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Nuclear Engineer Reacts to NileRed "Making Uranium Glass"

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  • Опубліковано 31 сер 2023
  • Original Video ‪@NileRed‬ • Making uranium glass
    Nuclear Engineer Reacts to NileRed "Making Uranium Glass"
    Radiation Dosage Chart: informationisb...

КОМЕНТАРІ • 877

  • @tfolsenuclear
    @tfolsenuclear  11 місяців тому +293

    Thank you so much for watching! If you are interested in seeing my reaction to another crazy homemade uranium experiment, please check out my reaction to Styropyro's URANIUM CRAYON! ua-cam.com/video/GuoAQ4SXtv4/v-deo.htmlsi=4RMyLLdiW38fIEzz

    • @redmist6630
      @redmist6630 11 місяців тому +2

      time to get hella learnt

    • @Axendane_P
      @Axendane_P 11 місяців тому

      Hello Sir! Can you check out QSERF- Quantum Science Energy Reasearch Facility ? Please. Is a roblox game like the one you watched earlier this year.

    • @miroslavpalas4734
      @miroslavpalas4734 11 місяців тому +1

      I bet ya people get the green glowy uranium image from Bart in the intro of The Simpsons.

    • @danbrit9848
      @danbrit9848 11 місяців тому

      Only you could get one of the beads..slip it in your pocket before the check at work lol

    • @jezzamobile
      @jezzamobile 11 місяців тому

      Great video! 😹👍

  • @gabbytabbycat
    @gabbytabbycat 11 місяців тому +4106

    Nigel was on the Trash Taste podcast, and he talked about this project. He asked the Canadian government about the legal implications of amateur/private citizen chemistry using uranium. What he was told was that the laws in Canada around radioactive materials only apply to using them for their radioactive properties. Therefore because the fluorescent property of uranium glass comes from its chemical properties and not from its radioactivity, legally he could just throw all his radioactive waste in the regular trash, but they “strongly prefer [he] didn’t”. 😂

    • @tillburr6799
      @tillburr6799 11 місяців тому +762

      Alternative phrasing “we dont have a reason to kick your ass for putting it in regular trash, but by god will we try to find one”

    • @Natso_1
      @Natso_1 11 місяців тому +159

      ​​@@tillburr6799Sounds more like the US, but Canada could probably pull it off.

    • @thewhitefalcon8539
      @thewhitefalcon8539 11 місяців тому +29

      @@tillburr6799 They wouldn't bother.

    • @neoqwerty
      @neoqwerty 11 місяців тому +118

      @@tillburr6799 That would be the country we are the hat of.
      Canada'd be like, "We don't have a reason to send people with horses to trample you, don't give us one and clean up your messes or we'll hit you as hard as the maple syrup thieves."

    • @livedandletdie
      @livedandletdie 11 місяців тому

      @@Natso_1 I mean, Canada the only nation where the cops are more corrupt than it's own government, and it's government is the definition of corrupt.
      Canada: Horse police tramples elderly lady and she ends up in hospital with broken bones... also Canada, no one was hurt today, I don't care if you got video evidence of us harassing the citizens.

  • @Xnoob545
    @Xnoob545 11 місяців тому +1222

    This nilered guy is no joke
    He can turn cotton into cotton candy, plastic gloves into grape soda, plastic gloves + vanilla into hot sauce

    • @sophiegrey9576
      @sophiegrey9576 11 місяців тому +160

      This dude's a modern day alchemist and that kicks donkey

    • @Yichh
      @Yichh 11 місяців тому +59

      Wait until he turns silver into gold

    • @Tunkkis
      @Tunkkis 11 місяців тому +75

      Not to mention toilet paper into rectified ethanol and diamonds into carbonation.

    • @titaniummechsx3324
      @titaniummechsx3324 11 місяців тому +20

      One day, he will turn dirt into diamonds

    • @Mercure250
      @Mercure250 11 місяців тому +9

      @@Yichh That's... gonna be more difficult. Definitely outside the scope of chemistry for sure.

  • @ferretforrent1144
    @ferretforrent1144 11 місяців тому +1429

    i love Nilered, but dont worry about safety! He built his own personal lab for these videos, complete with fumehoods and plenty of storage and PPE. He also has his own glassware (the beakers are all labeled "NileRed")

    • @k1zer100
      @k1zer100 11 місяців тому +8

      Did he really build the lab or does he just rent it from his uni?

    • @ferretforrent1144
      @ferretforrent1144 11 місяців тому +148

      @@k1zer100 pretty sure he built one into his house or something. He used to do them in his kitchen but that's gets pretty nasty quickly. He should have a video of his lab somewhere. Maybe on Nileblue

    • @FaZekiller-qe3uf
      @FaZekiller-qe3uf 11 місяців тому +228

      @@ferretforrent1144It's not part of his house. IIRC it's his own lab (everything in it is his own), the actual building it's in is a lease.

    • @theppotato1667
      @theppotato1667 11 місяців тому

      ​@@k1zer100he used to do these out of his parents house but at around 1 million subscribers he had saved up enough to make a lab, he rented a like 4 room places, broke one of the walls to make a room bigger, and bought all he needed to do what he needs (including PPE) he has a couple videos on this process and it's genuinely really cool. Online resellers were his savior apparently lol

    • @ChewyTwee
      @ChewyTwee 11 місяців тому

      @@k1zer100 He is renting a space for a lab, it is not inside of his house it is a separate office space. There are some videos on his second channel Nile Blue of him moving into the lab a few years back iirc!

  • @flomojo2u
    @flomojo2u 11 місяців тому +415

    Yep, Nile Red/Nigel has a degree in chemistry and is a real pro. Some of his experiments have spanned months, and he has a remarkable tenacity to stick with and repeat things until he gets it right.

