interior hollow projection, when engaged to the igniter body well portion, defines a variable volume chamber to contain a selected amount of ignition or detonation compositions. One then supplies the one or plurality of electrical connection leads and places the one or plurality of electrical connection leads in the opening in the igniter cap and through the interior hollow projection and into the variable volume chamber. This may then be followed by connecting the electrical connection leads in the variable volume chamber to an igniter squib and placing a selected amount of ignition or detonation composition into the variable volume chamber. This may then be followed by mechanically engaging the igniter cap and the igniter well portion with an incendiary or explosive device.
Igniter cap 15 is configured to be placed over the igniter body well portion 14 and become mechanically engaged thereto. Preferably the ignitor cap 15 has internal threads 24 that engage with the exterior threads 16 of the ignitor body well portion 14. The igniter cap 15 also provides one or a plurality of openings at 27 for insertion of one or a plurality of electrical wire connection leads 28, wherein only one such wire opening are shown in
Also shown at 26 is the igniter squib wire which is attached to the electrical wire connection leads 28 which leads extend through the hollow projection and into variable volume chamber 20, described more fully herein. Preferably, the igniter squib wire 26 is comprised of nickel chromium alloy, with a gauge in the range of 20 to 30, more preferably 20 to 25. The igniter squib wire also is preferably in the form of a coil, having a coil diameter in the range of 0.10″ to 0.20″, more preferably 0.10″ to 0.15″.
More specifically, the interior of the igniter cap 15 preferably includes a hollow projecting component 22 that projects and extends into the igniter body well portion 14 into which the one or more electrical wire connections leads 28 are contained and readily positioned. The hollow projection component 22 of the igniter cap also includes a relatively small opening at 23 for attachment to the igniter squib wire 26. Accordingly, the hollow projection component 22 of the igniter cap 15 is configured so that as illustrated, it will contain wire connection leads 28 which leads then project into variable volume chamber 20 of said body well portion 14. The hollow projection component 22 of the igniter cap 15 that extends within the body well portion 15 is also preferably sized so that its own outer surface 25 is frictionally engaged to the inner surface 29 of the body well portion 14.
As may now be appreciated, the igniter cap 15 along with its hollow projection component 22 that extends into at least a portion of the body well component 14, defines at 20 a variable volume chamber to contain a selected amount of ignition or detonation compositions. Such variable volume may preferably range between 1.0 cc to 15.0 cc, more preferably 1.0 cc to 10.0 cc, or even more preferably in the range of 1.0 cc to 5.0 cc. Reference to “cc” is reference to cubic centimeters.
The detonation compositions positioned within variable volume chamber 20 are preferably selected from a potassium perchlorate (KClO4) mixture with a metal such as iron (Fe). Other detonation compositions include oxidizers in general such as permanganates or chromates in combination with metals such as aluminum or titanium. In addition, it is contemplated that one may utilize lead azide or mercury fulminate. The amount of such ignition or detonation compositions preferably falls in the range of 0.5 grams to 5.0 grams, or more preferably, 0.5 grams to 3.0 grams.
The electrical igniter assembly comprising the igniter cap 15 and body well portion 14 can be preferably formed herein by the process of additive manufacturing or 3D printing. Such may include vat photopolymerization, material jetting, sheet lamination, binder jetting, directed energy deposition, or powder bed fusion. Preferred resins for construction of the igniter cap 15 and body well portion 14 include thermoplastic polymers. In one particularly preferred embodiment, fused deposition modeling (FDM) is utilized to form the igniter cap 15 and body well portion from poly(ethylene terephthalate) otherwise known as PET.
The electrical igniter assembly herein is one that now provides for remote detonation or ignition of incendiary or explosive devices by electrical impulse. The electrical igniter assembly herein successfully was observed to ignite, e.g., both M-14 TH3 and EIG thermite type grenades. The electrical igniter assembly therefore may provide the ability for conversion of manually triggered munitions to a command initiated remote system to allow for relatively safer operation. The electrical igniter assembly is therefore contemplated to have particular utility for ignition of EIG and M-14 thermite grenades.
The foregoing description of several preferred embodiments has been presented for purposed of illustration. It is not intended to be exhaustive or to limit the claims to the precise structures or procedures disclosed to provide the igniter assembly herein.
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20230175820 A1 | Jun 2023 | US |