Trialen 105
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Trialen was an
explosive An explosive (or explosive material) is a reactive substance that contains a great amount of potential energy that can produce an explosion if released suddenly, usually accompanied by the production of light, heat, sound, and pressure. An expl ...
developed in Germany. It was used during World War II in the V-1 flying bomb and
Arado E.377 The Arado E.377 was a remote-controlled glide bomb with powered and non-powered variants manufactured by Arado Flugzeugwerke Arado Flugzeugwerke was a German aircraft manufacturer, originally established as the Warnemünde factory of the Flugz ...
glide bomb, among other weapons, as an enhanced blast explosive. Trialen was the German equivalent of the British explosive Torpex, though its production was hindered by a shortage of the aluminium powder that was added to increase its explosive power. It comprised a mixture of Trotyl (TNT), hexogen and aluminium powder in varying proportions for each of three versions, known as Trialen (or Filler) 105, 106 and 107 respectively. The proportions for each version were: *Trialen 105: Trotyl 70%, hexogen 15%, Aluminium powder 15% *Trialen 106: Trotyl 50%, hexogen 25%, Aluminium powder 25% *Trialen 107: Trotyl 50%, hexogen 20%, Aluminium powder 30% * Trialen 105/109: a mixture of 27% Trialen 105 and 73% PMF 109. PMF 109 (Panzermunitionsfüllung 109) was a mixture consisting of 71% cyclonite, 25% aluminium powder and 4% montan wax. Though highly brisant and thermobaric, this mixture was infusible and quite impact sensitive, hence ill-suited for filling large caliber munitions. These drawbacks were overcome by the so-called ''Stuckfüllung'', or "biscuit filling", method: the pulverulent PMF 109 mixture was compressed into small cylindrical, tablet-like pellets and these were poured into the munition body, the space between them being filled with molten fusible Trialen 105; this method allowed the German munition factories to produce large, quasi homogeneous fillings containing a high proportion of cyclonite and hence high energy output and brisance by a simple variant of the melt casting process, while simultaneously conserving the trotyl needed to do so.


References

{{reflist, refs= {{Cite book , title=German Air-dropped Weapons to 1945 , last=Fleischer , first=Wolfgang , origyear=2003 , year=2004 , publisher= , isbn=1-85780-174-1 , ref={{harvid, Fleischer, 2003 , page=236 Explosives