    • @_sandy_
      @_sandy_ 11 місяців тому +17

      some have taken years! nigel is amazing :)

    • @Techno_Idioto
      @Techno_Idioto 11 місяців тому +19

      He's also made superconductors and aerogel, which is pretty awesome.

    • @_sandy_
      @_sandy_ 11 місяців тому +11

      @@Techno_Idioto he made frickin supercritical fluid and has probably made meth

    • @ChadDidNothingWrong
      @ChadDidNothingWrong 11 місяців тому +9

      The ferrofluid video convinced me. His results were better than any commercially sold examples he found.

    • @EthanRadell
      @EthanRadell 11 місяців тому +9

      ​@@_sandy_meth is actually p easy to make for guys like Nigel lol it's not that complicated. It would only make like a 5 min video

  • @misswhovivian868
    @misswhovivian868 9 місяців тому +119

    I love NileRed, he'll casually do some uranium chemistry and then turn around and say "I've never made glass before" as if that were the difficult/dangerous part 😂

    • @4Ninjastarz4
      @4Ninjastarz4 Місяць тому +5

      Ironically that turned out to be the only step he had any issues with as well 😂😂

  • @-cj-
    @-cj- 11 місяців тому +771

    Always admire Nile's attention to safety. Out of any science youtuber I've seen that does chemistry, they are the safest, despite working with arguably far more dangerous things

    • @cobaltchromee7533
      @cobaltchromee7533 11 місяців тому +45

      Actually, that makes perfect sense. When working with more dangerous things, you should probably be more careful. For example, I don't see why someone like Thought Emporium would need to use safety goggles, when they're working with living cells.

    • @AlldaylongRock
      @AlldaylongRock 11 місяців тому +7

      NurdRage also does some spicy stuff

    • @-cj-
      @-cj- 11 місяців тому +13

      @@cobaltchromee7533 I don't even mean in scale with the type of work done, I just mean in general, I feel a lot of science youtubers don't have proportionally appropriate safety standards

    • @telioty
      @telioty 11 місяців тому +12

      I thought the safest was Explosions and Fire /s

    • @dr.derpington
      @dr.derpington 11 місяців тому +13

      Him vs "i did a thing"

  • @petrolhead0387
    @petrolhead0387 6 місяців тому +16

    I work in nuclear reprocessing and waste management. We have a plant that we use for vitrification of radioactive effluent and liquor, it's not too dissimilar to the process that Nile uses here.
    Obviously it's on a greater scale and the contents are highly radioactive, meaning we have certain safeguards in place. But the end result is still the same, radioactive glass.
    We use vitrification because it is easier to track and control solid waste than liquid waste. All the liquid that is boiled off as part of the process is filtered of any remaining radioactive particles, then converted to steam which is also used to power some of the other plants on the site.
    Vitrification is one of the cleanest and safest ways to deal with radioactive effluent.

  • @TheMNWolf
    @TheMNWolf 11 місяців тому +257

    I'm a fan of @NileRed and I do believe he was working with a lab-grade fume hood at this point in his UA-cam career, and at his own off-site lab no less. Some geniuses have all the luck 🙂Also worth noting that he has a video about the cleanup from this experiment on his NileBlue channel which is also a good watch.

    • @AB-80X
      @AB-80X 11 місяців тому +9

      Yes. This was way after he set up his lab. He has two hoods as far as I recall. He's always safe.

    • @BoyBlunder66
      @BoyBlunder66 11 місяців тому +20

      Yeah, he has a really great professional setup now... Old Nile was hilariously jank though.

    • @kittycatpilot
      @kittycatpilot 11 місяців тому +7

      If you still want some shed chemistry, Tom from the Explosions&Fire/Extractions&Ire channels has some good jank.

    • @BrickNewton
      @BrickNewton 11 місяців тому +7

      ​@@kittycatpilotToms awesome, he laughs in the face of yellow chemistry.

  • @mme725
    @mme725 11 місяців тому +396

    Oh yeah, thats 99% why "radioactive = green". Its because from radium painted glow in the dark watches and clock faces, uranium glazed ceramics, uranium glass, uranium in jewelry, etc.
    It certainly didn't come out of nowhere lol

    • @XtreeM_FaiL
      @XtreeM_FaiL 11 місяців тому +9

      The green still comes from phosphor.

    • @PneumaticFrog
      @PneumaticFrog 11 місяців тому

      ​@@XtreeM_FaiLokay and?

    • @XtreeM_FaiL
      @XtreeM_FaiL 11 місяців тому +7

      @@PneumaticFrog And that's it.

    • @sambrown6426
      @sambrown6426 11 місяців тому

      Okay, that makes a lot of sense. Thanks.

    • @arthurmoore9488
      @arthurmoore9488 11 місяців тому

      @@XtreeM_FaiL Sort of / depends. Many lights, and presumably phosphors, put out UV and use a coating. In this case, the uranium can act as that coating.

  • @conorstewart2214
    @conorstewart2214 11 місяців тому +91

    Something worrying that was found out a few years ago was to do with “negative ion bracelets” or something like that, basically similar to healing crystals. What was found was that some of these bracelets and necklaces, mixed in with the silicone were thorium particles and were radioactive enough to cause some damage if you used them as intended. Also since they were just mixed in with the silicone, the thorium could probably come out/break off during everyday use, allowing the thorium to get inside people.
    There were a few UA-cam videos on it but I can’t remember who by.

    • @invictus_1245
      @invictus_1245 11 місяців тому +33

      Thought emporium I think, it would definitely be a cool reaction to his videos about those companies.

    • @katrinabryce
      @katrinabryce 11 місяців тому +9

      I think Thunderf00t did one

    • @Cdrsan
      @Cdrsan 11 місяців тому +8

      @@invictus_1245 I agree, I would love to see this guy react to thought emporium's videos about "health products" loaded with thorium.

