Chris: OK, thanks for good news for (almost) everyone

I also agree with triforcharity.
Superlogicalthinker: If you insist, stay here. Just try to post something which is based on some facts.
You e.g. wrote: "You cannot have an explosion without the explosion having an ignition. Period."
Although it's not really relevant here, some correction: explosions without ignition are actually happening many million times a day in your neighbourhood, since it is a principle of any diesel engine (perhaps even in your own car). This is why diesel engines don't need spark plugs. Also, many explosives can be exploded without ignition, e.g. nitroglycerin. This why Alfred Nobel invented dynamite. Etc. Try to read webs like Howstuffworks or some children books on these technical topics.
You also e.g. wrote: "They
(red chips, I.K.) explode when you heat them to 430C....as they explain on pg.22 of the paper."
I understand that you are not able/willing to read this thread, it's not always an easy reading. But you should definitely read and understand at least your Book of Revelation aka Bentham paper. On the p. 22, there is nothing written on any spontaneous explosion. On that page, just (already discussed) flame tests on chips using extreme overheating by oxyacetylene torch are described and there is only this notion: "However, the evidence obtained in the DSC analyses is more compelling that a thermitic reaction actually occurs as in that case ignition is observed when the red material is heated to no more than 430 °C." No explosion is mentioned even here and DSC exotherms on Fig. 19 are quite broad, indicating a release of heat in the broad temperature ranges cca 50-100 degrees C (which corresponds to ca 5 to 10 minutes, considering a heating rate 10 degrees per minute). Consequently, no explosions occured in DSC machine. I would again expect such a behavior, e.g., for some primer paint chips