this is a question I had for a long time and I did quite some research over this but thank you very much for telling many more people these interesting things, keep the videos coming :)
These experiments are not only very informative, but awesomely fascinating. This also takes great deal of efforts, time and fortune, Kudos from your chemist follower here in the Philippines Ric Capistrano !
My jaw was dropped multiple times. This video went far beyond all expectation, very cool. Thanks for sharing all the knowledge, and filming and narrating it so well. You're talented in a multi-faceted way. Cheers!
Chemistry/ Nature is an enormous mind f#ck and I’ve learnt more from this channel (& a couple others) than I EVER even did in “school”. I truly wish I wasn’t deceived during my most interested years but I’m all-in now and that feels good. Thank you my friends!
It’s great to hear you aware of the indoctrination Kabbalah schools. The have hide the Light Krystal structure and implemented the Fibonacci vortex spiral spin instead. That’s the open polymer structure for the consuming market to manipulate and to control us by the evil money system.
@@terrandroid It has nothing to do with their strength. They are strong, but they are also brittle, which is why they shatter. Over-hardened, non-tempered steel does the same thing. It breaks like glass.
The cintered magnets use a formula (ratio of elements) that can hold a stronger field, theres other types that are not as strong magnetically but are stronger physically by having a true metallic crystal structure, for applications where the magnet needs to not break. Its a tradeoff between the required physical strength versus magnetic strength.
Now that we have some Neodymium, lets make some magnets! Great video, Chemistry was always dry and academic. Your techniques are interesting to watch. Thank you for posting!
For some reason I love this guys accent and find it so relaxing it puts me to sleep at night hahahaha i wonder where he is from to get such a strange accent?
not at all, nitric acid is easily made at home by distilling nitrates in presence of sulfuric acid, oxalic acid is sold for a couple dollars/euros in every hardware store.
I knew that rare earth elements can be hard to separate, but I naïvely thought that the neodymium in NdFeB magnets would be nearly pure. I’d guessed that it had to be or the magnet would be weak. Very interesting to know!
But isn’t it still relatively pure? I think that just by working in a specific atmosphere and burning chemicals down you could be introducing additives on the spot
Thoisoi2, I'm interested in how you dispose or recycle your toxic chemicals and resulting waste. Could you do a video on how some of this can be reclaimed, and how much repositories charge for waste storage? Thanks in advance.
I like this guy. Props on your English, very informative. And this my friends is why we should not sell short the Russians in science and technology, this guy knows his stuff. Theory, lab procedures and an excellent understanding of chemistry and the periodic table. My hat is off to you sir.
Many people have the misconception that America's technological lead during the cold war was because of basic science. This is not true at all. Most of the hardcore scientists making waves in America were European imports. America excelled more in industry. In fact, the Soviet Union had extremely advanced basic science. Their chemists and physicists were probably actually better. Even today, any American college research library worth its salt will have a few dozen shelves worth of old Soviet chemistry journals. The failures of the Soviet system were not scientific at all. Communism just doesn't work!
DOES anyone know what is the different magnet types, loadstones, horseshoe, ceramic, cobalt and neodymium strength numbers from lowest to highest magnetic strengths ??? Thanks.
Happy to give it a thumbs up and seeing the cat at the end was great. I have no idea why anybody in their right mind would give you a thumbs down for this video so please try to ignore all the thumbs down those must be just some sort of computer error or something
I can tell you Sir that a few years ago my neighbor took a Neo 52 strength magnet that was three inches diameter one inch thick. He did exactly what you did and found out that very little NEO was in the magnet. Sorry that I do not remember what amount was in the sample. Nice work fella.
I've purchased quite a few magnets from Amazon and such. Last time I Needed the most powerful ones i could get. It's crazy the difference in quality between the cheap ones and the more expensive ones. I purchased them from a company called k&j magnetics. The difference is night and day
I became interested in neodymium because of my interest in Alexandrite glass which changes color from pink Under incandescent bulbs to blue under fluorescent bulbs and even green under LED bulbs of certain frequency. Thank you for explaining all of that colorful action that was really awesome and watching the process of extraction was terrific.
"I needed to remove iron sauce" "Somehow extract near demon souls" You see, the auto generated English caption can't understand Russian Style English. But human ear does.
Dear sir, I really appreciate your channel. I'm Italian and I understand every word you say. Where are you from? Just a curiosity... Good job anyway, you feed my mind. Thanks!
"After a couple of blows from a hammer such magnet easily breaks into pieces" :-D I'd give an extra thumbs up for the comedy value of that to be honest.
Try “beating the shit” out of a cm thick slug of copper, stainless, brass, MOST metals won’t shatter like that, what are you on about?? He was doing it on wood so it appeared more bouncy but these magnets are so brittle that they regularly break when just snapping together.