    • @RobinTheBot
      @RobinTheBot 11 місяців тому +5

      Big Clive iirc

    • @killingtimeitself
      @killingtimeitself 11 місяців тому +6

      not only just thorium being embedded in the silicone, but also thoriated blankets and other items that could potentially contain loose thorium powder which is not only easy to potentialy spill but also inhale. those bracelets are probably the safest form of that garbage ironically.

  • @nontrashfire2
    @nontrashfire2 11 місяців тому +130

    Based on the fire extinguisher, he got to put out metal fires, I believe he takes safety seriously.

  • @JunkyardBashSteve
    @JunkyardBashSteve 11 місяців тому +98

    Nigel, or Nile, is my favorite education-based youtuber, and I appreciate this look at his stuff. I'm enjoying you watching and educating along with these kinds of channels.

  • @aidyn1989
    @aidyn1989 11 місяців тому +55

    First time seeing your channel, but I'm a long-term fan of Nile. All his videos are extremely well detailed, and he even has videos about the cleaning process of the different chemicals that he used. He has videos about his entire lab setup, which is honestly impressive for someone doing UA-cam videos. He loves what he's doing, and it shows in the videos. Spending days, or even weeks, on a single video idea for him is nothing. Some of the experiments he did took MONTHS.

  • @garethjones6342
    @garethjones6342 11 місяців тому +58

    For your personal enrichment, yellowcake is a bright yellow, and most of the chemical processing of spent fuel is also quite yellow, being oxides, etc.
    ALSO as a glassblower, you CAN buy uranium glass rods, theyre just very expensive and rare. old stock mostly.

    • @TheSpongiform
      @TheSpongiform 11 місяців тому +7

      I found a piece of uranium glass in a pile of old trash in the woods right next to my house. It's an old cookie jar lid.

  • @BigJohn4516
    @BigJohn4516 11 місяців тому +34

    Uranium salts were also used as a pigment for bricks. Early in my career, I worked at a research facility which was built in the early 20th century. A radon assay was done in one of the buildings and radon was detected in the corner rooms. It turned out that the source of the radon was the yellow brick in the walls.

    • @The_Keeper
      @The_Keeper 11 місяців тому +3

      That is so cool... and horrifying.
      In my country Radon buildup is a common problem, and your comment has me wondering whether the yellow bricks in some of the older houses may be adding to the natural levels.

    • @GaiatheSage
      @GaiatheSage 10 місяців тому +5

      the yellow brick road is taking on entirely new forms of meaning now. 😂

  • @davewilson4427
    @davewilson4427 11 місяців тому +38

    I love Nile red! I apologize if I haven’t noticed it yet, but have you ever watched Cody , the guy he referenced with the thunder can? He’s awesome and a very worthwhile rabbit hole for reactions

    • @dobber43
      @dobber43 11 місяців тому +2

      Yeah codyslab is a trip

  • @Rhidongo
    @Rhidongo 11 місяців тому +17

    Finally, some actually good reaction content!
    Love to see it. Keep up the great work, my dude!

  • @Zulmofo
    @Zulmofo 11 місяців тому +78

    yoooooooo nilered rocks

    • @wow-roblox8370
      @wow-roblox8370 11 місяців тому +10

      Well this is nilered glass, but nilered probably makes rocks aswell

  • @themadzucchini
    @themadzucchini 11 місяців тому +7

    The reason the non-florescent uranium compound becomes florescent in the glass is because the uranium gets oxidized when you mix it with the glass. Uranium can have tons of different oxidation states, but only specific ones are florescent. I forget which ones, +12 maybe? Regardless, it's this oxidation state that gives rise to the fluorescence. You could say when the uranium is added to the glass it's not the same uranium compound, but that's kind of a funny way to say that. The uranium is now part of the glass structure, so it's not really it's own compound in the glass.

  • @lerkzor
    @lerkzor 10 місяців тому +24

    I am delighted to hear an expert opine that NileRed really IS as meticulous as he seems to be in all his videos. I have enjoyed Nile's content for years, and it always seemed to me that he was taking reasonable precautions.

  • @johns7734
    @johns7734 11 місяців тому +16

    My wife used to be a high school chemistry teacher and we would go to flea markets with a Geiger counter to find household radionuclides, like "vaseline" glass, so called because it's color resembles vasiline. You can actually tell if it was manufactured in the 30's or later by how hot it is. In the 30's, it was made with raw uranium. After the 40's, it was made with depleated uranium.
    We also looked for "Fiesta ware" plates and bowls. The orange-red ceramic glaze was also made with uranium.

    • @dwong98
      @dwong98 5 місяців тому

      Many people still do that because of the resell value. Many garage/flea market people do not fully realize what they have and sell them underpriced

    • @chanmandeath2993
      @chanmandeath2993 2 місяці тому

      personally fiesta ware scares me, if only somewhat. because fiesta ware is more likely to chip or scrape the glaze if its used as intended, and you ingest that, which then wreaks havoc on your innards until you figure out what happened.

  • @Astronetics
    @Astronetics 10 місяців тому +3

    UA-cam randomly reccomended your channel and I'm glad it did. This was great content especially considering your education, background, and expertise in the matter!

  • @nenben8759
    @nenben8759 11 місяців тому +19

    Nigel usually handles most syntheses he does in his fumehood
    Generally, flat black or white background means its in his fumehood
    Not always
    Uranium chemistry from what ive seen in demonstrations tend to be pretty colorful, and often kinda green or yellow or blue.
    Metal chemistry tends to be colorful
    Also, uranyl nitrate is extremely soluble, and subsequently toxic, and some sources say it can absorbed through skin. Some say absorption isnt significant, but skin contamination is still significant.
    The danger is still ingestion, but now its really really solible and will dissolve into the sweat on your hands rather than just sitting there

  • @DomiaAbrWyrda
    @DomiaAbrWyrda 11 місяців тому +30

    newcomer to your channel here; kudos to you for making this an actual reaction video! Your reactions add a lot to the original video which is what a react video should always strive to be.
    Too many people just steal other creators content under the name fair use and don't add anything to the video except laughing along and that really annoys me.

