Sciencemadness Discussion Board

Pretty Pictures (2)

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j_sum1 - 4-12-2016 at 04:49

I love the colour of Ti(III).
What is fun though is to add a little hydrogen peroxide. You get a very vivid complex formed (TI(IV) if I am not mistaken). It is a deep orange/blood colour. Difficult to describe but very interesting.

Edit. Here is a link to a not very good photo but it does give the idea,
https://www.sciencemadness.org/whisper/files.php?pid=447460&...

[Edited on 4-12-2016 by j_sum1]

mayko - 9-12-2016 at 09:37

Chemical & Engineering News has a tumblr, and it is about as hoppin' as you'd expect:

http://cen.chempics.org/

fluorescence - 10-12-2016 at 06:29

So I tried making "Berlin Green" after I found a good explanation in an old book last week...well the result is not so green to me....



BG.jpg - 115kB

Sulaiman - 10-12-2016 at 08:48

Quote: Originally posted by mayko  
Chemical & Engineering News has a tumblr, and it is about as hoppin' as you'd expect:

http://cen.chempics.org/


fantastic link, thanks ... just spent a couple of hours there :D

The Volatile Chemist - 12-12-2016 at 18:07

Quote: Originally posted by fluorescence  
So I tried making "Berlin Green" after I found a good explanation in an old book last week...well the result is not so green to me....


Usually works fine for me. How concentrated are your starting solutions, and which did you pour into which?

Amos - 20-12-2016 at 22:18

Some big boys

^DBEC86FC59AC5A5E3B0964E4789D6F87EFD312821CCC66FEBC^pimgpsh_fullsize_distr.jpg - 222kB

It's simply sodium sulfate that I got as a byproduct of making basic copper carbonate.

crystal grower - 21-12-2016 at 03:18

Quote: Originally posted by Amos  
Some big boys



It's simply sodium sulfate that I got as a byproduct of making basic copper carbonate.


Sodium sulfate forms really amazing crystals. Unfortunately, I have no way to preserve them long-term.

[Edited on 21-12-2016 by crystal grower]

Velzee - 21-12-2016 at 07:08

Quote: Originally posted by Amos  
Some big boys



It's simply sodium sulfate that I got as a byproduct of making basic copper carbonate.


That's crazy

m1tanker78 - 21-12-2016 at 18:12



crystal_tree.png - 453kB

I was about to toss this in the garbage can when these crystalline vines caught my eye. This was some leftover saturated sodium silicate that sat on the shelf for around a year.

awlb2 - 22-12-2016 at 02:53

Needle-shaped calcium benzoate crystals, produced by reaction between saturated CaCl2 solution and saturated C6H5COONa solution. After one night these crystals fell out of solution due to low solubility.




DSC_0010.jpg - 1.9MB DSC_0009.jpg - 1.6MB

Brain&Force - 22-12-2016 at 10:33

A WHOLE FUCKING KILOGRAM OF EUROPIUM METAL.

<img src="http://i.imgur.com/M3OZCbg.jpg" width=800>

99.9%, stored in a glovebox. Sadly the storage was improper and thus it corroded. But who cares, we have a kilo of europium!

Ozone - 22-12-2016 at 10:59

WOW! How in the Holy Hell did you get your hands on *that*?

O3

MrHomeScientist - 22-12-2016 at 11:01

Wow! You can make some expensive salts with all that. I bought 10g of Eu(NO<sub>3</sub>;)<sub>3</sub>*6H<sub>2</sub>O for $150 several years ago. Checking again today, it's up to $170. Sigma sells it for $350!

violet sin - 22-12-2016 at 13:17

WOW, indedd! Drooling just a little bit here. Thats one of the few I keep my eyes out looking for a deal, none good enough for my broke arse yet congrats, it's a pleasure just to see that much in one place

aga - 22-12-2016 at 13:36

Erm, looks a lot like charcoal dunnit ?