@@DieAnderTier That depends entirely on their crystalline structure and that depends on how they have been treated. A heat abused brass casting will shatter if you look at it funny... Same goes for aluminium and pretty much every other metal. In any event you are missing the point. Saying something easily breaks when you hit it with a lump hammer isn't much of a demonstration of how brittle it is. It's a bit like saying the human thumb is very delicate because it easily breaks if you hit it with a lump hammer (Trust me on this one... I have fully scienced it)...
@@AnthonyHandcock Fair I guess. I just hate how easily those little bucky balls break. Hard drive magnets are cheap and plentiful so it doesn't matter if they chip but balls are "supposed" to be round. Lol I haven't tried that experiment myself but I did try the variation where the metal saw slips out of the groove near your thumb.... Hopefully that's enough data, we don't need to repeat these!
That was some really cool information brother because I have always been fascinated with magnets. And may God bless you always so that you can keep up your research and tell us more:-)
Someone needs to buy this dude's university an x-ray spectrometer.
For what?
@@ninoroes07 Need know what was in brown water. Has me up nights
Just love this channel :D
lol, didn't think i would see you here but i love both your and this channel! (hoffe dir gehts gut :D)
Mild shock :D both of you make great videos!
All i can think of is " hello my name is Borat..."
Yours isn't bad itself ;)
wow, not expecting you here. Great person you both
Fascinating. Great choice of subject matter for an experiment!
Him: ...then i decided to drop it into some nitric acid.
Me: Seems like a reasonable next step
This is your best one yet. We need to get your University a gas chromatograph, many used ones in the USA are available very cheap.
What would happen if one farted into a gas chromatograph?
@@markhall7646 damn! Asking the real questions here
@@markhall7646 I have no idea, but Science calls for an answer :)
@@markhall7646 hydrogen peaks
this is a question I had for a long time and I did quite some research over this but thank you very much for telling many more people these interesting things, keep the videos coming :)
These experiments are not only very informative, but awesomely fascinating. This also takes great deal of efforts, time and fortune, Kudos from your chemist follower here in the Philippines Ric Capistrano !
My jaw was dropped multiple times. This video went far beyond all expectation, very cool. Thanks for sharing all the knowledge, and filming and narrating it so well. You're talented in a multi-faceted way. Cheers!
Chemistry/ Nature is an enormous mind f#ck and I’ve learnt more from this channel (& a couple others) than I EVER even did in “school”.
I truly wish I wasn’t deceived during my most interested years but I’m all-in now and that feels good. Thank you my friends!
So true u tube university I’ve started a few businesses from learning on u tube
It’s great to hear you aware of the indoctrination Kabbalah schools. The have hide the Light Krystal structure and implemented the Fibonacci vortex spiral spin instead. That’s the open polymer structure for the consuming market to manipulate and to control us by the evil money system.
Even though I NEED subtitles for your videos, I love how knowledgeable and descriptive you are. Thank you. Keep the content coming
:)
"What are Neodymium Magnets REALLY MADE From?"
Cake and lasers. Duh.
no, I'm not involved!
I could see these videos by months, so interesting and educational, thank you!!
1) great video ✓
2) cool accent ✓
3) cat at the end ✓
Yeah, it worth subscribing.
I've had neodynium magnets attract each other fiercely enough to fragment upon collision. Truly an impressive material.
They break really fast, not very strong
It's not as impressive when you learn about how structurely weak those magnets are. It feels strong when holding but it's not.
Yes, consumer grade neodymium magnets should be in a harder shell than just that thin and cowardly metal skin they have by default.
@@terrandroid It has nothing to do with their strength. They are strong, but they are also brittle, which is why they shatter. Over-hardened, non-tempered steel does the same thing. It breaks like glass.
The cintered magnets use a formula (ratio of elements) that can hold a stronger field, theres other types that are not as strong magnetically but are stronger physically by having a true metallic crystal structure, for applications where the magnet needs to not break. Its a tradeoff between the required physical strength versus magnetic strength.
Love it just taking us on this adventure of chemistry 🙂
Qualitative analysis was always my favorite part of all chemistry.
Now that we have some Neodymium, lets make some magnets! Great video, Chemistry was always dry and academic. Your techniques are interesting to watch. Thank you for posting!
I like the way you say solution..... SalYooshAn... Great video mate.
Bro! Really well put together. I learned a lot. Thank you.
Science channels: “warning, don’t attempt any of this”
Me, an intellectual: i already blew up my house
How many idiots does it take to blow up a house? According to the above post, two.
Benjamin Baugh OH FU, I REALIZED XD
my face is like your DP now after reading your comment
@@The.Plague u too OP someone nerf him
I was a young teenager with a anarchist cookbook pretty young and me and my friends spent a lot of time with it.
