Hollow charge explosive device particularly for avalanche control

Information

  • Patent Grant
  • 6786157
  • Patent Number
    6,786,157
  • Date Filed
    Monday, September 30, 2002
    22 years ago
  • Date Issued
    Tuesday, September 7, 2004
    20 years ago
  • Inventors
  • Examiners
    • Carone; Michael J.
    • Bergin; James S.
    Agents
    • Nields & Lemack
Abstract
A shaped charge explosive device (10) comprising an explosive charge body including an explosive charge (18) defining a cavity particulate material (44) dispersible by the explosive charge when detonated, eg in a liner lining the cavity. In a preferred embodiment of this device of particular applicability to use in avalanche control, the particulate medium is aluminium. This is energized by the liner collapse and jetting process such that on impact and interaction with a snow/ice target it gererates a directed blast effect extending beyond that achievable with a simple blast charge of the same mass. Direct application to hand charge avalanche control methods and modified ammunition for Avalauncher ammunition are presented. Two of such charges with a conical liner can be positioned either facing each other or facing away form each other to obtain a particular blast pattern.
Description




This invention relates to explosive devices commonly referred to as hollow charges or shaped charges. These essentially comprise a symmetric explosive charge within which is formed a cavity lined by a lining material. When the explosive charge is detonated the liner, of metal in known devices, is subject to extremely high compressive loads which act to collapse and eject the liner material in the form of a high speed fluid jet, normally followed by a more slowly moving rigid slug. The charge and liner may be rotationally symmetric or non axi-symmetric, for example with a liner with a “V” cross section, used for cutting operations.




There are a number of industrial applications for shaped charge devices where rapid penetration effects are required in awkward and inaccessible places. An example is to initiate or increase the yield of oil & gas wells. In this case a number of charges are arranged to fire radially outwards at the base of the well. Upon detonation the shaped charge jets perforate the steel well casing, surrounding concrete grouting and then penetrate deeply into the oil/gas bearing rock, producing a series of discrete channels through which the oil and gas can flow into the well conduit. Another application is perforation and clearance of refractory bung at the base of a steel smelting crucible. The most extensive use, however, is in the military context against heavily protected targets such as tanks and shelters and for a wide range of battlefield engineering applications. In all these cases the shaped charges are designed and applied to exploit their penetration potential.




The present invention seeks to provide a shaped charge explosive device particularly suitable for use for avalanche control. However, the mechanism by which energy is distributed and imparted to the target medium by this invention offers potential for a number of alternative applications. The invention will be described in context with avalanche control applications first, followed by alternative applications.




Avalanches can present a serious danger to people and property when triggered in an uncontrolled manner, whether by a natural cause such as the weather conditions or unintentionally as a result of human activity such as skiing or climbing. It has therefore become an established practice in many mountainous areas to maintain a continuous programme of avalanche control using explosives to trigger a release. This practice of regularly triggering small controlled avalanches is intended to minimise the build up of snow in known start zones which, if left, would eventually release naturally and unexpectedly often cascading out of control. The current practices relevant to the present invention include the following.




Where avalanche start zones are inaccessible, an explosive charge can be delivered to the slope in the form of a projectile fired from a gun or mortar system where the projectile explodes on or shortly after impact. Short ranges (up to 3 km) can be covered by gas gun projector systems such as the nitrogen driven Avalauncher, used extensively in the US, Canada and Europe. Longer ranges demand high performance systems typical of military artillery and the 105 mm howitzer and 106mm recoilless rifle have been used in avalanche control operations for many years.




Fuzes in older military ammunition are designed to detonate upon impact, in soft snow, however, these fuzes tend to trigger well below the surface and quite probably not until the projectile strikes rock or firm ground. In fact, the ideal point of burst for avalanche release is several meters above the surface in proximity mode. However, with gun fired projectiles, this can only be achieved with an electronic proximity burst fuze. Since this type of fuze is both inhibitively expensive and notoriously unreliable against light, dispersed media such as snow, the performance of impact fuzing continues to be tolerated.




Most areas in ski resorts are accessible, including the mountain peaks, and this accessibility enables explosive charges to be delivered or placed by hand. The practice of positioning charges by hand is probably the most cost effective and extensively used method of avalanche control in many ski resorts, but carries with it obvious hazards in poor weather conditions. The hand charge is a relatively simple device consisting of a lightly cased (cardboard) explosive charge detonated by a length of capped pyrotechnic delay fuze. The fuze can be ignited and the charge thrown into a preferred position or the charge can be pre-positioned above the surface on a bamboo stick before the fuze is ignited.