Brain&Force - 24-12-2016 at 17:57

The europium isn't mine! Our lab acquired it from a Chinese supplier – much cheaper than getting it or its compounds from somewhere like Sigma-Aldrich. (Just look at how much a kilo of europium would cost from Sigma. I'd rather shoot myself.)

It looks more like petrified wood, I'd say.

Mabus - 26-12-2016 at 06:51

WHOA, that's a lot of europium there. Is the charcoal-like aspect from manufacturing? Like injection molding or something?

fluorescence - 27-12-2016 at 03:27

@Marbus: Probably because Europium is an Alkali Earth Metal. Eu and Ho especially are very much at the position of Strontium with all their properties and if you look at a picture of oxidized dentritic Strontium in comparison to Barium (which is darker) you see how similar Sr and Eu look. I'd have to take a closer look on the crystal structure but it's probably due to the way it was cleaned, distillation or chemical transport or something similar and then it grew in this shape.

NitratedKittens - 28-12-2016 at 06:20

Quote: Originally posted by fluorescence  
@Marbus: Probably because Europium is an Alkali Earth Metal. Eu and Ho especially are very much at the position of Strontium with all their properties and if you look at a picture of oxidized dentritic Strontium in comparison to Barium (which is darker) you see how similar Sr and Eu look. I'd have to take a closer look on the crystal structure but it's probably due to the way it was cleaned, distillation or chemical transport or something similar and then it grew in this shape.

Europium is a rare earth metal, not alkali

Tsjerk - 28-12-2016 at 07:12

Electron wise it is an earth alkali metal.

DraconicAcid - 28-12-2016 at 09:08

Quote: Originally posted by Tsjerk  
Electron wise it is an earth alkali metal.

The partially filled f subshell says otherwise.

fluorescence - 31-12-2016 at 05:15

f-Orbitals don't really play a role for Eu(II), especially as Eu(II) has a quite stable config. with its f7. The electrons you work with are the 6s electrons. In a similar way Y(III) is pretty much the same as Ho(III). I worked a lot with both of them in my thesis and the crystal structures my compounds had were always pretty much the same for Y(III) and Ho(III) but different for Dy(III) and Er(III). I never worked with Eu(II) as my compounds required RE-Metal(III) but a colleague from our research group did a lot of Alkali Earth Silicate systems where he also used Eu(II) instead of for example Calcium or Strontium.

On the other hand the Alkali Earth Elements seem to crystallize in a different lattice than Eu does so I guess the structure is more or less due to the way it was processed.

[Edited on 31-12-2016 by fluorescence]

fluorescence - 31-12-2016 at 06:42

Forgot to bring in the acetic acid but really needed some today. So I scratched it out of the bottle to yield these nice transparent plates.
Looks really nice.



HAx.JPG - 92kB

Geocachmaster - 31-12-2016 at 13:09

An hour and a half of crystallizing later and there are some long, beautiful crystals of salicylic acid, the camera doesn't do it justice. They are each 3-7 cm long.



IMG_0389.JPG - 1011kB

fluorescence - 1-1-2017 at 02:39

@Geocachmaster: Wow that looks really cool. I have some Salicylic Acid from the Merck Reagent series and it's a fine, clumpy powder, like flour. Really interesting how dramatically the shape can change.

Sulaiman - 1-1-2017 at 10:36

have you looked carefully at the crystals ?

I recently re-crystalised salicylic acid from water just to see the hollow square crystals.

Geocachmaster - 1-1-2017 at 14:33

Salicylic crystals are hollow?! That's weird. Upon closer examination they are square, but I can't tell if they're hollow. Perhaps I'll have to take a look under the microscope.