Please never change your accent, is the second better thing about your videos, the first are these awesome facts that you provide to us.
For some reason I love this guys accent and find it so relaxing it puts me to sleep at night hahahaha i wonder where he is from to get such a strange accent?
Great video, love that shot of all the rare Earth oxides
I'm glad he knows what he's doing because it's a mystery to me!
All those chemicals must cost a fortune,if you can even get them.
Neat vid,thanks !
not at all, nitric acid is easily made at home by distilling nitrates in presence of sulfuric acid, oxalic acid is sold for a couple dollars/euros in every hardware store.
@@yannickramouillet3742 Yes and the rare earth metals that cost more than gold?
I'm sure this guy knows what he's doing, and it's nice to see what happens. I'd be scared that this would blow up in my face!
I knew that rare earth elements can be hard to separate, but I naïvely thought that the neodymium in NdFeB magnets would be nearly pure. I’d guessed that it had to be or the magnet would be weak. Very interesting to know!
But isn’t it still relatively pure? I think that just by working in a specific atmosphere and burning chemicals down you could be introducing additives on the spot
I stopped to believe in the purity of magnets immediately as China was mentioned as the sole producer.
UA-cam recommended a gold star channel! #subscribed
4:45 UA-cam captions:"extract near demon souls"
7:54 ""Okay I get it" whispers a demon"
( ͡◉ ͜ ʖ ͡◉)
Nani!?!!?!
My text said how to extract nerd emails LOL
8:10 Rosie demon impurities
Neodimium not near demon duuu
In 2:40 also
Interesting video. I appreciate the thorough approach to the analysis. Cheers. :)
Thoisoi2, I'm interested in how you dispose or recycle your toxic chemicals and resulting waste. Could you do a video on how some of this can be reclaimed, and how much repositories charge for waste storage? Thanks in advance.
He flushes them down the toilet
Melts them down and makes straws, then throws them away and blames the plastic companies for killing turtles?
Jk 😅😅😅
I think NileRed channel create a video like you describe
Or the video is in his second channel, NileBlue. I forget which one
@@farrasalharits5966 Thanks!
@@farrasalharits5966 red
Lovely, been looking for a procedure for some time. Gonna try this....
I like this guy. Props on your English, very informative. And this my friends is why we should not sell short the Russians in science and technology, this guy knows his stuff. Theory, lab procedures and an excellent understanding of chemistry and the periodic table. My hat is off to you sir.
Many people have the misconception that America's technological lead during the cold war was because of basic science. This is not true at all. Most of the hardcore scientists making waves in America were European imports. America excelled more in industry. In fact, the Soviet Union had extremely advanced basic science. Their chemists and physicists were probably actually better. Even today, any American college research library worth its salt will have a few dozen shelves worth of old Soviet chemistry journals. The failures of the Soviet system were not scientific at all. Communism just doesn't work!
DOES anyone know what is the different magnet types, loadstones, horseshoe, ceramic, cobalt and neodymium strength numbers from lowest to highest magnetic strengths ??? Thanks.
Love your work and passion for learning.
Love the way he says HOWEVER❤️
One of your best videos, great detail to the experiments
Happy to give it a thumbs up and seeing the cat at the end was great. I have no idea why anybody in their right mind would give you a thumbs down for this video so please try to ignore all the thumbs down those must be just some sort of computer error or something
Some people think these science channels compete. They actually compliment each other (and help the audience understand different accents).
I can tell you Sir that a few years ago my neighbor took a Neo 52 strength magnet that was three inches diameter one inch thick. He did exactly what you did and found out that very little NEO was in the magnet. Sorry that I do not remember what amount was in the sample. Nice work fella.
Thnx for another great educational video !☺👍📚🔬
Your knowledge of chemistry is amazing
I've purchased quite a few magnets from Amazon and such. Last time I
Needed the most powerful ones i could get. It's crazy the difference in quality between the cheap ones and the more expensive ones. I purchased them from a company called k&j magnetics. The difference is night and day
Great video! One suggestion regarding the intro: AlNiCo magnets were discovered and manufactured many years before the first SmCo magnets.
I became interested in neodymium because of my interest in Alexandrite glass which changes color from pink Under incandescent bulbs to blue under fluorescent bulbs and even green under LED bulbs of certain frequency. Thank you for explaining all of that colorful action that was really awesome and watching the process of extraction was terrific.
4:49 with the captions 😆
Somehow extract near demon souls 😂
"I needed to remove iron sauce"
"Somehow extract near demon souls"
You see, the auto generated English caption can't understand Russian Style English. But human ear does.
And. 7:54. And 8:03 and 8:14, lol! Rosie demon impurities.
4:45 "I needed to remove iron sauce and somehow extract near demon souls"
What a great channel. It reminds me of the golden years of youtube
Systematic analisys of rare earths really requires knowledge. Chapeau
You lost me way back but still watched it all. Marvelous!