It is acknowledged that various types of anti-tank ammunition, bearing shaped charge liners, have been fired into avalanche start zones in the past but this has been as a result of ammunition availability rather than an interest in the shaped charge effect. Results from this type of ordnance, designed specifically for high penetration into steel, has nevertheless been no different from standard artillery fragmenting shells because little of the jet energy can be dissipated into the snow pack.




The present invention seeks to provide an improved hollow charge explosive device for this and other applications.




Accordingly, the present invention provides a hollow charge explosive device including an explosive charge defining boundary walls of a cavity and including particulate material located forward of said boundary walls so as to be dispersible by said explosive charge when detonated.




The particulate material may be included in a liner lining the cavity or positioned elsewhere forward of the cavity, eg in a nacelle, or in both positions.




The particulate material, if present in a liner, is driven in the same way as that of a conventional shaped charge liner. However, in this case, the particulate medium forms into a highly energetic non-cohesive stream of particles, generally wider than that produced by a conventionally lined shaped charge. In this highly energised state, the low bulk density of the liner material and high surface area attributable to each particle of the liner material, together with the larger surface area of the jets cross section, facilitates an intimate and violent kinetically stimulated reaction with the target medium. Given a knowledge of the intended target material and its constitution, eg a snow slab, the liner material can be chosen to optimise the blast energy yield over and above that normally attributable to the explosive charge alone.




Conveniently, the liner may comprise an inner liner skin and an outer liner skin defining a space therebetween and the particulate material may be a loose powder contained in that space. In a one embodiment, the inner liner skin and outer liner skin are of a glass reinforced plastics material. The particulate material may be aluminium powder, particularly for use in avalanche control due to the potentially highly reactive nature of aluminium powder with water.




In an alternative embodiment, the particulate material may be embedded in an inert binder such as a plastics material, a was such as a paraffin was, or an adhesive matrix to aid manufacture, handling and assembly. The matrix material may also be conveniently chosen to make a net contribution to the reaction of the principal suspended particulate material.




Where a liner is not present, the high pressure and high temperature gaseous stream produced by the hollow cavity in the explosive focuses blast effects only along the axis of the charge. If a particulate material is located on the axis of the charge, typically in the nacelle, this material will be energised and dispersed by the high pressure and high temperature gases ejected from the cavity, thereby further enhancing the directed blast effects produced by the hollow cavity.




An explosive device assembly may be formed from two such explosive devices oriented such that the jets of liner formed on detonation of the charges are directed towards each other or away from each other.




When the jets are directed toward each other, the collision of the jets with each other provides an energetic response between the interacting jets. Two or more dissimilar liner materials may be provided in the explosive devices which when brought together in collision with each other and/or the target medium achieve an energetic response between associated interacting materials. This effect may also be further enchanced with additional particulate material located in the nacelle.




The devices may be gun fired, or otherwise hand thrown, or form part of a mechanically or chemically launched projectile.




An elongate support may be attached to the explosive charge body to aid hand positioning the device at the target.




The liner material may take any convenient form which can produce a shaped charge liner collapse mechanism, the so-called “Munroe effect”, and typically include conical liner configurations and hemispherical and hemispherical cap geometries.




A method of triggering an avalanche according to the present invention comprises positioning an explosive device or explosive device assembly of the present invention in a predetermined position relative to a snow or ice formation and detonating said explosive device or device assembly.











Embodiments of the invention will now be described, by way of example only, with reference to the accompanying drawings of which:





FIG. 1

is a diagrammatic sectional view of a first device according to the present invention;





FIG. 2

is a diagrammatic sectional view of a second device according to the present invention;





FIGS. 3

,


4


and


5


are diagrammatic views of the results of recent experimental cratering trials conducted against level and stable snow pack;





FIGS. 6

to


8


are diagrammatic views of the use of an explosive device which is as the device of

FIG. 1

but with a support stick affixed to it;





FIG. 9

is a diagrammatic view of a further embodiment of the present invention for cornice control;





FIG. 10

is a further diagrammatical sectional view of a further embodiment of an assembly comprising two devices of

FIG. 1

;





FIG. 11

is a diagrammatic view of a typical application of the device of

FIG. 10

for avalanche control;





FIG. 12

is a diagrammatic sectional view of a further embodiment of an assembly comprising two devices of

FIG. 1

;





FIG. 13

is a diagrammatic view of a typical application for the device of

FIG. 12

for avalanche control;





FIG. 14

is a diagrammatic sectional view of a further embodiment of the invention within the body of a modified Avalauncher gas gun round;





FIG. 15

is a diagrammatic sectional view of a further application of the explosive charge assembly of

FIG. 14

; and





FIG. 16

is a diagrammatic sectional view of a further embodiment of the present invention.