Sulaiman - 1-1-2017 at 19:43

I could see the 'hollowness' using a magnifying glass but I could not get a decent photo' with my 'phone, hence not shown before.
this is the best photo' that I got ... growing in a beaker



SalicylicAcid.jpg - 191kB

Mabus - 2-1-2017 at 09:51

Some NaCl crystals I grew last year. I placed 2 L of supersaturated NaCl solution in a wide plastic tray and left it to evaporate over the summer. When the volume decreased to half, I noticed the crystals grew much slower, so I decided it wasn't worth the effort and simply took them out of the solution. The next batch gave smaller crystals, I guess the bigger the solution volume, the bigger the crystals. Oh and the NaCl I used was from water softening tablets.
YvX2E8f.jpg - 557kB

chironex - 5-1-2017 at 03:44

Some of my favorite pictures. I know they're not all strictly chemistry, but I thought people here could still appreciate them:

hydrothermally grown carbon nanofoam SEM:

yRv4B6z.png - 590kB

DC magnetron I built:

7qAoETb.png - 333kB

Immunoflourescently labeled ad DAPi stained mouse 3t3 cells, 1 undergoing mitosis:

QDxQze1.jpg - 34kB

Venus fly trap, trap, stained with tuluidine blue. Digestive enzyme excretion glands can be clearly seen:

3pIbVu3.jpg - 72kB

Decellularized pig heart and decellularized strawberry:

il6wrjr.jpg - 950kB q9F6fCW.jpg - 1.4MB

And finally, hydrothermally grown copper crystals:

dRraAzs.png - 813kB QRQQYVK.jpg - 219kB



TheMrbunGee - 6-1-2017 at 07:45

SAM_4456  d.jpg - 6.7MB
Iodine crystals. And a bit of tiny ember glass shards.




[Edited on 6-1-2017 by TheMrbunGee]

Texium - 8-1-2017 at 16:16

Wow, MrbunGee, those iodine crystals are really neat! I've never seen any that look quite like that. How did you go about making them?

Also, I have my own pretty crystal picture to share now. I found these in the container of waste acetone that I used to rinse off my glassware after making Martius yellow (2,4-dinitronaphthol). I wouldn't have expected Martius yellow to grow such nice crystals, but it did!

IMG_2918.JPG - 2.3MB
I'd like to try growing a larger one now that I know it works.

TheMrbunGee - 9-1-2017 at 05:56

Quote: Originally posted by zts16  
Wow, MrbunGee, those iodine crystals are really neat! I've never seen any that look quite like that. How did you go about making them?


It came from 40 year old hydrogen iodide bottle, the HI had oxidized and most of the iodine crystalized out very slowly!

Here is the video of getting it out!
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4LMd8xiq-xY

Tsjerk - 9-1-2017 at 09:29

Definitely to nice to brake up that iodine!

fluorescence - 13-1-2017 at 14:45

A so called Metalcarbonylhydride or Hieber-Base, in this case K[HCr(CO)5]. Had to prepare this at the university this week. It's quite unstable but has a lovely color.



MC.JPG - 72kB

j_sum1 - 13-1-2017 at 15:02

Quote:

Here is the video of getting it out!
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4LMd8xiq-xY


Lovely video. I am going to have to watch more of those.

violet sin - 13-1-2017 at 16:16

Cemented copper from e-waste sol, onto a large square nail (~12" long). It nearly ate through at the liquid/atmosphere interface.

IMAG8604.jpg - 1.1MB IMAG8688.jpg - 907kB IMAG8682.jpg - 784kB
Manganese sulfate from battery crud. The reddish was from the first pull, second go was much lighter colored. What a mess to play with. Brought back memories of much earlier experiments with copper.


IMAG8673.jpg - 750kB IMAG8684.jpg - 717kB
Alum from a heat-sink/H2SO4. I had none laying around, but did have the makings for it. The stuff was heated untill a light crust formed, then cooled. It had a really cool gell texture with an opalescent marbled look. Neat

IMAG8661.jpg - 907kB
Zinc sulfate crystal in petri dish.







[Edited on 14-1-2017 by violet sin]

DraconicAcid - 13-1-2017 at 16:17

A crystal of sucrose, a crystal of nickel-doped ammonium magnesium sulphate dodecahydrate, and crystals of bis(ethylenediamine)copper(II) nitrate.

xtal1.jpg - 32kBxtal2.jpg - 22kBxtals.jpg - 74kB

Neme - 13-1-2017 at 23:57

How does one get so clear transparent crystal? Mine are always dim.