    • @grobol129
      @grobol129 11 місяців тому +1

      This! Actual add of info, Personal comment/stories, warning when he doesn't know much about the subject, ... and so much more. From a little channel i'm amazed. Actual legitimate good stuff.

    • @Malicious2013
      @Malicious2013 10 місяців тому +2

      This type of reaction video may still fall under copyright misuse, unfortunately. When you watch the entire video in full, it's always a little bit sketchy. I, as a general rule, try to avoid reaction videos that watch the entire source video because it really hurts the original creator. Taking little snippets of revelant material is generally a better practice. This guy does it better than most, though the commentary does consume less of the video duration than the original content, which is, again, risky regarding content protections.
      Legal Eagle has a good video regarding this topic. Worth a watch if you're interested.

    • @parasitelights3158
      @parasitelights3158 10 місяців тому

      @@Malicious2013 There should be, at least in theory, absolutely no problem with copyright infringement, at least according to LegalEagle's late September video addressing the systematic theft of content in the Reaction Streamer community. This reaction is about 40% longer in duration than the original video, and with the additional perspective and information added, it can easily be considered transformative, and it was made more than three and a half years after the date of the original upload, which for this period has realized almost 12 million views.

    • @Malicious2013
      @Malicious2013 10 місяців тому +1

      @parasitelights3158 It still uses an unedited full viewing of the original content. That's pretty tough to dispute lol.

  • @guywithatippmann
    @guywithatippmann 11 місяців тому +5

    Depleted uranium actually is used in nuclear weapons just as a tamper instead of core material its density making it well suited to this role coupled with the fact that when bombarded with enough neutrons it too will react

  • @bradhernlem1548
    @bradhernlem1548 11 місяців тому +17

    Bead shops are a great place to look for modern uranium glass ... or at least that was my experience a couple decades ago. A keen eye is almost as good as a geiger counter. I was even able to procure some within the Berkeley (CA) "nuclear-free zone". Alas, the beads were not free. Even so, a lot less trouble than rolling your own.

  • @brandonzanzig3200
    @brandonzanzig3200 11 місяців тому +2

    Thanks for the extra perspective on his video. I enjoyed watching this through your eyes. Have a good day mate.

  • @FalcoGer
    @FalcoGer 11 місяців тому +33

    5:35 I built my own counter from a cheap solder kit for 20 bucks. I found the asphalt outside my flat is about 4 times more radioactive than the woods around it I was looking into building a gamma ray spectrometer, but the crystal alone would come in at hundreds of money units. Certainly not the price range for me for something just to toy around with.
    36:40 most cheap counters that offer measurements in Sv/h or similar are calibrated to specific materials, like uranium. So when it detects some amount of particles, it assumes those particles to be in proportion as per the calibration material.

    • @cranberrysauce61
      @cranberrysauce61 11 місяців тому +1

      had my curiosity took hold and looked up the geiger counter used (PRM-9000) and found its $680usd and is calibrated to cesium-137

    • @rdizzy1
      @rdizzy1 11 місяців тому

      They are probably using phosphogypsum in the ashphalt, that is why it is radioactive.

  • @Ben_Kimber
    @Ben_Kimber 11 місяців тому +41

    I heard once that the reason why depleted uranium shells are so good at penetrating armour is partially because of the density of depleted uranium, but also because of the way it interacts with the armour itself. A typical steel shell (or pretty much any other metal used in ammunition, for that matter), tends to mushroom out at the front as it passes through armour. Apparently, a depleted uranium shell essentially sharpens itself as it passes through armour instead of mushrooming out.
    This is something I heard about maybe once or twice quite a while ago, and I have not researched the topic, so please take the above paragraph with a grain of salt.

    • @lukeevans1945
      @lukeevans1945 11 місяців тому +27

      It's oblative so sheds the outside off rather than mushrooming, while kind of self sharpening it doesn't really get sharp, however since DU is pyrophoric the dust/fragments auto ignite when in contact with the air. So it's a super dense armour piercing dart that doesn't mushroom out, sets things on fire inside and outside the tank (such as the big autoloaders in the Russian tanks leading to the turret popping off like a high powered party popper.)

    • @Ben_Kimber
      @Ben_Kimber 11 місяців тому +4

      @@lukeevans1945 I see. Thanks for the correction and the additional info.

    • @unknownhours
      @unknownhours 11 місяців тому +12

      Uranium is also a very hard metal. Not as hard as tungsten, but harder than steel. Though density is mostly what you care about in a penetrator.

    • @Ben_Kimber
      @Ben_Kimber 11 місяців тому

      @@unknownhours True.

    • @anandabraham9223
      @anandabraham9223 11 місяців тому

      lead is the decay product of Uranium

  • @56Seeker
    @56Seeker 11 місяців тому +3

    What a wonderfully warm, generous reaction. I really enjoyed this.

  • @josephwisniewski3673
    @josephwisniewski3673 11 місяців тому +3

    We use boric acid in glassmaking to lower the thermal coefficient of expansion, which reduces strain as the glass cools. That’s how you make old-fashioned pyrex. 1100°C is actually a little cool for borosilicate. The person who taught my wife and I glassblowing used to run the glass furnace up to about 1200°C to "fine" it, and that was a soda lime glass.

