Extracting the blue dye in jeans

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  • Опубліковано 30 сер 2018
  • Use my link www.audible.com/nilered or text NILERED to 500-500 to get a free book and 30 day free trial.
    In this video, I decided to try and extract indigo dye from an old pair of jeans. I managed to find a decent way to do it, and in the future, I'll try to scale up the process and do it on a full pair.
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  • Наука та технологія

КОМЕНТАРІ • 1,2 тис.

  • @art_and_sh.t4265
    @art_and_sh.t4265 5 років тому +7253

    Me, knowing absolutely nothing about chemistry: hehe color

  • @schmitty13923
    @schmitty13923 5 років тому +4233

    Seeing your trial and error is my favorite part of your videos. So many other science type channels just tell you what is but you really go into it and sometimes get unexpected results. BY FAR my favorite chemistry channel.

    • @nicholi8933
      @nicholi8933 5 років тому +174

      I send these to my former chem teacher that he tells his students about. He really likes his trial and error also.

    • @NileRed
      @NileRed  5 років тому +780

      I'm glad you like that aspect. It's my favorite thing to do.

    • @tylerlowden8023
      @tylerlowden8023 5 років тому +11

      Isn't that the damn truth

    • @cheesecakelasagna
      @cheesecakelasagna 3 роки тому +25

      That's my favourite parts too! Reminds me that experiment is never perfect and I should not pressure myself too much on perfection. Let knowledge and wisdom come as I go.

    • @pandom_ran
      @pandom_ran 3 роки тому +10

      I don’t really like chemistry because it was boring, but you made it fun because of the weird experiments you do. Whenever chemistry is mentioned in anything I start getting bored before I found you, on the video where you made your own glow sticks

  • @egretwhite3944
    @egretwhite3944 5 років тому +3577

    Heh, the idea of using pH-paper in a cup of dye seems problematic.

  • @Fvneral_moon
    @Fvneral_moon 4 роки тому +417

    Next video idea: "Extracting cocaine from a vintage Coca-Cola bottle"

  • @miamama9776
    @miamama9776 5 років тому +2283

    "I need a solvent that is cheap and nontoxic as possible"
    *Uses DCM*

    • @pietrotettamanti7239
      @pietrotettamanti7239 5 років тому +188

      Well, it's cheap and fairly non toxic compared to most solvents.

    • @biggyboablo
      @biggyboablo 5 років тому +115

      DCM is the least toxic chloroalkane solvent, so.

    • @FaiienWings
      @FaiienWings 5 років тому +28

      Isn't DCM a carcinogen though

    • @firstlast-cs6eg
      @firstlast-cs6eg 5 років тому +30

      Rubbing alcohol gets poison added to it so people don't drink it (sales tax and special sales requirement for alcohol)

    • @tunnar79
      @tunnar79 5 років тому +129

      @@FaiienWings What isn't a carcinogen nowadays?

  • @moechano
    @moechano 5 років тому +3639

    "Didn't fit me anymore"
    Nilered becoming thic c

  • @zell9058
    @zell9058 5 років тому +3441

    My son is 6 and loves your demonstrations! I caught him in the driveway wearing goggles playing in a puddle. I asked him what he was doing.. Chemistry Dad, Chemistry, he said. Keep up the great work 👍🤘

    • @preke953
      @preke953 5 років тому +185

      First I need to thank you, thank you for letting him discover this channel, please keep the drama, vlogging and personailty driven content out of his life. I have seen many young minds being destroyed by these personality. I am not saying that these channels are bad and bad influnence but what i am saying is that they have such strong connection with marketing rather than content and trying to pander to the 2018 "edgy" persona. It is becoming more and more hard to keep children away form these marketing schemes and bad influence. Although it might seem like i am going off topic but please keep him away form them.

    • @jayscoolvideosa
      @jayscoolvideosa 5 років тому +18

      Too bad there is an epidemic there are no jobs :(

    • @thelispinglizard5458
      @thelispinglizard5458 5 років тому +77

      Just make sure he doesn’t start mixing the windex and bleach in the bath tube

    • @lordofthefreshwater
      @lordofthefreshwater 5 років тому +7

      Dinglechalk Crumblewalk Er I want to agree with you but you have extremely bad spelling and edited your comment.

    • @roboactive
      @roboactive 5 років тому +27

      This could be a r/thathappened

  • @littlebacchus216
    @littlebacchus216 5 років тому +1444

    Need to see this go full and extract all the indigo. I'd shred the fabric smaller first though.

    • @rbbm454
      @rbbm454 5 років тому +32

      Was thinking that too, blend the jeans!

    • @Mp57navy
      @Mp57navy 5 років тому +47

      Hmm, I disagree. Shredding it more will add more fibers that float around in solution. Rather have it in one piece.