DraconicAcid - 14-1-2017 at 02:18

Quote: Originally posted by Neme  
How does one get so clear transparent crystal? Mine are always dim.

The crystal of sucrose, sadly, was not intentionally grown, but was found in a very old bottle of children's cough syrup.

CaCl2 - 14-1-2017 at 03:45


Some copper compounds.

https://imgur.com/a/nPxHC


Details here: https://www.sciencemadness.org/whisper/viewthread.php?tid=71...


[Edited on 14-1-2017 by CaCl2]

[Edited on 14-1-2017 by CaCl2]

IMG_6419.JPG - 1.5MB

violet sin - 14-1-2017 at 18:12

Love the rainbow display, cool stuff ^^^
1) Flea market score. 1$/ea
2) View of a family members front deck :)

IMAG8790.jpg - 637kB IMAG8781.jpg - 1.6MB

They were doing cedar essence oil from chips and needles.

[Edited on 15-1-2017 by violet sin]

Texium - 17-1-2017 at 19:09

On the left, Martius yellow as the ammonium salt in aqueous solution, and on the right as the free acid upon addition of a few drops of conc. HCl.

IMG_2951.JPG - 1.3MB IMG_2952.JPG - 1.2MB
Not sure why they're showing up sideways.

Oh yeah, and aga, I realized that if I set my phone camera to "square," the pictures are just small enough to post here, so I will likely double post more of my pictures between my blog and here.

https://texium.wordpress.com/2017/01/17/update-on-martius-ye...

gluon47 - 23-1-2017 at 22:06

Tin(ii) oxalate that I just made.

I find the needle-like crystal structure quite beautiful.




Tin(ii) oxalate.jpg - 1.1MB

PHILOU Zrealone - 24-1-2017 at 03:30

Quote: Originally posted by gluon47  
Tin(ii) oxalate that I just made.

I find the needle-like crystal structure quite beautiful.

Looks like snow :P or coconut dust ;)

What intend you to do with that SnC2O4?
What will it be used for?

gluon47 - 24-1-2017 at 12:51


Yeah, It really does look like coconut dust now you say it:), not so much in real life though.

I plan to convert it to tin(ii) oxide by heating with ammonia solution, then try isolating elemental tin via thermite:cool:.

[Edited on 24-1-2017 by gluon47]

Efflorescence of magnesium sulfate

Sulaiman - 25-1-2017 at 08:29

A c150 mm tall x 50mm dia porous pot that was in a saturated epsom salt solution, drained, and left for over a year in a plastic tub.


MgSO4_efflorescence.jpg - 1.7MB

Dwarvensilver - 25-1-2017 at 18:11

Wow Sulalman, that is awesome! Beautiful and something you don't see every day for sure.

violet sin - 25-1-2017 at 19:02

Sulaiman, nice pic. I find some pretty cool things happen when stuff is left alone for a long time. Too bad it is usually hard to photograph withough wrecking it. In the past I have had real neat crystals form in old solution, only to kick crud all over them when moving the beaker for a pic.

Glad you were able to share with out messing it up

Amos - 2-2-2017 at 12:46

Copper(II) formate crystals. Their supernatant is the deepest of royal blues and yet the crystals are an icy-looking aqua color.

IMG_20170122_114435965.jpg - 1.7MB


JnPS - 3-2-2017 at 17:15

I loved the green color of chlorophyll dissolved in ether, also this is a picture of the biggest copper sulfate crystal i have grown to date, the picture's a bit bad but I have a video showing off the crystal on twitter, and the last photo is my recrystallized paracetamol crystals ^.^

Chlorophylls.JPG - 740kB CS crystal.JPG - 658kB Paracetemol Crystals.JPG - 1MB

JJay - 3-2-2017 at 17:36

That is some clean-looking paracetamol!