  • @mattiemathis9549
    @mattiemathis9549 11 місяців тому +3

    NileRed is my favorite chemist!! My granddaughter and I watch his videos together. I’m so happy he got his new lab. He has the exuberance and fascination of a young person, with the education and knowledge to make chemistry understandable and fun. He also never quits. He is always trying to make whatever he’s doing better.

  • @Armpitfan
    @Armpitfan 11 місяців тому +3

    Thank you for reacting to this! Was realy fun to se you get so excited!.

  • @GrowlieDave
    @GrowlieDave 11 місяців тому +6

    I heard that the association between radiation and glowimg green originally stems from WW1. They used to paint the watch faces and compasses with a radioactive paint that would glow green at night and in the dim trench light (I think radium). I think many just assumed that anything radioactive glows green. Personally i like the blue more.

    • @AB-80X
      @AB-80X 11 місяців тому

      It can glow in a variety of colours.
      The story you are referring to, is the Radium Girls. An absolute nightmare.

  • @KamiNoBaka1
    @KamiNoBaka1 11 місяців тому +5

    I've been watching NileRed long enough to know that usually when he's showing chemicals outside of containers like with that uranyl nitrate, it's under his fume hood. So you can rest easy on that one, dude.
    Also powdered sodium diuranate is the forbidden mac n cheese powder.

  • @clairecelestin8437
    @clairecelestin8437 11 місяців тому +2

    I really enjoyed this reaction; you brought a lot of insight. It's cool when safety-focused people from different disciplines still converge on the same risks and mitigation strategies.

  • @sheepish132
    @sheepish132 11 місяців тому +7

    This guy does some of the coolest stuff. On NileRed, he has his more serious projects, like making cherry soda out of paint thinner, transparent wood, or bromine (his favorite carcinogen). On NileBlue, he has his more silly projects, like making the world's purest cookie.

  • @TheAHuman
    @TheAHuman 8 місяців тому +2

    Ah Nigel. He is someone who has truly earned his title of “the most dangerous man on UA-cam”

  • @sleepib
    @sleepib 11 місяців тому +3

    Depleted Uranium is used in thermonuclear weapons as a tamper, and the neutrons from the fusion reaction cause it to undergo fission itself, significantly increasing the yield.

  • @jackielinde7568
    @jackielinde7568 11 місяців тому +2

    For a reference, here are the temps/targets I use when doing fusing and slumping art glass: (I work with System 96 glass, so garget temps will vary.)
    from Room Temp to about 1,000 Deg F/357.8 Deg C - Fragile zone. Solid glass in this range is subject to thermal shock and can shatter. Not an issue for making powder into glass.
    960 Deg F/515.6 Deg C - Soak target temp to allow glass to relax and anneal, so it won't likely shatter on it's own.
    1250 Deg F/676.7 Deg C - Soak target Temp when ramping up temperature. Also edge of plastic/fluid state where glass is soft and taffy like.
    1350 Deg F/723.3 Deg C - Soak target temp for slumping panes of glass into molds.
    1400 Deg F/760.0 Deg C - Soak Target Temp for making smaller bits of glass stick together (Fusing). At this temp, glass retains it's sharp edges and corners.
    1450 Deg F/787.8 Deg C - Soak Target Temp for Fusing. Used to soften the edges and corners, but still leave them intact.
    1500 Deg F/815.6 Deg C - Soak Target Temp for Fusing. Used to take glass near puddle like. All edges and corners melt off and round out due to surface tension.
    1700 Deg F/926.7 Deg C - Soak Target Temp for Casting glass in a mold. Mostly used for solid chunks being melted down inside the mold.
    2300 Deg F/1260 Deg C - Target temp for melting glass, especially for "glory hole" kilns. This is the temp for pouring glass into a mold.
    The kiln I have can only go up to 1700 Deg F, because it's a small kiln used for slumping and fusing glass. I have ramped it that high in an attempt to make glass spacers for a fountain I never finished. I don't know how fluid Glass blowers need their glass to be, but I assume it's somewhere between 1700 Deg F and 2300 Deg F. (I'm being lazy and not looking it up.) For what Nile needs, I think he needed to go hotter. I don't remember what I posted in his video when I watched it a while ago. The nice thing is he doesn't need to slowly ramp up the temperature in the kiln he's using because he's working with powder and not solid glass chunks. HOWEVER, he will have to SLOWLY ramp down the temperature and probably have a few soak holds to anneal the glass so it won't just shatter. Don't remember if he did that. Luckily, they're smallish pieces, so he can be a little aggressive with the cool down. Larger pieces have to go as slow as you can and then even slower to keep the temperature equalized in the piece.
    EDIT: If you want to see if there is stress in the glass (from how it was created), you need a light table and two pieces of polarized plastic. Place one polarized sheet on the light table. Place the glass piece on top of it. Then place the other polarized piece on top and turn the top piece (90 Degrees) until the area around the glass piece is black. The light will go through the glass and be visible. Any stresses in the glass will show up as lines and the cloudier the piece, the more stress it has and likely to break. However, Tempered Glass uses this stress against itself to make the glass incredibly strong and likely to break into cubes instead of shards when it does break.

    • @UsernameXOXO
      @UsernameXOXO 11 місяців тому +1

      I'm hindsight it's ridiculously obvious that a hairline fracture in glass would polarize light, but I would never have thought of it. Physics is so damn cool.

  • @golden--hand
    @golden--hand 11 місяців тому +5

    I wish Nile did more chemistry related to radioactive materials so you would watch more for this channel XD

    • @AB-80X
      @AB-80X 11 місяців тому +2

      What exactly would you want him to do? There's only so much he can do, both from a safety and legal standpoint.

