Sciencemadness Discussion Board

Mineral oil with density of 0.9 instead of 0.8?

metalresearcher - 13-1-2012 at 13:13

For potassium separation I am searching for an oil slightly heavier than K metal which has a density of 0.86.
Which oil can I use for this? Most oils are 0.8.

zoombafu - 13-1-2012 at 14:06

You could use canola oil, it has a density of .92 g/mL.

unionised - 13-1-2012 at 16:15

"You could use canola oil"
briefly
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Acyloin_condensation

entropy51 - 13-1-2012 at 17:02

This would have been a good question for the short questions thread.:)

Mr. Wizard - 13-1-2012 at 18:23

More double bonded carbons, and longer chain length equals more density in general, as the ratio of C to H goes up.

metalresearcher - 14-1-2012 at 00:04

Quote: Originally posted by Mr. Wizard  
More double bonded carbons, and longer chain length equals more density in general, as the ratio of C to H goes up.

So, candle wax (i.e. paraffin)?

Dr.Bob - 14-1-2012 at 09:33

The only thing that will make the density heavier than 0.9 would be more heteroatoms, like oxygen, sulfer or halogens, and most of them will react with K in a violet manner. You will be hard pressed to find an oil that dense that in only a hydrocarbon, and I am sure that there is something that would work, that does not react with K, but it might be pricey. Maybe a Dowtherm oil or some silicon based oil, but make sure they are stable to K before using.