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DraconicAcid
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Location: The tiniest college campus ever....
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Quote: Originally posted by Finnnicus | Unrelated, but it had to go somewhere.
I gave "Guthrie's sweet whiskey" a google and my feelings are mixed. Do I feel sad? Or should I? Why? Why?I feel as if... I don't know. Try it for
yourself here.
Please, go back to your chemophobic parent stories.
[Edited on 11-6-2013 by Finnnicus] |
The first link that comes up there is from a creationist site that says, "Chloroform was introduced by Dr. Samuel Guthrie who first made Chloroform by
mixing drinking-alcohol with lime juice."
That makes me feel sad. Pass me the whiskey- sweet or otherwise.
Please remember: "Filtrate" is not a verb.
Write up your lab reports the way your instructor wants them, not the way your ex-instructor wants them.
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Hockeydemon
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I'm grateful that I never had your parents jeez. I was allowed to blossom into whatever I wanted as long as I could support my decisions with
rational. My step-mom who is an uneducated theist (albeit kind hearted) gave up on trying to out argue/wit me when I was 9 or 10. My dad is a rational
person that would mediate our arguments.
If I wanted to do something, and I could support the reason why with logic & facts then they would STFU because I was right. They've lost enough
arguments (though I guess I'm an adult now) to really never question anything I'm doing anymore. I've always had freedom to do whatever I please as
long as I was respectful, and responsible.
I remember back when I was 18, and living at home and I had just started smoking pot. It was not allowed that I smoke pot in doors at all (they hated
everything about it). I wrote up and explanation for the chemical reason why cigarette smoke lingers, and is damaging to the house vs marijuana smoke.
I also wrote up a proposal for how I would negatively pressurize the room, and take the proper precautions to ensure they would never know I was
smoking indoors. I won the argument.
Same went for science. I just randomly dropped a few hundred on science equipment one day, and set it up in the basement with no warning. They came
down stairs and said "Is this a fucking meth lab?!" to which I responded "Don't be ignorant". End of discussion - never heard another word about it
until my respirator came in the mail. But I simply explained that was for outdoors, and my personal safety. My dad actually ended up being quite
curious about the various things I was doing.
I'm a very passive aggressive, resourceful, & rebellious person however. If I was in the OP's position the mom would hate my guts, I would go out
of my way to disobey, and probably just stop talking to her/move out. Granted if I was raised by the OP's mom I would be a different person, but at
that age with who I was absolutely. My high school HATED me - not that I was a bad student, or got bad grades. I just challenged authority at every
turn - I still do, but have a much better handle on it.
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DORI
Harmless
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Registered: 14-6-2013
Location: Israel
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Not my parents, but my wife...I tried to make copper acetate using stock white vinegar and hydrogen peroxide (6%). It was too slow, so I got 99.9%
acetic acid and 33% Hydrogen peroxide. Stupid, I know that now - but back then I didn't. So anyway, I mixed (very) small amounts, and put in my copper
scrap. Everything looked OK, started fizzing slowly, and the all hell broke loose, the glass jar turned into a geyser, blowing fumes and turquoise
liquid all over the floor. I had to run to the grocery store at the corner and get a s%$t load of carbon dioxide, spread it all over the blue stuff,
just to get a 2 inch thick foam that covered the floor...lots of mopping, lots of water, opening all the windows and getting a ventilator to push the
fumes out, took me like 2 hrs. Then my wife got home and asked what was that funny vinegar smell, so I said I cooked something. Never tried it again!
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plante1999
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Peracetic acid intermediate was probably formed, I guess it was a real mess, better to do stuff like this outside, especially with oxidizers like
hydrogen peroxide.
I never asked for this.
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Nitro-esteban
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Good thing my parents barley care about all the reagents and explosives i have. They never ask about anything unless they can smell it.
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chemcam
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Let me guess... 5kg of TATP? Improperly neutralized and stored in a sealed iron container on top of a nightstand with a wobbly leg, right next to your
bed?
Sounds k3wl.
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elementcollector1
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Quote: Originally posted by chemcam |
Let me guess... 5kg of TATP? Improperly neutralized and stored in a sealed iron container on top of a nightstand with a wobbly leg, right next to your
bed?
Sounds k3wl. |
Don't forget the loaded pistol next to it.
My parents don't really care if I'm handling the basic stuff, but they require my dad to watch if I'm handling truly deadly stuff (bromine, thermite,
etc.). Personally, I think he watches out of part fascination, part horror, and part parental protection.
Elements Collected:52/87
Latest Acquired: Cl
Next in Line: Nd
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InertGas
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Quote: Originally posted by elementcollector1 | ...My parents don't really care if I'm handling the basic stuff, but they require my dad to watch if I'm handling truly deadly stuff (bromine,
thermite, etc.). Personally, I think he watches out of part fascination, part horror, and part parental protection. |
But unless your parents are chemists (amateur or pro), how do they know what's "truly deadly"?
For that matter, how do they know when you're doing even the "basic stuff"?