    • @golden--hand
      @golden--hand 11 місяців тому +1

      @@AB-80X I mean, whatever is interesting to him? I like all of NileRed stuff; the 'food' related ones are interesting, like Gloves to Grape Soda. But literally anything that strikes his fancy I'd be happy to watch more of.
      What do you mean 'safety and legal', you mean copyright strikes? If so, its entirely at the discretion of NileRed. Im not under the impression hes anti-reaction videos, so I don't think there is a high likelihood of any real risk of doing a video from him every so often. Otherwise, Im not so sure what you mean.

  • @tmkj13
    @tmkj13 11 місяців тому +14

    please do more reactions to nilered/nileblue!!

    • @wessltov
      @wessltov 11 місяців тому +3

      Or Nilegreen even

  • @Erdymus
    @Erdymus 11 місяців тому +3

    If you wanna check more about his safety steps and his setup, he has another channel for that called NileBlue. I think he has a cleanup video for this project specifically on there.

  • @JohnHansknecht
    @JohnHansknecht 11 місяців тому +2

    I lived near a pottery artist as a kid. She had drawers full of various powders for ceramic glaze. One drawer contained about 10lbs of powdered uranium ore. Makes the bright orange glaze once fired on pottery.

  • @dennisk5818
    @dennisk5818 11 місяців тому +3

    NileRed has done some impressive organic and inorganic chemical processes. He'll start with something like Nitrile gloves and end up after numerous reactions with 'grape soda'. Love watching him and he does work in a good lab.

  • @americansmark
    @americansmark 11 місяців тому +2

    I pick up and deliver at the Fiestaware plant in Newell, WV on occasion. I took my radiation detector in there once and it spooked me. Even though they stopped making radioactive dishware decades ago, it's still fairly radioactive for a factory. That side of the factory is now a tourist stop and the gift shop area iirc. Definitely worth checking out if you ever end up along the Ohio River in WV.

  • @fusionwing4208
    @fusionwing4208 11 місяців тому +1

    you are literally finding every science/comparison youtuber I watch! XD glad to see the youtubers I find all seem to be more than aware of each other

  • @Sir_Uncle_Ned
    @Sir_Uncle_Ned 11 місяців тому +5

    Depleted Uranium is amazing for weapons because not only is it denser than lead meaning you can carry more energy, it also ablates through armor in a very specific way that actually makes it sharper as it goes through, making it more effective with more armor to go through. I wouldn't want to be on the receiving end of one of those shells.

  • @fbiagentmiyakohoshino8223
    @fbiagentmiyakohoshino8223 11 місяців тому +20

    if you ever try out gaming. you should play minecraft with the industrial craft 2 mod (specifically ic2 classic) (its got nuclear reactors in it and theres so many ways you can set up one, its also a late game power source and the best power source)

    • @_CDLP
      @_CDLP 11 місяців тому +2

      there's also HBM's nuclear tech mod

    • @LatvianVideo
      @LatvianVideo 11 місяців тому +3

      bigger reactors and mekanism also do

    • @fbiagentmiyakohoshino8223
      @fbiagentmiyakohoshino8223 11 місяців тому

      @@_CDLP stuck on 1.12.2

    • @fbiagentmiyakohoshino8223
      @fbiagentmiyakohoshino8223 11 місяців тому +1

      @@LatvianVideo well yeah, but ic2 is the og though

    • @laurdy
      @laurdy 11 місяців тому

      How about Chernobyl: The Legacy Continues? (needs an old PC though)

  • @KeithPhillips
    @KeithPhillips 10 місяців тому +1

    Ah, the best measurement! The "banana equivalent dose!" 😂

  • @HenriFaust
    @HenriFaust 11 місяців тому +1

    Eating out of it isn't too bad, microscopic glass particles will just pass on through. It's when you breathe the particles in that you start having real problems, because they get stuck in your lungs. This is the same problem that occurs with cigarettes, as the mineral fertilizer used in fields is contaminated by lead-210 and polonium-210. The same fertilizer is used to grow food in the USA, by the way, but food doesn't normally get trapped in your lungs like tobacco tar.

  • @seanspartan2023
    @seanspartan2023 11 місяців тому +1

    20:00 the reason his Uranium compound wasn't fluorescent under the UV light is because most of the UV light was blocked by the glass container.

  • @mickpearce6939
    @mickpearce6939 5 місяців тому

    Uranium was commonly used as a glaze in making tiles prior to around 1940. Lots of old houses will still have these, and they are slightly radioactive.

  • @Merennulli
    @Merennulli 10 місяців тому +2

    It always amazes me that everyone has the same examples for the various levels of exposure. Dental scan, airplane trip, banana, etc. I assume it's from everyone having similar charts when they learned it, but the consistency is still impressive.

  • @OdesiusKrosa
    @OdesiusKrosa 4 місяці тому

    I have NEVER heard this about smoking. Not for doctors, nay sayers, nagging Nellies, etc. Thank you so much for enlightening me on this additional risk from smoking. I’m genuinely grateful!

  • @5688gamble
    @5688gamble 11 місяців тому +2

    I thik the green glow myth also comes from radium and tritium radioluminescense as green is the brightest and most common color used with zinc sulfide being ideal for the purpose. I wonder if if a self illuminating phosphorescent form of uranium glass that illuminates itself with charged particles is possible. Like a self glowing crystal that doesn't need a phospor coating.

  • @jackielinde7568
    @jackielinde7568 11 місяців тому +1

    30:00 - The reason the one piece broke is because he didn't anneal the glass and bring the temps down gradually. Stresses weren't allowed to be released in the annealing process... and it ripped itself apart.

  • @Xorthis
    @Xorthis 10 місяців тому +1

    It's awesome to see Nigel's science and methods confirmed by an actual expert in the field. Thank you for this video, very entertaining!

