sclarenonz
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What are the minerals that dissolves in oil?
What are the minerals that dissolves in oil?
I'm looking on the internet and I'm not finding thanks for the help
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walruslover69
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Oil like crude oil?
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sclarenonz
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it's soy oil
I collected a red stone and triturated it and threw the soybean oil, the oil became red, I threw this oil in a milk that comes out of a tree and there
was a polymerization in an interesting way
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vmelkon
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Can you be more specific?
You titrated? What chemical did you use?
Milk that comes out of a tree? Are you talking about the rubber tree?
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hevea_brasiliensis
"In Brazil, the initial name of the plant was pará rubber tree."
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walruslover69
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I am confused. why did you have the idea of mixing the stone with the oil. and are you sure it is actually dissolved. It sounds like you probably just
formed a suspension
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DrP
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Something has initiated a poloymerization in the soy oil though. What does this 'triuated' mean? Could that have initiated polymerization in the oil?
Has it actually polymerised or just curdled with whatever you used to 'triurate' the stone?
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walruslover69
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Triturate is just to grind it into a powder
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kulep
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There are many tree species with milky resins, not only the latex tree. Most are toxic
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vmelkon
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I guess so.
At first, I was thinking of a small plant we have in Quebec. It's high is at most 50 cm. It is not a tree. If you rip a leaf or cut a stem, a milky
liquid flows out.
I have no idea what makes it white. Most other plants have a colorless sieve (is that the word?).
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UC235
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White sap is from a suspension of latex. It's white for the same reason milk is white and clouds are white. Mie scattering.
Lots of plants produce latex. Euphorbia species, milkweed and dogbane, figs, wild lettuce and dandelions, mulberries, poppies, oleander, balloon
flowers, etc.
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Ubya
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the powdered rock probably just made a suspention in oil, but we need more informations, what was the ratio of oil vs rock? like a slurry or more like
a pinch of powdered rock in a glass of oil? then you mixed a milky sap, why? were you trying to make like oil paint? what was the plant you took the
sap from? how much sap did you add? a drop? a liter? what do you exactly mean by " polymerization in an interesting way"? did the mix just got thicker
or did it solidify?
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sclarenonz
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Triturate is like grind
the name of this tree is still unknown here, but most are called amapazeira.
this red stone with some marron and violet points, reacted with soybean oil, in that place there was a great indigent industry in the 1940s, it is in
the middle of the forest, I know there is something of value in this stones, when I threw in the water after spending a lot of time in the sun,
bubbles rose and that bubbles came back and sticking to the stone again.
the polymerization happened after I threw 20 ml of milk, and I threw 5 ml of the very red olei, a rapid solidification took place with crystals tips,
I moved and that stretched making many crystals and drying very fast. I made a video but I can not post, the internet is very slow
[Edited on 21-11-2018 by sclarenonz]
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kulep
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Quote: Originally posted by sclarenonz | Triturate is like grind
the name of this tree is still unknown here, but most are called amapazeira.
this red stone with some brown and violet dots, reacted with soybean oil, in that place there was a great indigent
industry in the 1940s, it is in the middle of the forest, I know there is something of value in this stones, when I threw in the water after spending
a lot of time in the sun, bubbles rose and that bubbles came back and sticking to the stone again.
the polymerization happened after I threw 20 ml of milk, and I threw 5 ml of the very red oil?, a rapid solidification took place
with crystals tips, I moved and that stretched making many crystals and drying very fast. I made a video but I can not post, the internet is very slow
[Edited on 21-11-2018 by sclarenonz] |
Can the tree you are referring be any one of these?