    • @Oleg-oe1rc
      @Oleg-oe1rc 5 років тому +98

      @@Mp57navy Won't really matter when he filters and rinses it anyway. The solid fabric pieces are traping the solution in the weave, with it shreaded it will be much easier for the solution to both get in, and get out. If he was going to stick with not filtering though, then strips would be the better way to go.

    • @Mp57navy
      @Mp57navy 5 років тому +14

      +Oleg fair enough.

    • @lolgamez9171
      @lolgamez9171 5 років тому +9

      @@Oleg-oe1rc as long as you press the shreds to get all the liquid or vacuum filter it

  • @KainYusanagi
    @KainYusanagi 5 років тому +854

    NileRed, regarding Sodium Hydrosulfite (aka Sodium Dithionite), which is an alkali salt itself; from Wikipedia: "It is used as such in some industrial dyeing processes, primarily those involving sulfur dyes and vat dyes, where an otherwise water-insoluble dye can be reduced into a water-soluble alkali metal salt (e.g. indigo dye)" So basically the indigo was being kept water-soluble because it was an alkali metal salt. Adding the acid neutralized the alkali and separated out the indigo dye which then was no longer water-soluble.

    • @grgvv
      @grgvv 5 років тому +31

      No it isn't what you said: it's the reduced indigo (yellow-green) that is an alkali metal salt and it is water-soluble, the oxidized form should be insoluble and blue. The solution was blue, so it should have precipitated but it didn't until he added acid.

    • @KainYusanagi
      @KainYusanagi 5 років тому +47

      Just because the solution is blue doesn't mean that it's not leuco-indigo; there's obviously some other chemistry going on that is neutralizing the yellow-green colour, possibly one of the secondary products from the rust out, but it's a blue solution, not a blue suspension; the indigo wasn't converted to its oxidized form, which would have already precipitated naturally. Adding the acid would have neutralized the base alkali component, which would have freed it up to be easily oxidized by the oxygen in the water, which is exactly what happened. There's no other explanation that really fits the scenario, esp. when one considers Occam's Razor.

    • @defenestrated23
      @defenestrated23 5 років тому +36

      I think you are close, but not quite! I think what is going on is that oxidized indigo can do this crazy proton transfer keto-enol isomerization of the ketone with the indole amine (google "asian textile studies indigo", first page, search for "the indigotin chromophore") makes the amino hydrogen more acidic than it ought to be in isolation. I don't think aq. NaOH by itself can deprotonate it, but if you reduce it, then let it oxidize, perhaps the proton gets "stuck" and you are left with the sodium salt of the mono-enol indigo. Just speculation. There is more than meets the eye here, like Thunderfoot and the Coulomb explosion.

    • @jojobeachable
      @jojobeachable 5 років тому +15

      I'm here to argue. I think the nitrogen was deprotonated forming an imine and an enolate which may or may not have become a salt. Change my mind

    • @apcapc-om8sq
      @apcapc-om8sq 5 років тому +13

      The amine groups on indigo are more like vinylogous amides, so the amine proton might be more acidic. Wikipedia says that the pKas of amides are typically above 15 though, so I don't think OH- is a strong enough base. Maybe in dilute solution enough indigo is deprotonated to afford enhanced solubility.

  • @taiwanluthiers
    @taiwanluthiers 4 роки тому +380

    What if you take the leftover denim, and break it down and make moonshine out of it?

    • @emichaelk5486
      @emichaelk5486 3 роки тому +51

      The ultimate crossover episode

    • @icebiirb9440
      @icebiirb9440 3 роки тому +24

      And then safely dye it with the dye(somehow) and show it as a moonshine "potion"

    • @taiwanluthiers
      @taiwanluthiers 3 роки тому +5

      @@icebiirb9440 That's easy. Just use food coloring.. and there are blue liquor out there, probably using some berries.

    • @carbon5362
      @carbon5362 3 роки тому +26

      @@taiwanluthiers He could use indigo carmine to dye it. Full circle.

    • @Sciencedoneright
      @Sciencedoneright 3 роки тому +2

      OH HI MEMBER

  • @DrInorganick
    @DrInorganick 5 років тому +616

    Okay, a couple of things. I've been working with indigo for a few years during my PhD, so there are a few things you could try. For one, as you alluded to, indigo's one characteristic property is its abysmal solubility. Good for a dye, bad for a reagent. Older german papers talk about its solubility in either boiling chloroform, or in neat sulfuric acid, but we have typically used it as a suspension in DMF at around ~260 mg in 40 mL. By itself, it is not very soluble, but a lot of derivatives are considerably more soluble because they typically have less inter/intramolecular hydrogen bonding. Salts in particular have higher solubility (probably why you werent getting anything precipitating before adding acid - indigo is fairly acidic because the N-anion is stabilised), and N-alkyl derivatives are fairly well-behaved (i.e. di-boc indigo will dissolve in hexane). Because of the hydrogen bonding and electronics aspects, a lot of derivatives have different colours. N-acetyl indigos are typically red, mono-N-alkyl derivatives are usually blue, and di-alkyl derivatives are green. The really interesting stuff comes from other modifications of the core ring structure, which is what I've been working on. If you're interested, get in contact and we can talk more about it.