  • @jameslockard6956
    @jameslockard6956 8 місяців тому

    Cobalt bottles and glass wear used to be popular. I had a friend who had a kitchen cabinet full of cobalt mixing and punch bowls. Cobalt dishes etc. One night he put the cobalt punch bowl into his microwave for one minute. He turned out the lights removed the bowl which glowed brighter a than most glow in the dark friz bee disc's. I was amazed. He died of cancer 3 years later. Not saying the cobalt kitchenware gave him cancer but I avoid it. The Philips Milk of Magnesia bottles used to be made of cobalt glass before they switched to plastic.

  • @PonteBata
    @PonteBata 11 місяців тому +1

    Great video!

  • @josephskulan750
    @josephskulan750 2 місяці тому

    Uranium glass is a staple in scientific glass blowing shops, because it gives a tight seal with metal, such as you would want around electrodes extending from an external power supply into a vacuum chamber.

  • @BM-jy6cb
    @BM-jy6cb 11 місяців тому +6

    I'm not a chemist, but always wonder where the fumes in a fumehood go - surely it's not just vented outside. How are they treated? It must be more sophisticated than something like a carbon filter?

    • @AB-80X
      @AB-80X 11 місяців тому +5

      Organic chemist here.
      It really depends on what you are working with.
      I work with Fluorinated Organophosphate compounds which can be extremely toxic and dangerous, as part of alternative pesticide research. We vent everything though chemical scrubbers. Some hoods use "mechanical" filters that are designed to catch small particles, which you would use in such a case as with NileRed. There are also some chemical scrubbers that can be used in this situation. What setup he uses? Who knows. I'm guessing a mix of HEPA and chem filters.
      And lastly, in work where you have low level toxicity and low pollution, you simply vent it outside of the building without any treatment. Fume hoods and their filter systems come in a wide variety of types. Ours are as simple as a caustic scrubbers that will react with the vapours given off and thus neutralizing them.

    • @kyrresjbk7876
      @kyrresjbk7876 9 місяців тому

      I once visited a lack working with highly radioactive materials, and the filtration system for their "fume hoods" took up as much space in the building as the rest of the lab...

    • @BM-jy6cb
      @BM-jy6cb 9 місяців тому

      @@AB-80X Belated thanks for the detailed reply. This is exactly the kind of thing I was wondering.

    • @BM-jy6cb
      @BM-jy6cb 9 місяців тому

      @@kyrresjbk7876 That's very reassuring 😐. Also interesting too.

  • @liamthedevastator
    @liamthedevastator 6 місяців тому

    I really appreciate seeing two knowledgeable people discuss a topic. Chemistry and Nuclear Physics are topics that probably 99% of the population will never know the details of let alone feel like they have any truck with, so seeing a video narrating the process of making uranium glass and having commentary by an expert--and that BOTH videos are so digestible by the layperson--is a really cool window into an otherwise mystical realm that we could never hope to get to. Thanks for sharing!

  • @zanthrasw
    @zanthrasw 11 місяців тому +1

    It’s not particularly related to this video, but have you heard of the Okla mine nuclear reactor? I think it is one of the most fascinating cases of nuclear criticality I have read.

  • @deepwinter77
    @deepwinter77 5 місяців тому

    Some fun and interesting facts about DU ammunition.
    The M1 Abrams also has depleted Uranium ammunition.
    It's a long solid dart of DU stabilised with a discarding plastic sabot, the sabot keeps the DU round centered and stable in the round and bore while firing.
    It falls away when it exits the bore of 120mm canon. DU rounds are used by The Army, Navy, Marine Core and Air force in a variety of guns and vehicles.
    Some notable vehicles are the AV-8B Harrier Jump jet, The Navy's Phalanx CIWS M61 Vulcan Gatling style rotary cannon.(This may have been subsequently replaced with Tungsten rounds)
    The Bradley, the Marines LAV-25
    And of course the legendary General Electric GAU-8/A Avenger 30mm 7 barrel auto cannon ( Currently manufactured by General Dynamics) on the A-10 Thunderbolt II, to name few vehicles and weapon systems that utilise DU rounds.
    The US & UK are the only nations who admit to using DU ammo
    The DU round is 20% more effective than Tungsten rounds, on contact with armore the tip of the round fractures in a way that makes the round sharper.
    As it's penetrating the armour it gets extremely hot and will self ignite when it contacts the oxygen on the inside of the tank.
    Brutal for the enemy.

  • @rickwiles8835
    @rickwiles8835 11 місяців тому +7

    Uranium glass is commonly known as Vaseline glass, my mother used to collect it and yes they did make drinking glasses from that material.
    I'd like to see you do a reaction to the Radium Girls.. I'm sure there are several educational history based utube videos on them It's an incredibly sad story.
    If you are unaware of the story at the turn of the 20th century people liked glow in the dark watches. At the time watch makers painted the face of watches with a radium based paint. To get a very fine point on a paint brush the workers would lick the ends of their brushes. After a year or more at the job their teeth would fall out, or their jaws would break from radiation poisoning. Many would eventually get cancer and die a long painful death.

    • @noodlelynoodle.
      @noodlelynoodle. 2 місяці тому

      Vaseline glass is just the name for one of the specific colors of uranium glass, it's the yellower stuff rather than the green or blue

  • @ryanbrown982
    @ryanbrown982 11 місяців тому +1

    I used to do glasswork for fun. I still have all the stuff. I have one rod of uranium glass somewhere. Someday I'll make something cool out of it.
    Anealing the glass is 100% required. Glass kilns have timers to control the ramp down. You can also see the internal stress with polarized light. If there's and internal stresses, you don't sell the piece.

  • @HenriFaust
    @HenriFaust 11 місяців тому +7

    21:18 Boric acid is used not for shielding properties, but because it increases the durability of glass. You might recognize borosilicate glassware brand names like "Duran" or "Pyrex" that have been stamped on equipment in both kitchens and chemistry labs, because it is both highly durable and heat resistant.