Geocachmaster - 5-2-2017 at 19:59

IMG_0465.JPG - 1.1MB

Accidental 'hot ice'! Cool looking crystals after boiling down sodium acetate solution. Brown/yellow(ish) color is from organic impurities, thanks to the vinegar I used making it.

image.jpg - 1.1MB

Woah, the top turned white while I was writing this.


image.jpg - 923kB

And after breaking up

[Edited on 2/6/2017 by Geocachmaster]

crystal grower - 6-2-2017 at 03:53

That white crystals on second pic may be leftover sodium carbonate if stoachiometric amounts weren't used.
The same thing sa as interfering my first try on hot ice as it wouldn't let the solution to supersaturate.
Nice pics by the way :).

[Edited on 6-2-2017 by crystal grower]

Geocachmaster - 6-2-2017 at 07:21

I don't think it was sodium carbonate because I used an excess of vinegar; I'd rather suffer through boiling acetic acid into the room than have contamination. I'll check later for any carbonate contamination though.

crystal grower - 6-2-2017 at 07:51

Quote: Originally posted by Geocachmaster  
I don't think it was sodium carbonate because I used an excess of vinegar; I'd rather suffer through boiling acetic acid into the room than have contamination. I'll check later for any carbonate contamination though.

I may be wrong, it just resemble me my experiment.

Bezaleel - 7-2-2017 at 09:16

Quote: Originally posted by Amos  
Copper(II) formate crystals. Their supernatant is the deepest of royal blues and yet the crystals are an icy-looking aqua color.
files.php.jpg - 1.7MB

Hi Amos, how did you prepare it? Just dissolved (basic) copper carbonate in formic acid?


Amos - 7-2-2017 at 09:59

Quote: Originally posted by Bezaleel  
Quote: Originally posted by Amos  
Copper(II) formate crystals. Their supernatant is the deepest of royal blues and yet the crystals are an icy-looking aqua color.

Hi Amos, how did you prepare it? Just dissolved (basic) copper carbonate in formic acid?



Yep, simple as that. The crystals form lightning fast if you leave a saturated solution of it alone, very easy.

Reduction of KMnO4

Dwarvensilver - 11-2-2017 at 23:28


MrHomeScientist - 13-2-2017 at 08:32

Dwarvensilver, looks like you reduced it all the way down to nothing!

crystal grower - 13-2-2017 at 10:15

Yep, massive reduction :D.

fluorescence - 24-2-2017 at 05:44

1 L Flask with lots of prussian blue on the bottom.

pb.jpg - 97kB

95% of the stuff I do is based on transition metals and I'd say 40-50% is cyanide based. So automatically blue Cyano-Iron phases like prussian blue should form when the wastes are combined.

But there is another reason why this is so much. I use this flask for the wastes I produce in the lab. It is in an old aquarium in case it leaks or breaks and contains a month's or two months' amount of waste to settle. Added is always some Ferri(o)cyanide, DMG, Hydroxides etc to bind most of the wastes. It settles down and only the clear solution is decanted off into secondary containers. So in case one of the waste bottles breaks there isn't much heavy metal in there. So jus working with Iron salts will produce a lot of prussian blue in the end but it looks quite nice. Used to be a blue solution and now after a few months it is all settled.

anewsoul - 24-2-2017 at 19:46

Here's some nice crystals of phthalic anhydride I got from a recrystallization.

7FoJXi0.jpg - 915kB


Supersonic - 2-3-2017 at 12:17

Quote: Originally posted by Amos  
Copper(II) formate crystals. Their supernatant is the deepest of royal blues and yet the crystals are an icy-looking aqua color.


Large crystals have a nice form and beautiful color.
It`s a pity that they erodes even in warm air.

There crystals were synthesed from copper(II) hydroxide and formic acid.