    • @dillonhofsommer5648
      @dillonhofsommer5648 5 років тому +58

      Someone else working on a PhD with indigo? What group? We've found 2-ethoxy ethanol works surprisingly well. The salts are green and absorb out in the 750 nm-ish range (at least in THF). The di-boc is a gorgeous color, isn't it?

    • @tedmcleod-morris
      @tedmcleod-morris 5 років тому +14

      Would it be possible to convert indigo while it is on cellulose? I mean could you take blue jeans and add red, green color to them, after they were dyed? Because if you could, then you could add colorful patterns onto generic blue denim.

    • @DrInorganick
      @DrInorganick 5 років тому +34

      @@dillonhofsommer5648 I've been working with Paul Keller at Wollongong for the last few years. I remember my Honours year when I made a batch of Di-boc indigo. Working up the reaction, I was condensing it down on the rotovap, when suddenly it precipitated and the huge increase in nucleation sites bumped it into the condensor and stained it hot pink. Bit of fun cleaning it all up.

    • @DrInorganick
      @DrInorganick 5 років тому +12

      @@tedmcleod-morris I think it would depend what kind of chemistry you're trying to do, but there's no reason why it wouldn't work. Solid-supported synthesis is a big deal now, so I think the biggest limitation would be using cellulose itself due to the amount of water/hydroxyl functionality.

    • @dillonhofsommer5648
      @dillonhofsommer5648 5 років тому +19

      I work with indigo diimines. I don't think there's a time that I've rotovapped it that it HASN'T bumped aha

  • @codyv308
    @codyv308 5 років тому +1240

    I love this channel because you do a really good job of talking and explaining your methods, and your production quality has increased tremendously over time. I think I've learned more about chemistry by watching your videos than I ever did in high school. Keep this up and you'll have a golden play button in no-time :)

    • @JuiciestLoot
      @JuiciestLoot 5 років тому +5

      most definitely learning more here then at highschool

    • @SebastianoZanda
      @SebastianoZanda 5 років тому +10

      @@JuiciestLoot *than, maybe you should go back to highschool

    • @JuiciestLoot
      @JuiciestLoot 5 років тому +3

      gotta be a grammar nazi? better with math ,THAN spelling

    • @codyv308
      @codyv308 5 років тому +8

      Sebastiano what are you twelve?

    • @scripter13
      @scripter13 5 років тому

      Nicely done! I like the explorational video format. You really excelled at taking me through the process.

  • @augustg2059
    @augustg2059 4 роки тому +160

    I love chemistry and am a horrible test taker. I was getting a 54 in grade 11 chemistry and my teacher saw I wasn’t stupid and asked what the problem was. I told her I loved the class and understood her, just had test anxiety. I showed her one of your videos and said “this is why I took chemistry. I love it and I understand it” she ended up loving your channel and having good conversations with me over them. She passed me with a 70 after the exam. Thanks for your help there 😂. I won’t be continuing chemistry next year but I will be continue watching your videos

    • @kaitlynp5823
      @kaitlynp5823 2 роки тому +4

      Based teacher

    • @Jynxedlove
      @Jynxedlove 2 роки тому +3

      You should keep with chemistry if you love it. Don't just give up because of a problem like test anxiety.

    • @kaitlynp5823
      @kaitlynp5823 2 роки тому +3

      @@Jynxedlove Sadly, if it tanks your gpa, then that might be a good idea. That or get a teacher that grades primarily off school work rather than tests. Some teachers grade differently so it really depends.

    • @Jynxedlove
      @Jynxedlove 2 роки тому +3

      @@kaitlynp5823 I mean I'm long out of college, and medical issues not being addressed tanked my GPA.

  • @User_2
    @User_2 5 років тому +57

    This video feels a lot more like "practical chemistry" than "educational chemistry", love it.

  • @emmamattson4253
    @emmamattson4253 5 років тому +76

    I am clueless about all of this stuff, BUT I love watching and listening to your videos. I feel like I'm in a science class I missed out on.

  • @freddiemercury8090
    @freddiemercury8090 5 років тому +81

    Your channel is so interesting and cool! Although I’m just a 15 year old chemistry enthusiast, I would really like to do stuff like you someday! ♥️

    • @NileRed
      @NileRed  5 років тому +37

      I'm glad you like it :)

    • @muzankibutsuji4671
      @muzankibutsuji4671 2 роки тому +2

      You're a Freddie Mercury fan and I am a MOONWALKER

    • @ye8348
      @ye8348 2 роки тому

      You’re 18 now, so?

