Abstract
The key macro properties of high explosives including sensitivity to
shock, the possibility of initiation, and the subsequent chemical
reaction are known to be controlled by processes occurring at their
microstructure level. However, there is the lack of an easy, effective
and accurate method to quantify the microstructure, termed as fabric, of
high explosives despite an abundance of evidence regarding its
importance. This study proposes a rotational Haar wavelet transform
(RHWT) method to characterize the fabric of high explosives from
two-dimensional images, yielding key fabric parameters including rose
diagram, fabric direction, degree of fabric anisotropy. The fabric
tensor commonly used in numerical simulations and constitutive models
can also be determined by RHWT. The RHWT was implemented on microscopic
images of six high explosives captured by various imaging techniques
including by scanning electrical microscopy, polarized light microscopy,
and micro X-ray computed tomography. Despite of these variables, the
proposed RHWT successfully identifies fabric in these images,
demonstrating robustness and validity of RHWT.