Search |
[Next Page] |
Calcium Sulphide It shouldn't be sulfur + CaCO3, sulfur wouldn't reduce carbon easily. Carbon WILL reduce C ... |
7-1-2004 at 02:00 by: Theoretic |
Hmmm... Mephisto: how do you expect nitrous fumes (acidic) evolve after you've added strong alkali? Hyd ... |
7-1-2004 at 01:33 by: Theoretic |
Material search Old lightbulbs are filled with vacuum (), while newer ones are filled with
inert gas. The great st ... |
6-1-2004 at 11:11 by: Theoretic |
Material search Lab glassware certainly wouldn't implode even under vacuum, lightbulbs have walls about five ti ... |
6-1-2004 at 07:25 by: Theoretic |
copper fulminate I think nitration of Anything with NO2 isn't straightfroward, becaus it's a radical and le ... |
6-1-2004 at 05:41 by: Theoretic |
The Ultimate Energetic Compound Kaboom:
A solution would be to cover calcium carbide with an inert solvent such as carbon tetrachlo ... |
3-1-2004 at 06:08 by: Theoretic |
Cyanogen nitrite/nitrate The reaction of NO2Cl on NH3 yields chlormaine and ammonium nitrite.
Why wouldn's nitryl bisul ... |
1-1-2004 at 05:46 by: Theoretic |
The Ultimate Energetic Compound Another idea on preparation of C2(NO2)2:
I think it could be prepared by reacting calcium carbide a ... |
31-12-2003 at 08:48 by: Theoretic |
away for holidays Not yet, not untill I post my recipe for dinitroacetylene and everyone is going to make a gallon. We ... |
31-12-2003 at 04:42 by: Theoretic |
HNO3???? Hmm... The reaction of H2O2 and ammonia can lead to different outcomes, depending on the stochiometr ... |
29-12-2003 at 03:30 by: Theoretic |
away for holidays I hope it's not you but Al Koholic thinking or talking right now, but take it easy, high-grade ... |
27-12-2003 at 06:25 by: Theoretic |
RDX synthesis Adiabatic:
If that's so, then a byproduct of RDX synthesis is trimethanolamine - (CH2OH)3N. Ve ... |
26-12-2003 at 04:46 by: Theoretic |
RDX synthesis Would someone please provide an equation for the nitration of hexamine to form RDX, there seems too ... |
25-12-2003 at 03:43 by: Theoretic |
Cyanide in apricot pits? Well... I eat my apples whole, pips and all... ... without remnant, I can eat up to four in a single ... |
24-12-2003 at 06:32 by: Theoretic |
unconventional sodium About the NaOH/Al method... Apparently sodium oxide's lattice energy is so low and Al2O3's ... |
24-12-2003 at 06:01 by: Theoretic |
away for holidays Vulture:
If you don't mind me butting in with my humble opinion,
I AGREE.
...Organicum is al ... |
23-12-2003 at 05:03 by: Theoretic |
Copper Sulfate The reaction with sodium bicarbonate isn't the method here, it fizzes with CuSO4 as well. There ... |
19-12-2003 at 04:24 by: Theoretic |
Exotic thermites & analogs Chemoleo:
Sorry, I thought that you were talking about Al2O3 as a fuel in Fe2O3 and CuO thermites.
... |
17-12-2003 at 07:48 by: Theoretic |
Chloropicrin and its Odor I think that chloropicrin + sodium hydroxide =. Sodium chloride + water + sodium nitroacetate. The n ... |
17-12-2003 at 02:12 by: Theoretic |
Need som help You don't need an experiment. Reaction 3 is the one, if the fire was a hot one then the Na2CO3 ... |
17-12-2003 at 01:57 by: Theoretic |
Exotic thermites & analogs Chemoleo:
Hell, no!
Fe3+ => Fe2+ has a higher potential than Cu2+ => Cu! Not Fe3+ =&g ... |
17-12-2003 at 01:37 by: Theoretic |
Exotic thermites & analogs Just an interesting fact: Fe/Fe2O3 releases more energy per gram (upon conversion to FeO) than CuO/Z ... |
16-12-2003 at 01:34 by: Theoretic |
unconventional sodium I think that aluminates are actually intermediates in the process, since first aluminium mreacts wit ... |
15-12-2003 at 05:03 by: Theoretic |
Urea explorations PJFF:
I think it can work, because ammonia can also oxidize metals at high temperatures, so why can ... |
15-12-2003 at 04:41 by: Theoretic |
Urea explorations It seems that red gunk just doesn't stay out of the flask of an organic chemist...
Sodium a ... |
11-12-2003 at 08:13 by: Theoretic |
[Next Page] |