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mayko
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[*] posted on 23-12-2015 at 19:20


A few labsnaps ...



This first one is a solution of nickel chloride, a very lovely green color, but what I liked most was the layered, iridescent halo caused by the water vapor coming off the warm, moist beaker. The camera doesn't do it justice!

iridescent_steam.jpg - 2.6MB

These two are from some experiments I was doing with Liesegang rings. These test tubes contain gelatin impregnated with magnesium (left) and cobalt (right), and a bit of ammonium hydroxide solution poured on top. A wave of cobalt hydroxide (?) appeared and traveled from the top of the tube to the bottom, where it was reabsorbed. The magnesium hydroxide precipitated in a series of jagged, tangled layers.

Liesegang_1.jpg - 2.3MB Liesegang_2.jpg - 1.9MB

This is some copper chloride which I left in a sealed container alongside a beaker of sodium hydroxide, to absorb acid fumes and water. Something odd happened, though... the salts appeared to grow and effloresce, the feathery masses finally meeting up and merging. Cool!

creepy_crystals.jpg - 2.4MB

Finally, here's a picture from some recent experiments with "magic rocks" silicate gardens. I dropped a clump of moist cobalt chloride into some ~20% sodium silicate solution, and over the course of about an hour this nice little tower sprouted!


IMG_20151215_224000.jpg - 1.1MB




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[*] posted on 23-12-2015 at 20:32


the orange is acidified K2CrO7 the middle oxidized cyclohexanol and the left oxidized benzyl alcohol. the Chrome(VI) has me nervous enough to actually wear gloves (knew people from Hinkley, CA).

100_1391.JPG - 2.2MB




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Crowfjord
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[*] posted on 26-12-2015 at 10:30




IMG_20151226_100532.jpg - 603kB IMG_20151226_100510.jpg - 628kB IMG_20151226_101025.jpg - 658kB

About a year and a half ago I made some dimethyl oxalate, and haven't done anything with it since. I decided to check it out again, and remind myself of the smell (sickly sweet brown butter solvent). I discovered that it had been slowly sublimating and crystallizing in the top of the jar. The photos don't really do them justice, they look like shards of glass. The one on the jar lid and the larger ones on the paper are about 1 cm long.
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[*] posted on 27-12-2015 at 13:38


Quote: Originally posted by PHILOU Zrealone  
Quote: Originally posted by stibium  
Phosphorescent alkaline earth sulfides activated with bismuth.
From left to right:
BaS / SrS / CaS

@Stibium,
Magnificent!
How did you do/make those? Via United State Patent n°US2544507A or else?
How is that phosphorescence activated, sunlight, UV light/laser and how long exposure?
How long does the phosphorescence lasts?


Hi,
I have always fascinated the chemistry of phosphorescence.
Here there is a digitized copy of a spanish old book specialized on phosphorescent alkaline earth sulfides:
https://archive.org/details/revistadelareal01madgoog

In the PDF file watch the pages 145 to 188, 406 to 465 and 578 to 640

I made my sulfides with help of this book.
Basically I made a suspension in water or ethanol intimately mixing 100 gr. of alkaline earth carbonate, 30 g. of sulfur, 1 gr. of sodium carbonate, 0.5 g. of sodium chloride and 0.02 gr. or less of bismuth subnitrate. I heated this mixture to evaporate the solvent, and put 10 gr of mixture inside a covered crucible placed on a gas burner for 30 minutes.

The phosphorescence can be activated by sunlight or UV light. If the material is activated by exposure to sunlight five minutes, the phosphorescence lasts half an hour.
To get better results the calcination temperature must be about 1000 or 1200 ºC

In these other links you can find more information about making Inorganic phosphorescent materials:

Alkaline earth sulfide phosphorescent pigments:
http://www.google.com/patents/US2544507
Phosphorescent Calcium Sulphide:
http://calcium.atomistry.com/calcium_monosulphide.html
Luminescence (easy synthesis):
http://www.teralab.co.uk/Experiments/Luminescence/Luminescen...
Many pictures and recipes:
https://www.flickr.com/photos/28617364@N04/9457791470/in/pho...
Phosphorescent materials (Spanish):
http://www.cientificosaficionados.com/tecnicas/fosforos.htm
Luminescence properties of CaS:Bi phosphors with special reference to fluxes:
http://shodhganga.inflibnet.ac.in/handle/10603/39477
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[*] posted on 28-12-2015 at 12:16


Last year I added these cut steel pipes from some fridge scrubbers in some hydrochloric acid to get rid of the iron and get the copper. Little iron dissolved and instead I got these small light blue crystals, about 1 mm in size. They don't seem to be soluble in water and they're pretty well stuck on the iron pipe.

