ManBearSwine
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Aluminum alkoxides with gallium instead of mercury?
Would a gallium salt catalyze the reaction between aluminum metal and an alcohol to form the alkoxide? It would seem logical as both pure metals have
the ability to permeate the crystal structure of aluminium. I've found a few patents, but they all call for dissolving the aluminium in liquid gallium
and then reacting the mixture with alcohol. I bought a small amount of gallium as a novelty a while back and I'd like to actually do something with,
but I also don't want to waste it unless I'm pretty sure it will work and don't have enough to carry out the reaction as suggested in the patents to
make a worthwhile amount of product.
[Edited on 4-25-2012 by ManBearSwine]
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weiming1998
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Quote: Originally posted by ManBearSwine | Would a gallium salt catalyze the reaction between aluminum metal and an alcohol to form the alkoxide? It would seem logical as both pure metals have
the ability to permeate the crystal structure of aluminium. I've found a few patents, but they all call for dissolving the aluminium in liquid gallium
and then reacting the mixture with alcohol. I bought a small amount of gallium as a novelty a while back and I'd like to actually do something with,
but I also don't want to waste it unless I'm pretty sure it will work and don't have enough to carry out the reaction as suggested in the patents to
make a worthwhile amount of product.
[Edited on 4-25-2012 by ManBearSwine] |
Yes, gallium will definitely work as the goal here is to destroy the layer of protective oxides that usually surrounds the aluminum, preventing
reaction with the alcohol. Gallium will do just that, and you only need a small bit of molten gallium on a chunk of aluminum. You can even recycle the
gallium when the reaction is finished, as gallium doesn't react with either alcohols or water, and will simply sink to the bottom of the reaction
flask, where you can freeze it and pick it up.
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AlphanandOmega
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Aluminum Amalgam via Gallium
Ok so I have been all over the web looking for a good way to produce Aluminum Amalgan and found that it can be created by using Gallium and Alumnium.
However The procedure to create the Amalgam does not really coincide well with the procedure using Mercury as it is normally done with a Mercuric
Chloride solution of some sort. How would using straight AL/GA be comparable to the procedure using Mercuric Chloride and Aluminum
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blogfast25
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Not at all. Ga/Al is an alloy of Ga and Al. An Al amalgam is an alloy of Al and Hg. Two different things. No comparison would be meaningful.
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HollowMan
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Hi,
it would be great if someone of u could explain to me, how to prepare the Al/Ga alloy. I saw severaly introductions, like to put 5gr Ga to 190gr
cutter Alufoil in hot water at Mp of Ga (30°C). But how should this work? i tried to cut 10gr of alufoil to alloy with 10gr Ga in neural/basic/acidic
conditions but with no result. The Ga just dont want to desolve de cutted Al. Its just going arround on the bottom of the flask. When i read to put
5gr Gr to 190Gr Al i was realy surprised. How could 5gr Ga cover up 190gr of Al? Al is a mountain and the Ga just a few drops of water.. I´m asking,
because I want to replace Hg with Ga by reducing imin to amin.
Would be more than great, if someone could help me ;D
<<<thanks in advance
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HollowMan
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How to make Ga/Al alloy
Hi to everyone,
it would be great if someone of u could explain to me, how to prepare the Al/Ga alloy. I saw severaly introductions, like to put 5gr Ga to 190gr
cutted Alufoil in hot water at Mp of Ga (30°C). But how should this work? i tried to cut 10gr of alufoil to alloy with 10gr Ga in neural/basic/acidic
conditions but with no result. The Ga just dont want to desolve de cutted Al. Its just going arround on the bottom of the flask. When i read to put
5gr Gr to 190Gr Al i was realy surprised. How could 5gr Ga cover up 190gr of Al? Al is a mountain and the Ga just a few drops of water.. I´m asking,
because I want to replace Hg with Ga by reducing imin to amin.
I used very thick alufoil (99%Alu) and 4N Ga.
I was looking to fix the problem by using Ga salts, but never saw a comment of someone, who got it done.
Would be more than great, if someone could help me ;D
<<
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bfesser
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HollowMan, don't cross-post.
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bfesser
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Threads Merged 10-12-2013 at 06:07 |
HollowMan
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Oh i´m sry i´m new to this forum. But anyway a helpful answer would be more appreciated
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bfesser
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An intelligible question would be helpful. Give the search function a try. You'll find that there have been <em>dozens</em> of threads
on this subject.
Here's a link to just one of the relevant topics:
<strong><a href="viewthread.php?tid=11687">Gallium-Aluminium alloy preparation</a></strong>
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HollowMan
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Did u read my previous post? Couldnt u get what i wanted to say? I read already every post to this theme, that why i started a new on! Did u ever try
it on ur own, to put some cutted alfloi pieces into melted Ga? How much time should it take to get the alu desloved in Ga? precise indicates would be
nice of the exact procedure.
Thaks
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bfesser
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I tried to read it, but I can't understand this chimpanzee-on-keyboard crap.
Try writing in English; you're not 'texting' on a cellular phone, here. If you're looking for spoon feeding so you can continue with your cook,
you're out of luck.