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fluorescence - 9-3-2017 at 09:43

Another try to film the mysterious blue-green gas in potassium reactions:

http://imgur.com/zCVaKoA


For a while now I filmed dozens of reactions involving potassium in other solvents besides water to slow down the reaction it usually shows. Originally Thunderf00t pointed out that in the reaction with water under inert gas atmosphere a blue gas forms.

I looked at so many of these reactions now and quite often this blue-green gas really is involed in the reaction. It leads me to believe that maybe potassium reacts or more burns from a gas phase and not as an element. I've seen for example quite often two differently colored flames in narrow and high flasks one that burns longer way above the metal which should be hydrogen and then a pale flame with the color of potassium which burns or more glows around the metal as it becomes smaller and smaller in water.

Funnily whenever I add an oxidized sample the water or acid would first react with the upper layer making it a shiny oxide-free ball. But always shortly before and after it either combusts or starts to melt, glow, burn etc. I've noticed the metal becoming either dark on its surface or form a blue-green gas around the metal itself which then burns instead of the metal. And I've checked this in literature as well while a K2 is very unlikely at these temperatures small nano-potassium particles are blue, too. So maybe the potassium reacts by forming fine nano particles which then react to fast that it appears like a burning cloud around it.

In the picture you can see a small lump of potassium which suddenly (1/30th of a second) turns all black then reacts (note that the gas burns above the metal) and afterwards shows a green-blue gas (some frames later this gas catches fire and the whole thing starts to glow).

I've had better ones before maybe I'll make a small collection of all these gases and upload it here.

fluorescence - 17-3-2017 at 07:28

Hopefully some RuO4 (video will come soon on YT).
Distilled some RuCl3 with H2SO4 and KMnO4.

vlcsnap-2017-03-17-16h24m23s135.png - 918kB

A Halogenated Substance - 18-3-2017 at 07:08

I got a spectrometer and decided to compare the emission spectrum of mercury with that of a fluorescent lightbulb. Looked like a pretty good match to me!


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Waffles SS - 18-3-2017 at 09:04

Guess how i made this RB flask scrap?


Photo0031.jpg - 277kB



[Edited on 18-3-2017 by Waffles SS]

fluorescence - 21-3-2017 at 11:09

Not fully reacted yet but a mixture of

[RuVIO2Cl4]2- and [RuIVOCl10]4-

Ru.jpg - 31kB

Hegi - 30-3-2017 at 22:45

Yet uncharacterized Dy complex salt at 10x magnification.

<img src="http://chem.pieceofscience.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/03/Image_5924.png" height="400" width="600">

Microcrystals of probably new copper benzoate complex.

<img src="http://chem.pieceofscience.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/03/Cu-benz3.png" height="400" width="600">

Laue diffraction pattern of ErFeO3 monocrystal oriented along the c-axis.

<img src="http://chem.pieceofscience.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/03/VI000034.jpg" height="500" width="600">

fluorescence - 8-4-2017 at 22:00

Diborane :D



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mayko - 9-4-2017 at 10:10


Recrystallized ammonium chloride:
IMG_20170405_NH4Cl_i.jpg - 160kB

The hair-like towers continued to grow with time, looking a lot like sodium silicate crystal gardens:


IMG_20170406_NH4Cl_ii.jpg - 123kB

Ice crystals in the parking lot after winter storm Helena:

IMG_20170108_parkingLotIce.jpg - 321kB

fluorescence - 14-4-2017 at 02:49

Reaction of what I believe is KSeCN (not sure so something between K2Se, KHSe and KSeCN reacting with a drop of conc. HCl. You can see how it takes around 0.1 seconds for the redox reaction to happen, quite interesting how slow this is. The bottom pictures were how it looked after a few additional drops.



Selenium.jpg - 786kB

fluorescence - 16-4-2017 at 00:18

Selfmade OsO4 solution (left), took me a while to find a chemical that reacts with solid Os metal and then reduced Potassium Osmate(VI) in Ethanol (right) :D



OS Chem.jpg - 480kB

HeYBrO - 18-4-2017 at 16:27

Some Cu(bpy)2(Cl)26.8H2O recrystallised from acetone and water

IMG_4789.jpg - 1.3MB

[Edited on 19-4-2017 by HeYBrO]

fluorescence - 20-4-2017 at 07:24

Wow nice, are they transparent to some extend ? On the photo it looks like you might be able to see through them a bit ?