  • @kumabanh1744
    @kumabanh1744 5 років тому +33

    Read the title and thought “my washer already does a pretty good job at that”

  • @johnsmith-qn2gd
    @johnsmith-qn2gd 5 років тому +263

    Do quinine from tonic water

    • @supersonictumbleweed
      @supersonictumbleweed 5 років тому +17

      Hail Schweppes

    • @danielcogburn4355
      @danielcogburn4355 5 років тому +15

      fun fact, tonic water glows blue under UV light.

    • @ashencloud2158
      @ashencloud2158 5 років тому +28

      Daniel Cogburn this is due to quinine, the point of this comment

    • @elephystry
      @elephystry 5 років тому +1

      Ashencloud
      You’re assuming that he didn’t know that.

    • @thomasgoodwin5636
      @thomasgoodwin5636 4 роки тому +1

      How much quinine is in tonic water though

  • @nononattono
    @nononattono 5 років тому +14

    Wow, this was so fun!! I’m a linguist, so I never dabbled much in chemistry, but it was always the science I enjoyed the most. I’d love to see a full extraction!! You were so informative!

    • @ilexdiapason
      @ilexdiapason 2 роки тому +4

      im a linguist currently procrastinating a syntax assignment by watching this, and i feel solidarity across time and space with this comment

    • @nononattono
      @nononattono 2 роки тому +3

      @@ilexdiapason 3 years later and I too am currently avoiding some syntax work I have to do. Great linguists think alike

  • @ccaio5585
    @ccaio5585 3 роки тому +19

    One reason I really love chemistry is that even masters get confused. There are so many combinations of things that could happen

  • @Munden
    @Munden 5 років тому +4

    Love being a supporter of one of the most fascinating channels on UA-cam.

  • @boba_fairy
    @boba_fairy 2 роки тому +6

    Even though I find all of his videos really interesting, my favorite parts is near the beginning or end when he includes just pictures of him having fun. By far my favorite part about learning applied science and chem is actually enjoying what you're doing. For someone whose main job is probably spending laborious hours on conducting these kinds of interesting experiments, it feels really good seeing that they enjoy what they do :)

  • @0xESSEL
    @0xESSEL 5 років тому +182

    Hey NileRed, I have seen your videos pop up in my recommended feed a lot and just recently clicked onto one of your videos for the first time. Since then I have watched quite a bit of your videos, and your videos are really fascinating. I know next to nothing about chemistry but yet you somehow make it interesting. Never thought watching a video about making soap would be so entertaining. I just want to say that your content here on UA-cam is amazing and you should keep it up! :D

  • @Asdayasman
    @Asdayasman 5 років тому +60

    The organic solvents did SOMETHING though. Could you use an automated repeated extraction like with a soxhlet extractor? Or would the heating costs then outweigh the labour + chemical savings?
    Still waiting for you to make tea with a soxhlet extractor by the way...

    • @User_2
      @User_2 5 років тому +2

      Considering how cheap the drain cleaner + small amount of acid are I don´t think there´s much point mucking about with solvents.

    • @CDCI3
      @CDCI3 4 роки тому

      Soxhlet extraction

  • @CIubDuck
    @CIubDuck 5 років тому +22

    I literally got an ad about indigo jeans dye, that's so oddly specific wtf

  • @piranha031091
    @piranha031091 5 років тому +8

    Yes! Bucket chemistry! I love bucket chemistry!
    Please show us the full scale extraction from the whole jean!

  • @DrWhaThaHell
    @DrWhaThaHell Рік тому

    Oh my god i love the way he keeps all the scenes in proportion to each other and throws off the sense of scale.

  • @tedmcleod-morris
    @tedmcleod-morris 5 років тому +2

    You just demonstrated subtractive dye for jeans. The patterns in your final sample are attractive and could be extended to creating a 'tie dye' look in jeans. Fabric artists would be very interested in decorating indigo dyed garments by protecting some of the fabric with tightly wrapped string, or even wax and then subtracting indigo. Congratulations.

  • @lovehawks2814
    @lovehawks2814 5 років тому +6

    Strictly speaking from a geological background, but strong bases are used in particle size analysis for clays and silts. What happens is that the base prevents the clay grains from clumping together by interrupting the static charge that builds up on the surfaces of the grains. Perhaps, a similar process is happening with the indigo.

  • @razor5cl
    @razor5cl 5 років тому +11

    Nice video as always dude! I'd love to see a scaled up indigo extraction at some point, that would be pretty damn cool to watch.