B10ZYmJ.jpg - 1.2MB




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[*] posted on 29-12-2015 at 13:45
Methanol Distillation


I haven`t identified locally no other source of methanol other than the commonly available windshield washer fluid. It should be about 40-45% conc. but I suspect that this is not really the case as long as the distillation started at a quite high temperature (~ 80 C).

DSC_7067bx.jpg - 397kB DSC_7068bx.jpg - 355kB DSC_7069bx.jpg - 305kB DSC_7071bx.jpg - 341kB DSC_7072bx.jpg - 276kB DSC_7075bx.jpg - 314kB
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The Volatile Chemist
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[*] posted on 30-12-2015 at 16:44


Really nice photo of the luminol precursor, zts16. Quite a set-up starcruiser!



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Hegi
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[*] posted on 31-12-2015 at 01:40
Rhodochrosite


Maybe for those of you who love minerals ;) For more photos from my collection, visit my page CHEM.PIECEOFSCIENCE.COM


<img src="http://chem.pieceofscience.com/wp-content/uploads/2015/12/rodochrozit1.png" alt="rhodochrosite" height="600" width="900">




Our webpage has been shut down forever cause nobody was willing to contribute. Shame on you all!!!
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[*] posted on 31-12-2015 at 03:05


Nice crystal Hegi. Kind of Christmassy with the red and green.



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fluorescence
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[*] posted on 31-12-2015 at 04:15


So I have no idea what this is probably some sort of Iron(III)Fluoride-Hydrate, due to its green color but could be anything else, too.

So I've been cleaning my crucibles that I brought home from the university over the holidays to clean them in the lab. That's how it started...

If you want to dissolve metals you boil them in Aqua Regia, if you want to get rid of Minerals, and that's what our expert for mineralogy at the university told me once, you boil it in a mixture of H2SO4 and HF. So I took the crucible added some conc. HF to it and left it for 2 days. It dissolved quite much of the compounds and probablya lot of my corundum crucible, too.

Then I changed it to the conc. HF + conc. Sulph Acid mixture and as that didn't help I took it a step further and even added some fluoride to it.
No it's hard to find anything on the solubility of HF in H2SO4 but it's something around 38% depending on the temperature. And as it was getting warmer I had a constant stream of dry, gaseous HF coming of for 48h ! So I checked it every few hours and it was always fuming off some HF. The mixture worked wonders and dissolved most of the stuff but I had placed everything in that stainless steel bowl and due to the cold temperatures it's quite humid in my lab so the bowl slowly filled with humid HF vapours ...

I have to say I used that bowl for like 4 years now. Boiled acids, Lyes and lot's of burning stuff in there. It has been heated to hot temperatures so often, left with conc. Acids for days and there was never ever any sign of rust, corrosion or any effect on it. It took the HF like 2 days to cause what you see on the pictures. After one day those green crystals had formed and back then those were really beautiful crystals not like the amorphous thing you see there.

I'm not even mad but just impressed how fast everything went. Not sure what it is but since there mostly fumes of HF present it should be some mixture of Iron - Sulphate, Fluoride, Hydrate whatever. Really beautiful. I dried it and it yielded some brown and light green powders that are insoluble in water. So looks like the Fluoride to me.



Iron-HF.jpg - 91kB
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[*] posted on 31-12-2015 at 11:11


That's vague;y remnicient of my basement sink after my usage of it for a few years...



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PHILOU Zrealone
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[*] posted on 1-1-2016 at 13:01


Quote: Originally posted by stibium  
Quote: Originally posted by PHILOU Zrealone  
Quote: Originally posted by stibium  
Phosphorescent alkaline earth sulfides activated with bismuth.
From left to right:
BaS / SrS / CaS

@Stibium,
Magnificent!
How did you do/make those? Via United State Patent n°US2544507A or else?
How is that phosphorescence activated, sunlight, UV light/laser and how long exposure?
How long does the phosphorescence lasts?


Hi,
I have always fascinated the chemistry of phosphorescence.
Here there is a digitized copy of a spanish old book specialized on phosphorescent alkaline earth sulfides:
https://archive.org/details/revistadelareal01madgoog

In the PDF file watch the pages 145 to 188, 406 to 465 and 578 to 640

I made my sulfides with help of this book.
Basically I made a suspension in water or ethanol intimately mixing 100 gr. of alkaline earth carbonate, 30 g. of sulfur, 1 gr. of sodium carbonate, 0.5 g. of sodium chloride and 0.02 gr. or less of bismuth subnitrate. I heated this mixture to evaporate the solvent, and put 10 gr of mixture inside a covered crucible placed on a gas burner for 30 minutes.

