Again, that hasn't been my experience. Manganese dioxide thermites are slightly more energetic than iron oxide, but are nowhere near explosive. I've
done many of them. See 1:22 in my video linked above. The problem recovering metal from manganese thermites is not that they are 'explosive', but that
the boiling point of manganese is very close to the temperature the thermite runs at. Thus most of the manganese boils off during the reaction,
greatly reducing yield. That said, I've been able to recover nice Mn nodules from MnO<sub>2</sub> thermites.
A different oxidation state of Mn would be interesting to try sometime. You'd still run into the boiling point problem, though.
[Edited on 2-4-2016 by MrHomeScientist] |