    • @NileRed
      @NileRed  5 років тому +7

      Yeah I think it'll happen!

  • @dejanaur
    @dejanaur 5 років тому +1

    I'm so glad that I found your channel! You're videos are so fascinating and fun to watch and I really learn a lot. I think you explain things very cleanly and it's really easy to understand. And I also have a huuuugeeee amount of respect for you for putting in "fails"! Its a huge part of learning and I really appriciate it.Lots of love! Keep up the amazing work!

  • @samuelpell2673
    @samuelpell2673 5 років тому +1

    The true mark of a great UA-cam channel is an audible promotion. Glad to hear that you made it to stardom

  • @darrianweathington1923
    @darrianweathington1923 5 років тому +3

    Time to make some white- blue jeans

  • @Kunait.
    @Kunait. 5 років тому +6

    Please do the full scale extraction, I think it's really interesting

  • @sketchywolff6365
    @sketchywolff6365 3 роки тому +1

    Every day I watch your videos and learn more about chemistry. It is absolutely one of my favorite subjects in school, and I enjoy learning about all of the different elements and chemicals you use in your procedures. I never even thought some of these things you made videos on could be possible.

  • @ransombot
    @ransombot 5 років тому

    So close to 500k subs, TY for keeping my interest in chemistry re-active and accessible. With the ignition stuff might talk with Cody's Lab & Scott Manley colabs might help put you over a bit faster and have some good input/problems to test. Anyhow keep doing what you do I really appreciate it.

  • @fwiffo
    @fwiffo 5 років тому +130

    Dissolve the cellulose instead. :)

    • @tesseract342
      @tesseract342 5 років тому +7

      damn didn't realize that someone already commented this

    • @e00drik1
      @e00drik1 5 років тому +3

      Such a severe reduction/ dehydration could denature the indigo.

    • @GiovanniCarloIglina
      @GiovanniCarloIglina 5 років тому

      Maybe with the Schweizer solution.

  • @alexanderdechaneet4001
    @alexanderdechaneet4001 5 років тому +3

    The PH of the sodium hydroxide is quite large (14), making it a base, and neutralising the acid in the iron out (with a PH of one, highly acidic), making it turn into water and salt. This makes the indigo come out of solution.

  • @Somedude20282
    @Somedude20282 5 років тому +1

    Honestly; I find these videos super fascinating when i’m awake, and relaxing when I’m tired! I can easily fall asleep listening to your voice

  • @anthonyberube946
    @anthonyberube946 3 роки тому

    I absolutely love you Nile Red... Thank you so much for all of your videos!

  • @mmmhorsesteaks
    @mmmhorsesteaks 5 років тому +3

    Either you're forming a ketal that's more soluble; and/or the indigo is precipitating as a charge-stabilized colloid. As soon as you acidify it, the colloid breaks and the indigo clumps together.

  • @nutellaftw8864
    @nutellaftw8864 5 років тому +15

    Try to extract MSG from common foods like tomatoes, seaweed, and more.

  • @bradleyhowes848
    @bradleyhowes848 5 років тому

    Yes please! I’d love to see a full extraction. It would be interesting to see if the solution could be applied by pouring it on the jeans or dripping to selectively remove the indigo to style the jeans.

  • @forknspoon3275
    @forknspoon3275 4 роки тому

    This dude is absolutely crazy!! Every video I watch my mind gets blown! I never have any idea of wtf he’s talking about or how he does it but this dude does it.

  • @aleenamurphy1182
    @aleenamurphy1182 5 років тому +3

    please full scale extraction. love your videos. especially with my fear of chemials so im glad you do this so i dont have to, lol

  • @vlaicud
    @vlaicud 5 років тому +12

    Could you make another Edible Chem video? Maybe about MSG? It seems very interesting

  • @sandervandaatselaar
    @sandervandaatselaar 5 років тому

    Great video. I'm surprised the indigo can be removed from the fabric so well. I love the improved quality of the photography.

  • @justusfelix2441
    @justusfelix2441 5 років тому +1

    I love this channel! High quality

  • @aajjeee
    @aajjeee 5 років тому +3

    maybe air wasnt enough to completely destroy the reducing agent and the mix of oxidized and non oxidized indigo somehow helped it solubilitse the acid probably was able to remove the reducing agent and subsequently only the 1.5 mg could solubilize

  • @dudumaurina2
    @dudumaurina2 5 років тому +21

    The sodium hydroxide probably formed a salt with the indigo, since it has a N-H group that is a bit acid. When you added the HCl you converted the salt back to indigo.

    • @grgvv
      @grgvv 5 років тому

      The N-H bond shouldn't be so acidic to get deprotonated by NaOH

    • @dudumaurina2
      @dudumaurina2 5 років тому +6

      I think it should, apparently indoline has a pKa of 4.9 (www.scripps.edu/baran/heterocycles/Essentials1-2009.pdf - I know, not a very good source, but good enough for a youtube discussion =P). In indigo the pKa might be even lower because of the carbonyl group.