HeYBrO - 21-4-2017 at 03:15

Quote: Originally posted by fluorescence  
Wow nice, are they transparent to some extend ? On the photo it looks like you might be able to see through them a bit ?
Thanks. Ill check and let you know, as i can't remember how they were in person.

CrystalCage - 24-4-2017 at 08:34

Made some CuCa(CH3COO)4.6H2O
Really hard to make, 4:1 Ca:Cu ratio does not always work, several failed attempts has been made.
The solution is quite supersaturated.. Need to dilute again the mother liquor to obtain the seed crystals.

IMG_20170425_003316.jpg - 2MB

The Volatile Chemist - 24-4-2017 at 12:33

HeYBrO and Crystalcage, cool copper crystals! Copper Calcium Acetate is definitely on my todo list. And HeYBrO's would be too if I had Bipy....:/

fluorescence - 3-5-2017 at 13:06

Well this is not really a photo but I still love the structure. Had to explain why hydrates PdO can be dehydrated for YouTube and compared it to the dehydration of CaCl2x6H2O when I found out that for some reason there is no good picture of the Hexahydrate anywhere on the web which I found really sad. So I took the crystal structure data from the literature and simulated the tricapped trigonal prismatic structure again.

You can see how each Ca has a coordination number of 9. Along the axis many of these stack on their triangular surfaces so you end up with 6/2 + 3 caps per Ca which equals 6 H2O and thus is called hexahydrate.

As you can see there is no Chloride to be seen. I didn't add them to make it easier to see but they are surrounding this structure with hydrogen bonds towards the water hydrogens. If you want to dehydrate that thermally there is no real contact between Ca and Cl which is why other compounds form as well.

I find this structure really nice because you don't expact something like that for a simple Calcium :D

CaCl2.jpg - 201kB

Panache - 7-5-2017 at 21:58

CrO3, the largest crystal is ~10mm across.

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JJay - 7-5-2017 at 22:17

Are you sure that is CrO3? I thought the crystals looked like needles....

Amos - 8-5-2017 at 11:02

Tried my hand at synthesizing xanthopurpurin a little while ago and my first sample of purified material crystallized in a strange, but very pretty way.



IMG_20170508_143558762.jpg - 1.6MB

MrHomeScientist - 8-5-2017 at 12:39

Wow that's beautiful! That would make a great desktop background.

Geocachmaster - 9-5-2017 at 12:33


I had a concentrated sodium sulfate solution sitting in a beaker on the bench for a few days. When I checked the lab today I noticed some very beautiful crystals, this was the best one.



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The Volatile Chemist - 16-5-2017 at 17:13

Nice crystal! To be honest that's one thing ive never really tried to crystallize, I'll have to try it. Was attempting to grow epsom salt crystals but accidentally left it on the hot plate the other day...now I have some nice anhydrous epsom salt...

Justin Blaise - 17-5-2017 at 20:00

Panache, how did you crystallize that CrO3?

fluorescence - 20-5-2017 at 06:14

Beautiful color :D

[Os(Thiourea)6]3-

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NeonPulse - 24-5-2017 at 22:03

Some potassium chloride crystals slowly grown from water.

