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Pyrolant is a made-up word containing the Greek word pyros (= fire) to describe energetic materials that generate hot flames upon combustion. Pyrolants are metal-based pyrotechnic compositions containing virtually any oxidizer. The term pyrolant was originally coined by Kuwahara in 1992[1], in a paper on Magnesium/Teflon/Viton, to distinguish between compositions that serve as propellants and those yielding hot flames which are not necessarily suitable for propellant purposes. A similar common expression is propellant which describes either a homogeneous or composite material that generates thrust upon combustion. Metal-based pyrotechnic compositions, that is to say pyrolants, are generally characterized by high combustion temperatures (< 2000 K) and high amounts of condensed reaction products at equilibrium conditions such as metal oxides, fluorides and soot. Typical pyrolants find use as pyrotechnic initiators (Zr/BaCrO4)[2] or Zr/KClO4, illuminating flare (Mg/NaNO3)[3] and decoy flare compositions (Mg/(C2F4)n)[4] [edit] References
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