    • @rpearson
      @rpearson 4 роки тому

      According to predicted data from chemicalize.com the strongest acidic pKa is 8.48. Honestly take the time to check it out, this compound has some interesting characteristics IMO. Indigo will not work in the search bar but its IUPAC name will "(2E)-2-(3-Oxo-1,3-dihydro-2H-indol-2-ylidene)-1,2-dihydro-3H-indol-3-one". Let me know your thoughts!

    • @rpearson
      @rpearson 4 роки тому

      @@grgvv I think it does. Check out the chemicalize data - It's really interesting.

  • @nickd5333
    @nickd5333 5 років тому +2

    Nile Red I love your videos, keep inspiring people to love science.

  • @charlesham9214
    @charlesham9214 2 роки тому +1

    The denim sample from the second wash method looks beautiful. If you could do that process to an entire pair of jeans it would create a Rorschach Test / Tie-Die pattern that would look amazing and be completely unique from each other.

    • @k.y.6148
      @k.y.6148 8 місяців тому

      Yeah, I loved that design! I immediately thought of the marketing possibilities.

  • @whatevernamegoeshere3644
    @whatevernamegoeshere3644 5 років тому +58

    I'm sorry, Mama, I never meant to hurt you
    I never meant to make you cry
    But tonight I'm 0:56

    • @aljaberhk
      @aljaberhk 5 років тому +10

      [Whatever name goes here] how to delete somebody’s UA-cam comment

    • @elephystry
      @elephystry 5 років тому +2

      I don’t get it

    • @okayaki7567
      @okayaki7567 4 роки тому

      i had to google it to get it why don't i listen to Eminem

    • @JohnCena-kn9tv
      @JohnCena-kn9tv 3 роки тому

      @@elephystry eminem

  • @cushshonvlogs420
    @cushshonvlogs420 5 років тому +6

    15:45 Is it just me or did he photoshop those headphones on his head😂🤣😂😂

  • @bonzwaygo
    @bonzwaygo 5 років тому +2

    Would you be interested in doing a series on pigments? Vermilion is a interesting pigment to make and there are a lot of others that's could produce exciting results

    • @weissv
      @weissv 2 роки тому

      read in a car, thought you said you wanting nilered to get you pregnant

  • @jigpu2630
    @jigpu2630 5 років тому

    "Ignition!" is an absolutely wonderful read -- lots of interesting chemistry and funny anecdotes to go with them. Glad to see you recommending it :)

  • @julianvargo9997
    @julianvargo9997 5 років тому +5

    Hey! I have taken up a recent interest in chemistry and I tried looking for the "glucose/fructose" heavy molecules. In other words, the molecule would be Si6Li12S6. I couldn't find anything on it, and I was also wondering what such a molecule would do to a cell.

  • @geckooTec
    @geckooTec 5 років тому +4

    Please make a video on making or extracting MSG (Monosodium Glutamate) from food

  • @tb303wpf1
    @tb303wpf1 2 роки тому +1

    Anyone who thumbs downs this man is just a hater, and a snowflake.
    This is the best chemistry channel on UA-cam for many reasons.
    Nile and Cody are the best 2.

  • @among-us-99999
    @among-us-99999 5 років тому +15

    How about something like a chemistry speedrun?
    Maybe with the Aspirin->Tylenol process

  • @modestus2826
    @modestus2826 5 років тому +5

    today is now a good day

  • @philipjfrys
    @philipjfrys 5 років тому

    This is like science class! I just found your channel and I love it.

  • @zbeekerm
    @zbeekerm 5 років тому

    I’m so happy you enjoyed the book! Also, I take it (from your use of analine) that you never got your hands on any UDMH. Too bad, but I’m pleased that you still have all your fingers and eye brows!

  • @bcikablam3578
    @bcikablam3578 5 років тому +5

    that clip at the end IS really satisfying. daily dose of internet should use it

  • @muhammadbilalkhan2916
    @muhammadbilalkhan2916 5 років тому +3

    Can you do a video on making bio diesel from different plant oils such as sunflower or olive or corn??

  • @nicholasscott1803
    @nicholasscott1803 5 років тому +1

    Take a look into liquid-liquid extraction. Some indigo salts probably formed with some sodium from the iron out and caused the indigo to be much more soluble in water. Then when you added the HCl it pulled the sodium back off of the indigo, causing it to crash out. Its commonly done with benzoic acid and phenanthrene in lab courses in college.

