TeTeC
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Juggler and red flames
Hello !
A friend of mine loves juggling... In a perpetual search of new ideas to 'spice' this activity, she asked me if there was any possible way to create
red flames on her torches. Is there any compound that would (easily) produce such an effect?
Thank you. ;-)
TeTeC.
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DrP
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KCl disolved into the fuel should colour the flame pink if not red. I tried either copper chloride or sulphate - can't rememer now - gave a gren
tint to the flame but only slightly as I did not have that much and the stuff wasn't dispersed properly. She could play with varying amounts of these
disolved into the fuel.
I have some fire poi - great fun and go down well at parties -
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Mr. Wizard
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Colored flames are often not as bright as flames from burning gasoline or kerosene. To make sure you see the color, you might try using an alcohol
type fuel, such as methanol, ethanol or some of the fuels used in food warming trays. They burn with a clear blue flame. The metals that produce red
colors in blue flames are lithium, strontium, and for a more orange color calcium. You want the more volatile easily ionized compounds, such as the
chlorides or chlorates. Maybe some of the others can suggest a more specific combination. Strontium Nitrate is what gives road safety flares their
intense red color, but that compound may not be as bright in an alcohol flame.
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ordenblitz
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From my experience methanol is the best fuel for color producing flames. You will need a few percent of a chlorine donor. Typically chlorinated
solvents such as dichloromethane, trichloroethane etc work well.
Lithium salts will give you a good red. Lithium chloride or nitrate are soluble enough in methanol to work but if you need to get more in solution add
a few percent water in the methanol.
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woelen
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Try methanol with boric acid. Beautiful purely green flames:
http://woelen.scheikunde.net/science/chem/exps/borate_ester/...
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Dave Angel
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I too have a juggler friend and I was looking into a few of these things for him. I've tinkered around with boric acid esters myself and they give
such a wonderful green flame; just watch out for the toxic fumes - I'm sure there's more about that elsewhere in the forum, and other members will be
able to advise you better than I.
The main point of my post was that if your friend tries this sort of thing, make sure she washes her clubs in plenty of normal paraffin afterwards
because I seem to remember reading that the use of alcohol fuels and/or additives can damage the wicks if left on them, and I believe those clubs
don't come cheap!
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TeTeC
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Ok, thanks a lot! ;-) Many ideas and some useful pieces of advice...
I'll report the results. In the meantime, if anyone else still has something to say, I'll read it.
Thanks again!
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silonyl
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Li salts give a very strong crimson red. Strontium is also pretty good.
Recommendations for alcohol fuel are good - they burn hot and blue. Higher hydrocarbons burn much brighter yellow, from increased C content (the
yellow is the "swan" emission band of C2, the carbon dimer) and possibly cooler flame temps.
Li(OAc)2 might be a good start for an alcohol-soluable Li salt, or you could work with an alcohol-water mixture and a more water-soluable Li salt.
p
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Artifex
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I am also a juggler, I use ethanol with boric acid for green flames and ethanol with a little strontium nitrate (aqueous) for red.
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transformer
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One can also juggle with acids
http://www.juggleonacid.com/
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