Referring to

FIG. 1

, an explosive device


10


consists of a cylindrical GRP (glass reinforced plastic) body


2


located between a PERSPEX magazine locating plate


4


and PERSPEX liner locating plate


6


. The magazine locating plate


4


centralises a PERSPEX unit


8


on the central axis of the device. The magazine unit


8


locates a detonator


12


and explosive booster pellet


14


to form an initiation cap assembly


16


. The initiation cap assembly


16


ensures that the detonation front transferred into a main explosive filling


18


, via the booster pellet


14


, is propagated symmetrically with respect to the axis of the device


10


. A GRP outer liner skin


22


, with an open truncated apex


24


is bonded to the cylindrical body


2


to form a sub-assembly


26


. An internal GRP conical liner


32


, with a closed truncated apex, is bonded into the recess


34


machined into the liner locating plate


6


to form a sub-assembly


36


. Sub-assemblies


26


and


36


are then joined and bonded to form a charge assembly


42


defining a conical void


44


concentric and aligned to the central axis of the device


10


.




The material and grist size of a particulate liner cavity filling


45


is chosen to suit the nature of the target material involved. For avalanche control work, aluminium powder of 150 micron particle size is suitable, for example. The filling


45


is loaded into the void


44


through a filling port


24


at the apex of the liner


22


. The filling port is then sealed with a disk of aluminium adhesive tape


46


. The explosive filling


18


is then loaded into the charge assembly


42


and the charge is closed by fitting and bonding the initiation cap


16


in place. A hole


48


in the liner locator plate


6


allows pressure equalisation between the conical void enclosed by the inner liner skin


32


and liner locator plate


6


and external atmospheric pressure and has no other bearing on the function of the vice.




Referring now to

FIG. 2

, a device


20


consists of a cylindrical body


50


located between an initiation cap


16


and a PERSPEX tubular liner assembly locator plate


35


. The initiation cap


16


ensures that the detonation front is transferred into a radial detonation transfer disk


51


, symmetrically disposed with respect to the axis of the device


20


. An inner GRP tubular liner


52


and outer GRP tubular liner


53


are located co-axially between a polyethylene barrier plate


59


and the tubular liner assembly locator plate


35


. The separation between the two tubular liners


52


and


53


is maintained by in insert


54


which is drilled with a single hole


55


to allow a void


56


defined by the liners


52


and


53


to be filled with aluminium powder


58


.




The barrier plate


59


, inner and outer tubular liners,


52


and


53


respectively, and insert


54


are bonded together to form a tubular liner assembly


57


, The void


56


between the inner and outer tubular liners is filled with aluminium powder


58


, of 150 micron particle size, through the filling hole


55


which is then sealed with a disk of aluminium adhesive tape, (not shown). The radial detonation transfer disk


51


is bonded to the inner face


58


of the initiation cap assembly


16


and the barrier plate


59


of the tubular liner assembly


57


is bonded concentrically to the outer face


62


of the radial detonation transfer disk


51


. A main explosive filling


64


is filled into the charge assembly from the open end opposite the initiation cap


16


and closed and sealed by fitting and bonding the tube locator plate


34


in position.





FIGS. 3

,


4


&


5


show the results of experimental cratering trials of the explosive device of

FIG. 1

conducted against a level and stable snow pack


66


. Each charge was set 1.2 m below the snow surface such that its axis was horizontal and the point of detonation


68


arranged such that any bias would be driven in the direction of the arrow. After firing, the craters were sectioned to reveal the profiles shown in the figures. The depth of the snow base is indicated by a solid black line


72






The profile


74


shown in

FIG. 3

was produced by a 1 kg blast explosive charge


70


. The charge was


68


fired to establish a control standard against which the experimental charge firings of devices according to the present invention could be compared. The profile was symmetrical about the vertical axis and yielded a crater volume of 2.7 cubic meters.