Apocynaceae Parahancornia amapa
Apocynaceae Couma guianensis
Moraceae Brosimum rubescens
Moraceae Brosimum potabile
Moraceae Brosimum parinarioides
From: http://www.ppmac.org/content/amapa-amapazeiro
I don't know if tasting the sap would be a good idea as that site says, milky sap tends to be toxic but I don't know how much. If you could post even
a couple of pictures it would be useful
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sclarenonz
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brothers
is very similar to this species
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brosimum_rubescens
but there are hundreds of trees resembling a few different characteristics, this tree has a red bark and grows up to 50 meters, its leaves grow to the
size of a palm and have a triangular shape, it has no roots showing on the surface
I will try to make a short video of 5 seconds and a very low quality and send tomorrow to you, you will like it, I did it for some children here and
it was fantastic
[Edited on 22-11-2018 by sclarenonz]
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sclarenonz
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i dont get make dthe movie the internet is very slow
more details
https://cienciadadapordeus.blogspot.com/
[Edited on 28-11-2018 by sclarenonz]
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fusso
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A mineral is a naturally occurring chemical compound, usually of crystalline form and not produced by life processes. A
mineral has one specific chemical composition. So minerals are inorganic and usually polar. And oils (organic, excluding silicones) are
organic. So I don't think any minerals will dissolve in oil. Period.
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Ubya
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Quote: Originally posted by fusso | A mineral is a naturally occurring chemical compound, usually of crystalline form and not produced by life processes. A
mineral has one specific chemical composition. So minerals are inorganic and usually polar. And oils (organic, excluding silicones) are
organic. So I don't think any minerals will dissolve in oil. Period. |
well just because you think this it doesn't mean it's absolute truth, sulphur is a mineral and can be dissolved in toluene (organic) so as you can see
there are more exceptions to the rule
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fusso
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Quote: Originally posted by Ubya | Quote: Originally posted by fusso | A mineral is a naturally occurring chemical compound, usually of crystalline form and not produced by life processes. A
mineral has one specific chemical composition. So minerals are inorganic and usually polar. And oils (organic, excluding silicones) are
organic. So I don't think any minerals will dissolve in oil. Period. |
well just because you think this it doesn't mean it's absolute truth, sulphur is a mineral and can be dissolved in toluene (organic) so as you can see
there are more exceptions to the rule | OK didn't realize that my bad. Well now you answered exactly what the
question asks for OP!
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kulep
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Well I am more inclined to think that it may be a suspension, if you add little oil or fat to colored dirt you can make a primitive paint paste.
As for the latex coagulation it is probably a reaction to anything you add to it, as it is an important part of the defense system of many plants. pH,
particulates, bacteria, water%, temperature?
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Ubya
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@sclarenonz thanks for the pictures, now it's clear what you mean by polymerization.
maybe i have the answer
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Emulsion_polymerization
the rock could contain iron (redox catalyst for this reacrion) so you could try by just mixing sap and oil and see if it polymerizes.
as the wikipedia page says in the "Ingredients" section, fatty acids are used as surfactants, vegetable oil as many fatty acids.
[Edited on 29-11-2018 by Ubya]
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sclarenonz
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Thankyou ubya!
I tried to use only oil before, but to get the doubt I did it again and took the photo, the oil does not react is bubbled over the milk, in each tree
with 20 ml, if you compare the number of trees by 50 meters I can take 1 liter per day
I tried to enter the site I want to understand the theoretical form about polymerization so I know the practice rustic
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DrP
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Quote: Originally posted by kulep | Well I am more inclined to think that it may be a suspension, if you add little oil or fat to colored dirt you can make a primitive
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It still could just be thickening of the suspension or a curdling rather than polymerization. But the picture looked like there might have been some
cross linking going on. Difficult to say from the picture. The OP seems to think it IS polymerising rather than just thickening though - so I guess we
need to guess at what is initiating it. Maybe it is the iron as Ubya suggested... or a pH change due to the surface chemistry of the rock or
something- idk. Maybe the polymer has just 'crashed out' of the emulsion.
[Edited on 4-12-2018 by DrP]
\"It\'s a man\'s obligation to stick his boneration in a women\'s separation; this sort of penetration will increase the population of the younger
generation\" - Eric Cartman
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