What you say suggests that there's a good level of communication, honesty and mutual respect between you and your parents. I think that's great and
(as a parent) I hope you understand how fortunate you are to have parents like that. Similarly, I hope your mother and father appreciate how fortunate
they are to have a son with an enquiring mind who is willing to talk to them about what he's doing.
Unfortunately, it appears that mutual respect, good communication skills and gratitude are all lacking in the OP's relationship with his parents.
[Edited on 21-6-2013 by InertGas]
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amazingchemistry
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While I applaud Cou's fascination with chemistry, I have to join previous posters in saying that his disregard for safety doesn't do him any favors,
to say the least. Chemistry is much more than just throwing things together. True, it may start out that way but it doesn't become true science until
careful planning and observation are involved. Here's my two cents: If you want to keep doing chemistry until your 70s, and not stop 'rather abruptly'
before your 20s, and if you don't want to have your mother yell at you that you're going to kill yourself, please, PLEASE, stop performing reactions
as if you have a deathwish. Mixing hydrochloric acid and bleach without proper ventilation or working with lead without proper protection is just
stupid. If you start being less kewlish and more scientific (researching safety hazards of reactants and expected products BEFORE performing a
reaction, having contingency plans, informing yourself as to the theory of the reaction, including expected enthalpies and such) you will greatly
reduce the inherent risk of doing chemistry, and hopefully, leave your parents feeling a bit more reassured.
Always remember to check your pride at the door and ask that "stupid" question. Learning comes from having your "stupid" questions answered.
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Random
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Quote: Originally posted by bfesser |
<li>Specify the exact asbestos mineral. For example, I tell people that my specimen is chrysotile. It sounds almost floral, so people don't
freak out.</li></ol>
Then I hold it out to them and say "Scratch & Sniff"... |
[Edited on 12-7-2013 by Random]
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bfesser
Resident Wikipedian
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<strong>Random</strong>, would you mind keeping that stuff on 4chan, reddit, or some other mouth-breather website?
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Manifest
Script Kiddie Asshole
Posts: 229
Registered: 7-12-2012
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Oh come on, we can't have an odd joke, or reaction picture?
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Finnnicus
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Hopefully 'the odd joke' isn't as obvious and unneeded as "I see what you did there" but maybe thats just me...
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Manifest
Script Kiddie Asshole
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Hopefully not, maybe that's something Random can work on.
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subsecret
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My parents aren't very chemophobic. My mom doesn't care what I do, but she does ask what I plan to do with the chemicals I buy. She's generally pretty
interested in my lab work, especially when I use things like gas generators that look more complex than they really are. My dad generally doesn't ask
what I do, he just wants me to avoid dangerous things such as explosives (and I obey).
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DraconicAcid
International Hazard
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My father-in-law, on the other hand, won't let me wash bowls or glasses using detergent, as he's afraid that "chemicals" might stick to the glass....
Please remember: "Filtrate" is not a verb.
Write up your lab reports the way your instructor wants them, not the way your ex-instructor wants them.
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Cou
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It's been a while, now that I moved all the stuff outside my parents aren't chemophobic anymore.
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Plutonium239
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My mom found out that I inhaled a small amount of chlorine gas and said "that's some serious ****"! I also told her that methylphosphonyl difluoride
is a Schedule I substance and she thought that meant it was a drug.
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sonogashira
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The most chemophobic people that I have ever-met have worked at university chemistry departments! Having to fill-in numerous forms, signed and dated,
filled with the new Europen-standard health-risk codes, approved by a supervisor, hard-copied, filed, indexed, periodically-reviewed and updated
according to the new COSHH guidelines. Then you are allowed to use methanol as your solvent! -- so-long as you keep it in the fume-cupboard, and have
less than 250 ml out at any one-time, in a clearly-labeled ISO-approved flask!
[Edited on 3-9-2013 by sonogashira]
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blogfast25
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Yes, methanol is one of those they reserve special ire for. At uni we ended up ignoring the whole thing and rectifying technical MeOH to UV grade with
a 10 m high pilot plant fractionation column anyway, by the gallon! Determined as we were, they ended up turning a blind eye. If it was up to the
safety boffins the only thing that would ever have seen the inside of that piece of equipment would have been... water! ('Caution! Hot water
is hot!')
It's all part of our litigation rich culture of course: great for liars... I mean 'lawyers'.. not so good for anything else.
[Edited on 3-9-2013 by blogfast25]
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bismuthate
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my parents are fine with most chemicals but they won't let me use heat! i'm not even allowed to use my alchohol lamp or the stove.
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confused
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you might want to consider getting a hotplate to heat your reactions
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bismuthate
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i am trying to get one. Of course I use my alcohol lamp when i absolutly need heat.
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Eddygp
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HAHAHA turning a blind eye with MeOH hahahahaha you made me fall off the chair!
You did it on purpose didn't you?
LOL
there may be bugs in gfind
[ˌɛdidʒiˈpiː] IPA pronunciation for my Username
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Random
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Blogfast, they will probably die of dihydrogen monoxide sooner or later anyway.
Everyone did.
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