The profile


76


shown in

FIG. 4

was produced by the device


10


described earlier and shown in FIG.


1


. The explosive content was also 1 kg. The effects of the conical liner are clear. The crater was elongated as a result of the penetration and subsequent secondary reaction of the shaped charge jet. A significant increase in the energy transmission into the snow pack was evident, the crater volume increasing from 2.7 to 11.9 cubic meters.




The profile


78


shown in

FIG. 5

was produced by the device


20


described earlier and shown in FIG.


2


. The explosive content was also 1 kg. This liner configuration produced more localised reaction of the liner material. The crater volume was increased from 2.7 to 7.8 cubic meters. This was less than that produced by the conical liner configuration. of device


10


but particularly high shock emission was evident from the ground shock detected and extensive secondary surface spalling at the inner surface of the crater.




There will now be described exemplary applications of the device


10


of FIG.


1


. It should be note that the applications are equally valid for the device


20


of FIG.


2


and liner geometries that fall between the two, the choice being made to suit the characteristics of the particulate loading material, operational environment, cost, and target medium involved.





FIGS. 6

to


8


illustrate the use of an explosive device


40


which is as device


10


of

FIG. 1

but with a support stick


82


affixed to it so the device can be positioned and orientated as required on a snow slab. The device


40


includes a pyrotechnic fuze


88


. The highly focused blast emission produced by the enhanced blast charge


10


is indicated schematically by the extended, highly schematic “star” shaped blast envelope


84


. They respectively illustrate the use of the device for cornice overhang removal with the device


40


providing combined air shock and deep penetration, slab blasting with the device providing combined air shock and deep penetration perpendicular to the snow slab, and slab blasting where the device is orientated to provide superficial disruption of the surface layer of a snow slab.





FIG. 9

shows a further use of the present invention for cornice control. The device


50


is as the device


10


of

FIG. 1

but includes a pyrotechnic fuze


88


and a conical end cap


86


to aid penetration into the soft back of the cornice following remote delivery of the device from a short range launcher system, typically a cross bow.





FIG. 10

shows a further embodiment of the present invention, namely an assembly


60


comprising two devices


10


of

FIG. 1

, located back to back within a thin cardboard tube


92


. A smaller diameter cardboard tube


94


, located inside the main tube


92


, holds the devices apart and tape


96


at each end retains the two devices


10


in place. Each device


10


is connected to an identical length of shock tube


98


(Dyno-Nobel Starter Line), terminated at the charge end by an instantaneous standard detonator cap


102


. The starter lines


98


pass out of the locating tubes


92


and


94


via hole


104


and are fixed securely to the outer tube


92


by adhesive tapes


106


.




The assembly


60


of

FIG. 10

produces a simultaneous detonation of the charges


10


which project a highly focused axi-symmetric blast wave travelling in opposite directions along the axis of the assembly as indicated by the blast envelope


99


.





FIG. 11

shows a typical application for the device


60


of

FIG. 10

for avalanche control. The assembly


60


is arranged to overhang a cornice build up such that the axis of the charge is parallel to the line of the cornice. The two starter lines


98


are initiated simultaneously from a firing point


70


in known manner.





FIG. 12

shows a further embodiment of the present invention, namely an assembly


80


comprising two devices


10


of

FIG. 1

, located face to face within a thin cardboard tube


108


. A smaller diameter cardboard tube


112


, located inside the main tube


108


, establishes a separation between the charges


10


that can be changed in length to alter the output of the charge assembly. The charges


10


are retained in the outer tube


108


by adhesive tape as described for FIG.


10


. Each device


10


is connected to an identical length of shock tube


114


(Dyno-Nobel Starter Line), terminated at the charge end by an instantaneous standard detonator cap


116


. The two starter lines are then crossed over the outer tube


108


and taped securely as described for FIG.


10


.




The assembly


80


of

FIG. 12

produces simultaneous detonation of the charges. When the jets formed by the two shaped charge liners collide, in accordance with simple principles of momentum balance, a symmetrical 360 degree disk of high pressure products


109


is emitted in a plane at 90 degrees to the axis of the two charges.





FIG. 13

shows a typical application for the device of

FIG. 12

for avalanche control. The assembly


60


is arranged to overhang a cornice build up such that the axis of the charge is parallel to the line of the cornice. The two starter lines


98


are initiated simultaneously from the firing point


70


. This arrangement may be equally effective if suspended such that the axis of the assembly


80


runs vertically.





