The Entropy Paradox in the Chapman-Jouguet Theory of Detonation

ORAL

Abstract

The Chapman-Jouguet theory of detonation waves (circa 1905) predicts propagation speeds in gaseous systems to within 2{\%} of experimental values in most cases. In spite of this success, the theory was criticized early on by investigators who claimed that the accuracy of the CJ solution was just a lucky accident. The solution represents an entropy minimum of the final state, which is thermodynamically unstable. We show, however, that the original entropy-minimum argument was made erroneously, thus resolving a 100-year-old paradox.

*Supported by the UNM McNair Research Opportunity Program

Authors

  • David Dunlap

    • Department of Physics and Astronomy, University of New Mexico
  • Osmar Aguirre

    • Department of Mechanical Engineering, University of New Mexico