  • @smji5269
    @smji5269 5 років тому

    this is by far the only channel that actually has a thumbnail that isn't fake or click-baity

  • @R42PH
    @R42PH 5 років тому +70

    15:44 : Usually it's science that turns you into a crazy scientist, not Audible

  • @12thealchemist
    @12thealchemist 5 років тому +70

    Did you consider a Soxhlet extractor?

    • @yatagarasu1495
      @yatagarasu1495 5 років тому

      12thealchemist probably hasnt one :/

    • @ljfaag
      @ljfaag 5 років тому +11

      I think he does, I remember him using it in an earlier video

    • @piranha031091
      @piranha031091 5 років тому +1

      It would take a *MASSIVE* soxhlet to do it on the whole jean though!

    • @mmmhorsesteaks
      @mmmhorsesteaks 5 років тому +2

      Indigo is just so insoluble (unless you go to solvents like DMF, which he doesn't want to use) there's not much point to it.

    • @lolgamez9171
      @lolgamez9171 5 років тому

      @@yatagarasu1495 he has a small one from the pepper video

  • @tom_something
    @tom_something 5 років тому +1

    If you could find out what caused the indigo to appear to dissolve in water (or at least finely suspend itself in water) then maybe you can repeat those conditions to get the indigo to drop directly out of the cloth into the water suspension.

  • @U014B
    @U014B 5 років тому +1

    Incredible, you just invented indigo recycling! Now our old jeans shan't go to waste, for our new ones can just use the indigo from those instead of having to synthesize more!

  • @jakubrudzki2325
    @jakubrudzki2325 5 років тому +14

    When will be the next livestream?

  • @nickbeliveau1556
    @nickbeliveau1556 4 роки тому +14

    He’s eventually gonna come out with a video called “ making methamphetamine”

  • @ryanslabandtheworldofchemi3690
    @ryanslabandtheworldofchemi3690 5 років тому

    Best science channel on UA-cam , together with Cody's Lab and The Action Lab , congratulations !

  • @tinah9059
    @tinah9059 2 роки тому

    NileRed and NileBlue are both awesome scientific channels that entertain me. I never knew such a thing could use so many chemicals! This is a really cool thing to watch! Kepp up the awesome work!

  • @ZankGarage3DPrintingAndDIY
    @ZankGarage3DPrintingAndDIY 5 років тому +4

    Cool , scientific and interesting. Niceeeee

  • @CREWAPP_
    @CREWAPP_ 3 роки тому +3

    me: i know lots about chemistry!
    also me: liquid turn solid color blue acid yes

  • @peregrine1970
    @peregrine1970 5 років тому +2

    Nice job. If only I saw this in the 80s... extracting the indigo would have produced some pretty styling jeans from the look of it... almost a tie-dye/bleaching effect.

  • @samson5erb312
    @samson5erb312 5 років тому +2

    I am very interested looking forward to see the full scale extraction

  • @danielf3623
    @danielf3623 5 років тому +3

    Huh. I thought *Ignition!* was out of print. When I went looking for it about 5 years ago I had to download an ancient pdf of it.

  • @yusefdanielhassounharmouch1520
    @yusefdanielhassounharmouch1520 5 років тому +3

    Don't know that much chemistry, but could the indigo have stayed in solution because of the sodium citrate in the iron out?

  • @SomeMorganSomewhere
    @SomeMorganSomewhere 5 років тому

    Ignition! is an AWESOME book, also terrifying in parts but AWESOME none the less.

  • @desert2195
    @desert2195 4 роки тому

    We use sodium dithionite and sodium citrate to extract Fe and Al from soil for mineralogical analysis. Similarly Oxalic acid and ammonium oxalate to do the same for Si, Al, and Fe (poorly crystalline forms). Using a salt to help suspend and hold the extract to obtain higher yields. Additional freezing the solution will cause precipitate to form for recapture.

  • @geniewitabeanie
    @geniewitabeanie 4 роки тому +3

    "Point something obvious out"
    "Make you look stupid"
    Me:

  • @papanyanz
    @papanyanz 5 років тому +6

    If indigo blue dissolved in base then why not to try a simple acid-base extraction approach ?

    • @leocurious9919
      @leocurious9919 5 років тому +1

      This. Why is he not trying that? Maybe its not good if you want to dye cotton (so they use the reduced form), but it seems to be working well for just dissolving the dye?

  • @m1k3y48
    @m1k3y48 5 років тому +2

    This is by far and away the coolest channel on youtube, thank you for your work! (Also the Cinemaldehyde clock reaction video was helpful information source for a ChemE Car timer.)
    Edit: Ignition is an amazing read! Highly recommend it to anyone who hasn't read it yet.