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Plunkett - 25-5-2017 at 10:43

Molten silver on a piece of drywall; you can see the reflection of the room
IMAG1936.jpg - 344kB

My element collection in no particular order
ElementCollection - Copy.JPG - 1.4MB

Bubble of boric acid as I dehydrate it to make boron trioxide
IMAG1981.jpg - 722kB

Crystals of boric acid on a beaker
IMAG2091_1.jpg - 321kB

[Edited on 26-5-2017 by Plunkett]

j_sum1 - 25-5-2017 at 18:39

That element collection shot is pretty cool. I like it a lot. :)

mayko - 27-5-2017 at 12:41


A few flowers I was keeping, with stems split between two water sources, each dyed a different color.
IMG_20170226_xylemPhloem.jpg - 1.9MB IMG_20170307_slideFlower.jpg - 1.6MB

I took a few pictures under the microscope. The first shows the sharp partitioning in the flower petals. The second is interesting because it shows an upwelling of one color in a sea of the other!



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Mabus - 28-5-2017 at 09:35

Some zinc sulfate I finally arsed myself to recrystallize it from its solution, after sitting in a closet for 2 years.
Zinc_sulfate_crystals.jpg - 2.6MB

Neme - 30-5-2017 at 11:30

One picture is bunch of copper(II) acetate crystals.

In next pictures is my attempt to double phantom crystal, chrome alum crystal in chrome alum+ KAl alum mixture in KAl alum. The inner black crystal is not visible tho so it's more like normal phantom crystal.


IMG_20170530_210345_HDR.jpg - 467kB IMG_20170530_210507_HDR.jpg - 426kB IMG_20170530_210115_HDR.jpg - 506kB

Geocachmaster - 30-5-2017 at 15:35


Here's some crystallized copper acetate from a spill:
IMG_1031.JPG - 1.8MB
(Open in a new tab for the full experience :P)


And this is thermochromism from flower pigments. The alcoholic extract of lilac petals changes color when heated (and cooled). The first photo is at room temperature, In the second the right test tube has been heated to ~70C, and the third photo is when it has cooled back down to room temp.
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ninhydric1 - 30-5-2017 at 16:42

I'm pretty sure most of the people here have seen the various oxidation states of manganese, but I'll post it anyway. I particularly like the +2 oxidation state because of the slight gradient from dark to light pink then to clear. The +7 and +6 are way too dark (probably too concentrated of KMnO4 solution), and the +4 simply precipitated :(.

oxidationstatesmanganese.jpg - 888kB

Melgar - 5-6-2017 at 01:43

First is a sealed vial containing reacting bromine and sulfur in n-butanol. The end products will presumably be sulfuric acid and bromobutane.

Second is a pool of galinstan with other metals dissolved in it from prior experiments. They form an oxide crust on its surface.

Third is an attempt to oxidize phenylalanine past the amine stage. It ended up forming a sphere at the center of the test tube.

IMG_20170605_053520.jpg - 308kBIMG_20170120_124959.jpg - 346kBIMG_20170514_191835.jpg - 297kB

fluorescence - 5-6-2017 at 08:19

My first success in making K2[OsCl6]. As mentioned before I am not using pure OsO4 but a very contaminated solution which also has other reactive compounds from the dissolution process of Os metal in it. So I cannot simply copy experiments but have to redesign each of them. No matter what text I used I was not able to make it directly but had to go to [OsO2(OH)4]2- first which is insoluble in Ethanol and can be cleaned that way and then turn this into the chloro complex. Still, I am pretty satisfied with the results, an insoluble red powder. The problem is I probably added too much or heated it too long as it decomposed a few seconds afterward.

i260^cimgpsh_orig.png - 281kB

Velzee - 7-6-2017 at 19:05

My attempt at the Copper/Acetone "lamp" experiment (ketene generator), as well as my first attempt at synthesizing picric acid from acetylsalicylic acid(recrystalization), and my twenty-fifth (unsuccessful) attempt at nitrocellulose:

https://i.imgur.com/x3Nkv04.jpg
https://i.imgur.com/dGigrRw.jpg
https://i.imgur.com/QLUNuzD.jpg

Velzee - 14-6-2017 at 20:07

Potassium chlorate crystals from my second batch(9.22g):

https://i.imgur.com/Cah6s84.jpg

Hydrazine sulfate precipitating (24.24g from using hand stirring):

https://i.imgur.com/2sktdCU.jpg

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