-
Trinitrotoluene (/ˌtraɪˌnaɪtroʊˈtɒljuiːn/), more
commonly known as TNT (and more
specifically 2,4,6-
trinitrotoluene, and by its
preferred IUPAC name 2-methyl-1...
-
Chemie und Pharmacie, Bd. 128, 1863, S. 178-179. G.
Carlton Smith: TNT.
Trinitrotoluenes and Mono- and Dinitrotoluenes,
Their Manufacture and Properties, New...
- were
mixtures of
several common components:
Ammonium picrate TNT (
Trinitrotoluene) PETN (Pentaerythritol tetranitrate) RDX
Powdered aluminium. This is...
- Look up TNT,
trinitrotoluene, or
trinitrotoluol in Wiktionary, the free dictionary. TNT is
trinitrotoluene, an
explosive chemical compound. TNT or TnT...
-
sense of
metric ton of
uranium (1,000 kg [2,200 lb]). The
tonne of
trinitrotoluene (TNT) is used as a
proxy for energy,
usually of
explosions (TNT is...
- the
megaton (the
energy released by
detonating one
million tons of
trinitrotoluene, TNT) and the electronvolt. To
reduce the
incidence of
retail fraud...
-
Other explosives are
often referred to or
confused with dynamite:
Trinitrotoluene (TNT) is
often ****umed to be the same as (or
confused for) dynamite...
- a
large amount of gl****
spheres closed with a cork and
sealed with
trinitrotoluene (TNT).
Later N-ethylcarbazole was added.
Depending on the caliber,...
- is a
liquid and
highly unstable, it was
replaced by nitrocellulose,
trinitrotoluene (TNT) in 1863,
smokeless powder,
dynamite in 1867 and
gelignite (the...
- (50% TNT + 50% AN) 1.50 6,290 0.91
Nitroguanidine 1.32 6,750 0.95
Trinitrotoluene (TNT) 1.60 6,900 1.00
Hexanitrostilbene (HNS) 1.70 7,080 1.05 Nitrourea...