FIG. 14

shows an embodiment


90


of the current invention within the body of a modified Avalauncher gas gun round


90


. An assembly


125


consists of a plastics nose cone


118


, a full calibre body shell


119


, containing the explosive filling


122


, and an enhanced blast shaped charge liner assembly


123


, as described for device


10


of

FIG. 1

, and a plastics tail fin adaptor


124


of known form. The explosive charge assembly


125


is stored separately from a known tail fin assembly


126


, which embodies the safety and arming mechanism (not detailed) and detonator


128


. This configuration significantly improves the performance of the standard Avalauncher blast round as shown in

FIGS. 3 and 4

, respectively.





FIG. 15

shows a further embodiment


100


employing the above explosive charge assembly


125


but this time in conjunction with the shock tube firing and control system described in detail filed in copending British Patent Application No 9915586.3 the entire contents of which are incorporated by reference into this application. This embodiment


100


is a cost effective engineering solution, for application of the experimental configurations described in

FIGS. 1 and 2

, to hand charge avalanche control operations. Briefly, the free end


132


of a Dyno-Nobel starter line is attached to the operator (not shown). The remainder of the starter line is coiled as a coil


134


within a cardboard spool tube


136


, eventually terminating at a detonator end


138


forming a spool assembly


142


which is retained


144


on the body of the Avalauncher explosive charge assembly


125


by adhesive tape


144


. The charge assembly


100


may be thrown or launched to the desired position, the first end


132


of the starter line being subsequently detached from the operator and connected to a firing pack (not shown) ready for firing.




Referring now to

FIG. 16

, this embodiment of the present invention is a round


150


having a body


152


and nacelle


154


, both of injection moulded polypropylene, joined together by a joint ferrule


156


, also of polypropylene, held together by pairs of male/female clip rings (not shown) moulded into the three components


152


,


154


,


156


.




The body


152


is tapered to minimise aerodynamic drag and has the necessary base features to interface with previous described aerodynamic fin


126


and firing assembly of FIG.


14


.




The nacelle also provides aerodynamic streamlining and a stand off between the mouth of a shaped charge liner


158


and target material (not shown). Alternative nacelle shapes could be employed to control the detonation delay time in soft snow pack, for example.




The joint ferrule


156


also retains the liner


158


and a series of HE pellets HE


1


to HE


6


within the body component. Note that there is a 1 mm clearance gap between the liner


158


and joint ferrule


156


to accept a soft packing washer


160


to control thermal effects and tolerance build-up.




The liner


158


is pressed from aluminium powder bound with paraffin wax, this allows a broad range of different liner compositions to be introduced to adjust performance to suit varying conditions and/or alternative applications. A range of different liner geometries can also be used for the HE


1


pellet. The liner


158


of this embodiment has a density of 1.7 g/cc.




The explosive charge consists of a set of pre-pressed pellets HE


1


to HE


6


. This construction allows a range of different explosive compositions to be introduced to adjust performance to suit varying conditions and/or alternative applications. Typically, aluminised explosive (addition of up to 20% of Al. powder) significantly enhances blast yield from pellets HE


3


, HE


4


, HE


5


and HE


6


, but pellets HE


1


and HE


2


could be a high density HMX and/or RDX/wax composition, more ideally suited to the shaped charge function. However, all pellets (HE


1


to HE


6


) could be aluminised to optimise blast yield.




A wave shaping barrier


162


(injection moulded polypropylene) shapes the geometry of the detonation from and influences the way in which the shaped charge liner collapses. A broad range of different effects can be both introduced and controlled by altering the shape of the barrier


162


. The introduction of a separate pellet that accommodates the barrier feature pellet HE


2


allows for such changes to be made at will.




The nacelle


154


has a bead


168


round the inside of the nacelle


154


tapered rearwardly to permit a bowed plenum


166


to be pushed forwardly over the bead


168


and held in position inside the nacelle


154


.




The front most region of the interior volume of the nacelle


154


is filled with aluminium powder


164


and held in place by the plenum


166


but other materials can be placed there, eg aluminised paraffin wax.




