Composition C-3 was very similar to Composition C-1, but removed the solvent and varied the exact proportions of plasticisers to improve high temperature storage. It is a yellow, putty-like material. It remained a service item through the
Korean War, but had marginal plasticity at the very low temperatures encountered in Korean winters, and was significantly toxic, including by vapour and skin absorption. While Composition C-3 had a much wider serviceable temperature range than Composition C-1, it could not be stored at elevated temperatures. Consequently, it would eventually be replaced by Composition C-4. The
velocity of detonation is about 7600 m/s (25,000 feet per second). Composition C-3 consists of 77%–85% cyclonite (
RDX) and 15%–23% gel made out of liquid nitro compounds (e.g. liquid
DNT and small amount of
NT) and nitrocellulose or butyl phthalate and nitrocellulose. One of the first reported and tested compositions of C-3 was very similar to earlier Composition C-2 and contained 77%
RDX, 3%
tetryl, 4%
TNT, 1%
NC, 5%
NT, and 10%
DNT. The last two compounds (they are very poor explosives) are oily liquids and plasticise the mixture. The most important later innovation of C-3 introduced the non-explosive
plasticiser butyl phthalate instead of this mixture of nitro compounds. This reduced the toxicity while increasing the concentration of
RDX and improving safety of use and storage. It also opened the way to begin study of new non-explosive low-toxicity plasticisers (esters of dicarboxylic acid) and binder (branched
polymers). ==Properties==