Seeing as I have these at home. Its crazy to finally know what helps make them so strong.
I love his accents. Like a drunkard but smart Estonian guy.
I never thought chemist would be so fun to watch.
The guy knows his stuff and I always learn a lot from this channel, but turn on CC and the subtitles are entertaining on their own.
These are great videos - the narration is very calming and informative, ^oo^
^oo^
@@uwuowo4856 Strigine not porcine - though pigs are brilliant intelligent creatures, ^oo^
@@bernardthedisappointedowl6938 I know pigs are smart...I love pigs🤤🤤
@@uwuowo4856 Wisdom indeed, ^oo^
Thanks Borat. Great content!!!
8:10 are you saying Praseodymium? or what im trying to take notes
Subtitles crack me up, "edema magma magnets" and "new demon magnets"? Sign me the f**k up for that crazy shit 😂
Fascinating! Thank you for your efforts!
Your videos are always interesting!
Thanks again for another interesting upload
Dear sir, I really appreciate your channel. I'm Italian and I understand every word you say. Where are you from? Just a curiosity... Good job anyway, you feed my mind. Thanks!
So , you are a Dr at a very forward thinking university . Love your videos .
Lovely explanation and chemical reaction demonstration. Reminds me of my graduate studies... :)
INSANE just discovered this channel by this video! Keep on :D
incredible video! Thank you!
Another excellent video! So Interesting.
Very informative. I didn't expect the contaminates, didn't think about it. Could prove useful in the future. Thank You
Terrific video, keep up the great work
Wow, deep dive, high quality!
Love it. Well done. Hard to believe that a university does not have a possibility to do gas chromotagraphy....
Learnt a few thing in this tyvm 👍🏼
You're awesome!
Great video!
Nice work man! Keep it up...
Very good video!!! Thank You!
Superb video, very interesting. Please keep them up!
when you reacted the brown powder with nitric acid, what was the reactant with the HNO3 and what was the insoluble sediment underneath
Very interesting video. Many thanks.
"After a couple of blows from a hammer such magnet easily breaks into pieces" :-D
I'd give an extra thumbs up for the comedy value of that to be honest.
Stupid
Try “beating the shit” out of a cm thick slug of copper, stainless, brass, MOST metals won’t shatter like that, what are you on about?? He was doing it on wood so it appeared more bouncy but these magnets are so brittle that they regularly break when just snapping together.
@@DieAnderTier That depends entirely on their crystalline structure and that depends on how they have been treated. A heat abused brass casting will shatter if you look at it funny... Same goes for aluminium and pretty much every other metal. In any event you are missing the point. Saying something easily breaks when you hit it with a lump hammer isn't much of a demonstration of how brittle it is. It's a bit like saying the human thumb is very delicate because it easily breaks if you hit it with a lump hammer (Trust me on this one... I have fully scienced it)...
@@AnthonyHandcock Fair I guess.
I just hate how easily those little bucky balls break. Hard drive magnets are cheap and plentiful so it doesn't matter if they chip but balls are "supposed" to be round. Lol
I haven't tried that experiment myself but I did try the variation where the metal saw slips out of the groove near your thumb.... Hopefully that's enough data, we don't need to repeat these!
@@DieAnderTier Well quite. Sometimes one experiment is all the sciencing we need to establish the validity of our hypothesis :-D
Can we cut it? I have only one which is small and cylindrical. It looks well-polished so I am a little scared to cut it.
That was some really cool information brother because I have always been fascinated with magnets. And may God bless you always so that you can keep up your research and tell us more:-)
Im new t9 this channel learning about magnets and now i can tell my teacher how they really made magnets
Wish I remember more from chemistry, this stuff is so fascinating
Excellent work!
great content, thanks for sharing.
That was an interesting presentation topic. Very informative. Well done.
Fascinating! Great channel, thanks for sharing
I like the way he says “ however “lol
Love his habit of gratitude
He also thanks the element.
Very nice, put together well and the information was what i was wondering with mine, im not sure on the different compositions of the n52 and n30 etc.
Very nice. Thank you
Wow , one of my interesting topic you covered in this video .
That reaction looks like it would make an awesome air freshener. I’ll let you know.
Great channel .
Awesome vid, man!
The line at 3:30 where he kinda repeats himself has me laughing my ass off.
Great vid though :3
Very cool video. But I want some slow-mo footage of you hitting the magnet with the hammer.
Your videos are informative and get right to it.
you have very good knowledge of science 👌👍
It's a good channel I love it
Make videos of electrolysis of different things and distillation of different things.
Best Experiment. This could turn twoards Fusion
If you do a test for radioactivity, the sensor detects the presence of nuclear radioactivity in the magnets. It's worth trying to check this out.