LoL, it wouldn't create an arc - it would create a short circuit, which would blow out the triac long before melting the insulation. But anyway,
that's actually not likely to happen with careful construction. And actually, materials become *less* effective conductors when they heat up. I'm not
mocking you, but I'm not sure what makes you think you are competent to give advice on these matters... have you built a tube furnace, wg48?
I have 120v elements and yeah, only a mm or so of inside insulation and about 10mm outside plus some refractory brick. I guess I should mention that I
doubled up the inner layer of ceramic paper at the ends to keep it from breaking down under the steel wire, and I didn't wrap the heating element very
tightly. I think it might be possible to heat it to 1300 C but I don't have any specific plans that would require such temperatures... I think the
tube furnace could be used to make phosphorus but have no plans of doing so.
Incidentally, the iron pipe / asbestos (ceramic) paper plan came straight out of Vogel's Practical Organic Chemistry, although I had to make some
modifications for higher temperatures / lower voltage / less use of carcinogenic materials. I'm not saying my furnace is as good as garage chemist's,
but it sure was easy to build.
Here it is running at around 800 C. I'm burning it in so that it won't fume when I use it in regular experiments (burning off pipe paint, wire
coatings, masking tape, etc.). Oh and, the quartz tubing is actually pretty close to ambient temperature at 30 cm away from the heating element
[Edited on 26-2-2016 by JJay] |