Or shall I rephrase that?
ts;cr: <em>if ur lookn 4 halp wit u cook, u foad</em>
[Edited on 10.12.13 by bfesser]
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HollowMan
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Ok thats the problem i got it. Of course, i will rewrite it, to make it understandable for you.
Hopefully, after this i will get the advice i´m looking for. Otherwise it was just wasted time.
I can do this in german too, maybe it works better this way.
ts;cr: if ur lookn 4 halp wit u cook, u foad
"Das ist nicht nur nicht richtig, es ist nicht einmal falsch!"
Thats all i say to this (i can understand hopefully you, too)
No I´m not looking for spoon feeding. Thats why i was asking if you read my previous post, because to answer your phrases is just wasting time. It
seams to me, that you got a bit to much of free time to shit around on people, who are not talking like your teacher did in elementary school?
So thats enough now comes my rephrased question:
Hi Guys,
i was looking for an exact introduction, of alloying Aluminiumfoil with Ga. I already tried it severely times, but the Ga (4N) never really dissolves
the Al (99%) pieces.
I got this preperation by using the searching function :
Aluminum gallium amalgam prep:
The gallium amalgam is an excellent substitute in an al/hg reductive amination procedure. it's non-toxic, and stronger.
A search of the internet will reveal, a patent where it has been used already to reduce NO2 and NH2. gallium is also
easily sourced. If you wanted to make a Ga-Al alloy, simply gently heat the Ga (m. pt. 29.7646ºC) until it is liquid, and
it will start to readily form an alloy by dissolving the Al. However, the resulting amalgam will have a higher melting
point than the liquid Ga, so you would have to keep heating the mixture until all the Al is dissolved. In a 10,000ml
wide-mouthed flask, 190 grams of aluminum foil cut to 3x3cm pieces was amalgamated with 5grams gallium in 7000ml
warm water until the solution became greyish, and hydrogen bubbles was evolved in a steady rate from the aluminum surface. The water was decanted off,
and the aluminum amalgam was washed with 2x5000ml cold water.
My question:
Did anyone of you tried that that on his own? 190gr Aluminiumfoil is such a big surface, how could this be covered by 5gr of liquid Ga?
I started it the same way with 10gr cutted Aluminiumfoil mixed together with 10gr of liquid Ga for about 1 hour. After this, i dropped some water to
the mix, to see how the hydrogen production will be.
But there was nearly nothing. never comparable with HgCl2 + Al.
I restarted the experiment in neutral/acidic/ basic conditions but with no significant difference.
So what was going wrong?
thanks in advance for help
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MrHomeScientist
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Was that so hard? See how much nicer that looks? If you type intelligently, you're much more likely to get intelligent responses.
In my experience with gallium and aluminum, the gallium readily amalgamates as long as it's liquid. If the going is slow try scratching the surface of
the aluminum underneath your molten blob of gallium. This lats the gallium penetrate and dissolve the Al easier. Perhaps use sand paper to rough
everything up directly before addition of molten Ga.
190g per 5g of gallium sounds a little ridiculous to me. Do you have a link pointing to your source for this info? I would not expect basic or
especially acidic conditions to help either, as these would dissolve the aluminum or both metals into solution instead of allowing them to form an
amalgam.
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HollowMan
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No thats not. It was just how blesser answered to me.
At first, he is not able to understand and after correcting he cannot or don´t like to give an intelligent helpful answer.
Thats sth i really hate.
Thanks for your answer.
Thats the link i got the information from:
http://www.sciencemadness.org/talk/viewthread.php?tid=14173#...
So should i prepare the washed Alfoil with sand paper to remove the oxid layer?
How far can the Ga go inside the Al? is there no possibility, to do the same by using for exampla Gacl3 like its common by Hgcl2 + Al procedures?
I used acidic/basic conditions, to get the oxid layer a bit destroyed, to make it easier for the Ga to get into Al.
regards
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vmelkon
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Quote: Originally posted by HollowMan |
So should i prepare the washed Alfoil with sand paper to remove the oxid layer?
How far can the Ga go inside the Al? is there no possibility, to do the same by using for exampla Gacl3 like its common by Hgcl2 + Al procedures?
I used acidic/basic conditions, to get the oxid layer a bit destroyed, to make it easier for the Ga to get into Al.
regards
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I would suggest that you put the molten gallium on your Al. Then use a iron knife or something to scratch the surface of the Al. I have seen this done
with Al and Hg.
Method 2 : I have seen someone (Youtube) with a pool of Ga (500 mL or 1 liter). He heats it and dumps small Al pieces in it.
I haven't done these but I plan to someday. I plan on reacting with with propan-2-ol.
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HollowMan
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I will try it next time too. Hopefully it works.
Thanks for your advice when you keep it going just feel free to post on.
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eidolonicaurum
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I tried this, making gallium aluminium alloy, then adding it to isopropanol. No reaction what so ever. And its not my alloy thats dodgy, it reacts
with water beautifully.
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eidolonicaurum
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This talks about gallium/aluminium alloy.
http://www.sciencemadness.org/talk/viewthread.php?tid=19866
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bfesser
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Threads Merged 5-1-2014 at 07:11 |