  • @seeigecannon
    @seeigecannon 5 років тому +1

    A couple of extraction ideas: You can try using a Soxhlet Extractor with ethyl acetate to always be washing with a clean solvent. If you stick with the solvent that you ended the video with then you should take a tube of PVC or something (after you make sure it is chemically compatible), and loosely fill it with the denim. Pour the solvent in the top, and let it drain out of the bottom. This will ensure that the solvent is getting more and more concentrated as it passes through the denim. When you think the denim that is at the top is fully extracted then you can push more fresh denim into the bottom and squeeze the denim at the top out of the pipe.
    Source: I am helping design a pilot scale counter-current extractor. If anybody has any questions about this process (that is not directly related to my job), feel free to ask.

  • @quiteindeed6809
    @quiteindeed6809 4 роки тому +5

    I get the dye out by wearing them.

  • @erakettu1395
    @erakettu1395 5 років тому +12

    If there's a hydroxide bound to the oxydized indigo it might get protolyzed with an hydrogen ion from the acid to water? My guess, I haven't studied chemistry in years

    • @EarlofDestruction
      @EarlofDestruction 5 років тому +3

      I think that it would be more likely that in basic conditions -NH- group gets deprotonated therefore increasing solubility.

    • @erakettu1395
      @erakettu1395 5 років тому

      Could be. Anyways I see it as most likely being some polar group in bound with the oxy-indigo that gets protolyzed with the acid

    • @Mp57navy
      @Mp57navy 5 років тому +1

      It seems the wikipedia page for Sodium dithionite has all the answers. As the compound "Sodium hydrosulfite" does not exist and Sodium dithionate is referred to as such.
      > Although it is stable in the absence of air, it decomposes in hot water and in acid solutions. (en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sodium_dithionite)

  • @hardstylerockercify
    @hardstylerockercify 5 років тому

    My guess on the solubility fix is that the NaOH you added in advance of the iron-out deprotonated the secondary amines and allowed for the salt to form between the indigo and iron out. The HCl in turn protonated the indigo preferentially allowing it to return to its normal crashing out behavior in water

  • @gioianash6191
    @gioianash6191 4 роки тому

    It made such a cool pattern on the jeans for the double washed test! You should do the same experiment with a whole pair of jeans

  • @kadenlarson9992
    @kadenlarson9992 5 років тому +6

    could you do a soxhlet extraction of the denim after grinding it finely with a blender?

  • @kiganbriody6314
    @kiganbriody6314 5 років тому +6

    wait... so this whole time i thought you could use bleach to extract indigo?!
    ;-; whoops

  • @Tom-uq1gu
    @Tom-uq1gu 5 років тому +2

    This was in my suggested and I’m not sure why but it was very interesting and now I’m subbed so 🤷‍♀️

  • @daniellamaster9000
    @daniellamaster9000 5 років тому

    The indigo has 2 vinylogous amides with both carbonyls conjugated together. Additionally, it is also essentially a 2-acylaniline dimer and the electron withdrawing carbonyl decreases the electron density on the aniline nitrogens making the N-H protons more acidic. With this combination of functional groups and the presence of several pathways for the negative charge to be delocalize, the base is probably able to deprotonate one of nitrogens to generate the water soluble anion.

  • @ericliu8087
    @ericliu8087 5 років тому +7

    That's cool and all, but can you extract happiness from the void that is life?

  • @brandons1095
    @brandons1095 5 років тому +22

    Nile Red is the best UA-cam channel ever!!!!! Please let this be top so everyone knows!

    • @modestus2826
      @modestus2826 5 років тому +1

      I CONCUR

    • @NileRed
      @NileRed  5 років тому +5

      Thanks!

    • @BothHands1
      @BothHands1 5 років тому

      we know

    • @submerse9993
      @submerse9993 5 років тому +1

      You're like Cody, if you used proper safety procedures and pronounced bleach as "Blech."

  • @KnakuanaRka
    @KnakuanaRka 5 років тому +1

    I’m fascinated by chemistry, but don’t know much more than the basics about it. I do have a recommendation for this, though: the washed scraps of denim from your second extraction clearly have dark spots where the fabric folded and didn’t move around much, so the indigo didn’t have a chance to dissolve and escape from the fabric. If you ever plan to do this on a larger scale, like with a whole pair of jeans, I’d recommend either using some method that lets you physically move the solution to shake it and the fabric around to shake loose the dye (although I can’t think of a way to do it that wouldn’t require a huge dissolving solution and way too much of the chemicals), or cut the fabric into far smaller pieces (or even just shred it) so that they can move around more freely.
    Also, you consistently referred to the reducing agent as dithionite in the first video; is that another term for hydrosulfite?

  • @Michael-bt7bq
    @Michael-bt7bq 3 роки тому

    Acid/base extraction always works. It was the first thing I thought of.

  • @Saiserk
    @Saiserk 5 років тому +20

    Saluditos a todos los de habla hispana