Showing posts with label chemistry. Show all posts
Showing posts with label chemistry. Show all posts

Saturday, September 28, 2024

Your Worst Chemical Nightmare

YouTube video titled "the Best Performing (and most dangerous) Chemical Rocket Ever."  Rocketdyne experimented with a liquid lithium metal and fluorine gas rocket with liquid hydrogen thrown in to improve performance.  This video has some truly dazzling video (spraying cold fluorine gas on brick, for example).  I am glad NASA never gave Rocketdyne a contract to make this engine.  

Tuesday, October 26, 2021

Pure Scientific Research

This article describes how some chemists figured out how to extract rare earth metals from coal ash, making it environmentally cleaner as it did so.  Less dependent on China and a way to dispose of pollution. 

Wednesday, December 30, 2020

Another Nerddom Special

 Making Toilet Paper Moonshine.  He uses an enzyme called cellulase that breaks cellulose into sugars.  The rest of the process is obvious.  Priceless comments:


i wonder if he knows how to make meth with Sudafed

 sergio tapia 2 days ago

@Moonlight io he can prolly make meth outta oreos


Friday, August 3, 2018

The Ultimate "Do Not Try This At Home, Kids" Video

From uranium ore to metallic uranium in some guy's home lab:



And you thought a website showing pronouns having sex was unlikely.  You can find anything on the Internet.  Remember Doc Brown having to buy plutonium from Libyans for his repurposed DeLorean?  I suspect if you look long enough, you can find some guy showing the used uranium fuel to plutonium process on his kitchen table.  Okay, it might be one of his last videos.

Friday, September 1, 2017

More Democratic Party Civil War

9/1/17 Los Angeles Times:
At a time when the Democratic base is more restive than it has been in decades, Sen. Dianne Feinstein ignited a firestorm earlier this week when she refused to back the impeachment of President Trump and instead called for “patience” over his presidency.
The statements — provocative in Democratic circles and near-heretical in her hometown of San Francisco, where she made them — reflected a moderation and pragmatism that have been hallmarks of Feinstein’s career. But these qualities, after proving politically advantageous for decades, could become an albatross because of the state’s shifting demographics and political leanings as the 84-year-old decides whether to seek a sixth term.
Potential rivals are already circling.
Senate President Pro Tem Kevin De León lashed out at Feinstein’s remarks hours after she made them Tuesday at the Commonwealth Club, saying that women, children, people of color, immigrants and members of the LGBTQ community had little time for patience in the face of the president’s policies.
Feinstein, to be blunt, is not one of my favorite politicians, but behaving like an adult in the party of the perpetual toddlers is risky business.

Thursday, June 9, 2016

How Can I Keep Up?

When I was in elementary school, I was the only kid I knew who knew the symbol and name of every element (or even thought that was cool).  A bunch more to remember:
The International Union of Pure and Applied Chemistry has announced these proposed names:
  • Nihonium and symbol Nh, for the element 113
  • Moscovium and symbol Mc, for the element 115
  • Tennessine and symbol Ts, for the element 117
  • Oganesson and symbol Og, for the element 118

Wednesday, November 18, 2015

Today's Silly Question

Back when I was young, I learned that chlorine kills bacteria in drinking water not directly but by breaking up water molecules, releasing free oxygen, which is the actual bacteriacide.  But when I look at the electronegativity of chlorine (3.0) and oxygen (3.5), I don't see how chlorine could replace oxygen in a water molecule.  Can someone who has taken freshman chemistry recently than me explain this?

Saturday, December 15, 2012

An Impressive Reconstruction of Recent Solar Activity

This is a most impressive paper reconstructing solar activity over the last several millennia based on a variety of proxies. It is long, and like any scientific paper based on proxies, subject to the limitation that proxies sometimes include assumptions that are not warranted. Nonetheless, I greatly enjoyed reading it.

Wednesday, June 27, 2012

TNP?

I saw that a jury convicted a Saudi student of planning a terrorist attack in Texas (alliterative headline for the ensuing civil suit if he had set off the TNP-based bomb: "Texas terror TNP torts today").  From June 27, 2012 USA Today:

Khalid Ali-M Aldawasari, who was legally in the U.S. on a student visa, was arrested in February 2011 after federal agents secretly searched his apartment near Texas Tech University in Lubbock and found bomb-making chemicals, wiring, a hazmat suit and clocks.
Authorities also discovered Aldawsari's journal, handwritten in Arabic, in which he wrote he'd been planning a terror attack in the U.S. for years and that it was "time for jihad," or holy war, court documents show.
Part of what led the FBI to investigate, including using one of those secret searches that caused panty-twisting for many people after passage of the PATRIOT Act, was that he ordered $435 of TNP from a chemical supply house, Carolina Biological Supply, who immediately informed the FBI that the order was suspicious.
Separately, Con-way Freight, the shipping company, notified Lubbock police and the FBI the same day with similar suspicions because it appeared the order wasn't intended for commercial use. 
Congratulations to both companies for noticing the suspicious nature of the order, and informing the FBI.  But what is TNP?  I did not recognize the acronym--until I looked it up, and discovered it was a chemical that I know well, 2,4,6-trinitrophenol, under its older name, picric acid.  If you took organic chemistry in college (or were just a hopeless explosives nerd, as I was in high school), you will recognize from the IUPAC name that it is a close relative of TNT, but with phenol instead of tolulene as the aromatic ring to which the nitro groups are attached.

What made picric acid so fascinating to me long ago was that while a decent high explosive in its own right, when placed in contact with most metals, it produces an even more unstable salt--an interesting way to render common objects dangerous.