A throughhole


172


in the nacelle


154


allows the injection of a low density filler, eg polyurethane foam, about 0.01 gm/cm


2


, to fill the volume


170


which is in the collapse zone forward of the liner


158


. This adds rigidity to the forward structure of the device and provides support to the liner


158


so permitting the use of more frangible liners than otherwise possible.




The material


164


in the nacelle


154


, if present, is energised, dispersed and propelled forward by the jet formed on detonating the device, to react with either the target material and/or the atmosphere ahead of the nacelle.




An alternative embodiment of the device of

FIG. 16

is one in which there is no particulate material


164


. In a further embodiment, the liner


158


may be omitted, with suitable dimension changes of the pellet HE


1


to accommodate the gap that would otherwise be present between it and the washer


160


or replaced by a liner not having any dispersible material in its composition. Such an embodiment would be applied where minimal penetration effects were required, typically, the production of a highly directional gaseous blast effect. The magnitude of the focused blast effect could be further enhanced by causing the gaseous jet formed by the cavity in the explosive to interact with a particulate or reactive material


164


contained within the nacelle.




Although the use of present invention has been described in terms of avalanche control applications, the benefits of controlled and highly directional cutting, perforation or stimulation of secondary reactions of explosive devices according to the present invention has a wide range of other potential applications. These include:




rapid generation of wide access holes in concrete/rock walls in support of rescue and recovery operations, where a range of liner materials and particle sizes for the liner can be chosen to control the nature of the cut and/or residual particle penetration into sensitive areas behind;




the use of directing the highly focused blast effects to combat and extinguishing burning oil wells;




rapid internal cutting of narrow bore, thick walled pipes, typical of well liners and drilling shafts; and




spalling of loose rock from chamber roofs in underground mines, civil tunnelling and mining operations and underwater engineering operations.




While this invention has been particularly shown and described with references to preferred embodiments thereof, it will be understood by those skilled in the art that various changes in form and details may be made therein without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention as defined by the appended claims.



Claims
  • 1. A method of blasting a snow or ice formation target including a given material comprising,(a) providing a hollow charge explosive device including an explosive charge defining at least one boundary wall of a cavity and including particulate material located forward of said boundary wall so as to be dispersible by said explosive charge when detonated, said particulate material being selected to be one which reacts with water on detonation of the explosive device, (b) positioning said explosive device in a predetermined position relative to the snow or ice formation target, and (c) detonating said explosive device thereby triggering an avalanche.
  • 2. A method as claimed in claim 1, in which said explosive device is positioned by launching said explosive device by hand or by mechanical or chemical propulsion.
  • 3. A method as claimed in claim 1, wherein said particulate material is included in a liner, said liner lining said cavity.
  • 4. A method as claimed in claim 3, in which said liner comprises an inner liner skin and an outer liner skin spaced apart from said inner line skin, and said particulate material is a loose powder located between said inner liner skin and said outer liner skin.
  • 5. A method as claimed in claim 4, wherein said inner liner skin and said outer liner skin are formed from a glass reinforced plastics material.
  • 6. A method as claimed in claim 1, in which said particulate material is embedded in a solid binder.
  • 7. A method as claimed in claim 1, in which said particulate material has been consolidated by mechanical pressure.
  • 8. A method as claimed in claim 1, in which said particulate material is aluminum powder.
  • 9. A method as claimed in claim 1, in which said particulate material reacts with a predetermined target medium.
  • 10. A method as claimed in claim 1, further comprising a nacelle forward of said cavity, and wherein said particulate material is located in said nacelle.
  • 11. A method as claimed in claim 1, wherein said device is embodied in a gun firable or hand throwable, or mechanically or chemically launchable projectile.
  • 12. A method as claimed in claim 1, wherein said device includes a liner which liner includes aluminum powder bound by wax.
  • 13. A method as claimed in claim 12, wherein said wax is paraffin wax.
  • 14. A method as claimed in claim 1, wherein said explosive charge includes two or more high explosive pellets.
  • 15. A method as claimed in claim 14, wherein one or more of the high explosive pellets is aluminized.
Parent Case Info

This application is a continuation in part of application Ser. No. 09/412,764, Oct. 1, 1999 abandoned.

PCT Information
Filing Document Filing Date Country Kind
PCT/GB00/03751 WO 00
Publishing Document Publishing Date Country Kind
WO01/25717 4/12/2001 WO A
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Continuation in Parts (1)
Number Date Country
Parent 09/412764 Oct 1999 US
Child 10/089418 US