The phosphorescence can be activated by sunlight or UV light. If the material is activated by exposure to sunlight five minutes, the phosphorescence lasts half an hour.
To get better results the calcination temperature must be about 1000 or 1200 ºC

In these other links you can find more information about making Inorganic phosphorescent materials:

Alkaline earth sulfide phosphorescent pigments:
http://www.google.com/patents/US2544507
Phosphorescent Calcium Sulphide:
http://calcium.atomistry.com/calcium_monosulphide.html
Luminescence (easy synthesis):
http://www.teralab.co.uk/Experiments/Luminescence/Luminescen...
Many pictures and recipes:
https://www.flickr.com/photos/28617364@N04/9457791470/in/pho...
Phosphorescent materials (Spanish):
http://www.cientificosaficionados.com/tecnicas/fosforos.htm
Luminescence properties of CaS:Bi phosphors with special reference to fluxes:
http://shodhganga.inflibnet.ac.in/handle/10603/39477


Thank you for those valuable infos...




PH Z (PHILOU Zrealone)

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Texium
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2-1-2016 at 12:36
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[*] posted on 3-1-2016 at 13:15


P1032029.jpg - 76kB
upload a picture

P1032020.jpg - 44kB
image hosting over 10mb

My FeSO4.7H2O crystal druze .:D its about 1,2 inch across.
image quality isnt wery good:( ill try to make better photos next time.

Btw my 1st post :P
[Edited on 3-1-2016 by crystal grower]

[Edited on 4-1-2016 by crystal grower]
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[*] posted on 3-1-2016 at 13:25


These are my first bismuth crystals:
PC241986.jpg - 211kB
host images

PC241987.jpg - 108kB
picture hosting

PC241991.jpg - 79kB
gif image hosting


bismuth is my no.1 metal :)

[Edited on 3-1-2016 by crystal grower]
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aga
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[*] posted on 3-1-2016 at 13:38


Very nice indeed.

Care to post your process ?




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[*] posted on 3-1-2016 at 14:22


Very impressive Bi crystals!
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[*] posted on 4-1-2016 at 00:28


Quote: Originally posted by aga  
Very nice indeed.

Care to post your process ?


Thanks for compliment:)

The crystal growing process:

1. I created my Iron(II) sulfate by mixing 99.99% pure electrolytic iron with diluted sulfuric acid.(I didnt buy green vitriol bcouse I prefer making the compounds myself;) ).

2.There is a problem with making iron sulfate crystals becouse some brown silt creates in the solution after some period of time . it is probably some iron oxide so I come up with idea that you only need to add some extra sulfuric acid (it should react with the silt and create the FeSO4 again) - it looks it worked properly in my case .

3.I grew some seed crystals by cooling the heated saturated solution and hung the best of them onto nylon.

4.then I drowned it into solution and after several days the crystals have created :D

PS: sorry for my english feel free to correct me - I will learn something beside the chemistry at least :D:D:D.



[Edited on 4-1-2016 by crystal grower]

[Edited on 4-1-2016 by crystal grower]
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[*] posted on 5-1-2016 at 17:53


Did an alkaline cleavage of piperine with KOH. My lil Kodak doiesn't have a macro mode darn it so the pics don't do justice to the BEAUTY of the potassium piperate.





100_1428.JPG - 2.3MB

[Edited on 1-6-2016 by arkoma]

100_1429.JPG - 2.3MB




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[*] posted on 5-1-2016 at 23:32


It looks like you have several grams there. Does it taste like pepper? :P
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[*] posted on 6-1-2016 at 15:05


haven't tasted it, the piperine base sure did.



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[*] posted on 6-1-2016 at 16:01


Nice picture arkoma. Perhaps you should be wary, though, of posting pictures containing your address, unless you don't mind.



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[*] posted on 6-1-2016 at 16:04


sulaiman was kind enough to U2U me about it, BUT, I really got squat to hide and it would take 3 whole MINUTES to edit the photo. Fort Meade ALREADY knows where we all live anyways. (Ft Meade=NSA HDQTRS)



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The Volatile Chemist
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[*] posted on 6-1-2016 at 16:58


Quote: Originally posted by arkoma  
sulaiman was kind enough to U2U me about it, BUT, I really got squat to hide and it would take 3 whole MINUTES to edit the photo. Fort Meade ALREADY knows where we all live anyways. (Ft Meade=NSA HDQTRS)

Oh, yeah, they definitely do... :(
I already put lab pics in the lab folder, but I really think my lab is pretty :)

Anyways, Some chemical testing with ferro/ferricyanide and zinc cyanide.
Also the blue product is degraded Tetraamminecopper(II) acetate.

PTDC0002.JPG - 1.6MB PTDC0005.JPG - 2.2MB PTDC0079.JPG - 1.9MB

[Edited on 1-7-2016 by The Volatile Chemist]




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[*] posted on 8-1-2016 at 21:14


Fresh batch of Ammonium Nitrate

DSC_2121.jpg - 1.4MB

DSC_2118.jpg - 2MB
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[*] posted on 9-1-2016 at 10:56


@Nedshead, nice looking AN.
Just curious, what method did you use to make it?

[Edited on 9-1-2016 by greenlight]




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