    • @RobinTheBot
      @RobinTheBot 11 місяців тому +2

      Pyrex is usually not borosilicate anymore :(

    • @HenriFaust
      @HenriFaust 11 місяців тому

      @@RobinTheBot Really? I guess I shouldn't trust their Wikipedia page.

    • @wingracer1614
      @wingracer1614 11 місяців тому +1

      @@HenriFaust It used to be but they have changed to something else which is why if you look, you can find many articles and videos about Pyrex exploding.

    • @wingracer1614
      @wingracer1614 11 місяців тому

      He never said it was used for shielding. He said it was used for its neutron absorption in reactors. He never mentioned its use in glass other than saying it was interesting it was used in both

    • @m.k.8158
      @m.k.8158 10 місяців тому

      @@RobinTheBot the lab glassware still is, but the USA made consumer-grade stuff is now made of soda-lime glass-much inferior to the borosilicate glass used before.

  • @nunyabusiness9013
    @nunyabusiness9013 9 місяців тому

    Depleted Uranium is used for armor piercing rounds because of it's high density/weight. It's roughly 3x the mass of an equal volume of lead.

  • @imdonkeykonga
    @imdonkeykonga 9 місяців тому

    thanks for talking professionally about this enthusiasts! this is very needed in youtube

  • @Modenut
    @Modenut 5 місяців тому

    Way back in the early 80s I read a book called "After The Flood" (by Swedish author P.C. Jersild). The story takes place after a nuclear world war. In one sequence the characters are piloting a boat outside Stockholm in the archipelago and I remember one of them mentioning that they need to be careful because there were glass banks that might sink their vessel. That detail always remained with me.

  • @trevorhaddox6884
    @trevorhaddox6884 11 місяців тому +1

    Meteorites will also form glass when they hit due to the plasma heating them in the atmosphere. I have a glass infused meteorite that has blue and white glass covering it.

  • @Rusty-METAL-J
    @Rusty-METAL-J 9 місяців тому +1

    I love this video and that video. I have a piece of Uranium(U, 92) glass from the 1950s that I think has Uranium Dioxide as the special sauce. It is an ashtray. It is a yellow-green color and is called Vaseline Uranium Glass. It doesn't have a seam of any kind and it fluoresces just like his and gives Geiger/Dosimiters plenty to talk about. I don't have a proper display case so I have it wrapped in the foam it came in. I'm 70s born 80s kid and when I was a child every time you heard about Radiation it was just Uranium(U, 92) that was always the element mentioned. U is what gave some superheroes their powers. Also, not many people knew about the unnatural elements to follow starting with Neptunium(Np, 93) and Plutonium(Pu, 94) If Uranium is the murderer of the Periodic Table Plutonium is a Hannibal Lector Crazed Serial Killer. Plutonium is 1 of, if not the only element that can spontaneously undergo fusion/fission with no reason and no warning.

  • @RovingTroll
    @RovingTroll 11 місяців тому +1

    Deleted uranium is super dense, which is why it's used in munitions. Heavy small rounds impart more force via kinetic energy transfer

  • @jackielinde7568
    @jackielinde7568 11 місяців тому +1

    BTW, Metals (and their oxides, et al) are added in TINY AMOUNTS to color glass. Window Glass has a little bit of Iron in it to give it that clear look, but the edges will always be a bit green. I think Gold makes glass red, and I don't remember the other color combinations. I just buy my glass in sheets already colored.

    • @UsernameXOXO
      @UsernameXOXO 11 місяців тому

      In plant GMO they use use a tiny "shotgun" loaded with nano-size gold mixed in water and the genetic material they want to transfer, since gold is not going to react with the samples or host plant. That nano solution is indeed red!

  • @Pietukor
    @Pietukor 11 місяців тому +2

    I would love to see more NileRed!

  • @3v068
    @3v068 11 місяців тому +1

    Literally, the only thing Nigel could have done better in his video was to slowly turn down the temperature in the furnace to properly cure the glass.

  • @alisalavine1052
    @alisalavine1052 11 місяців тому

    I was born in the late 60s and came of age before the end of the Cold War. The ever present threat of USSR nuclear bombs falling out of the sky was a low level but constant fear during my childhood.
    Once the internet was born I found tons of information online about all things nuclear that wasn't easily accessible pre-internet.
    Because of this easy access, over the past couple of decades I've sucked up every bit of information I can find about nuclear energy and radioactivity: from radium dials on watches to the nuclear fusion explosions kept in check by gravity that we call stars.
    Discovering your channel makes me super happy. Seeing another content creator "playing" with uranium blows my Cold War influenced mind.
    I'm really excited to have found your channel and now Nile's. Science was not cool for girls when I grew up and I crave fact based information sources that are easy to understand.
    So thanks! I think a day of binge watching your content is in my immediate future.

  • @joecichlid
    @joecichlid 5 місяців тому

    I am a collector of uranium (and other types) glass and seeing your video was very helpful in answering questions about the radiation side of it. From what I have been able to find in research uranium being added to glass goes back to about the 1830s. Although some glass dated back to the time of the Romans has been found with uranium in it.
    A side note, uranium glass will floress in different shades of green under differing wavelengths of light. Playing with 395 nM and 365 nM black lights will give differing results. Also, different types of glass will glow different colors under a 365 nM light, cadmium glass is very cool as is lead glass.

  • @johankaewberg8162
    @johankaewberg8162 2 місяці тому +1

    “Don’t eat Uranium” (taking notes)

  • @Hoshimaru57
    @Hoshimaru57 9 місяців тому

    Fun thing I learned: the original use for Uranium was in making glass. Someone must have made it by accident and gone “ooh look at this pretty glowing green glass I made” and decided that that was a good idea.
    It’s only thousands of years later that we get “but what happens if we piss it off? BOOOM”

  • @alt8620
    @alt8620 11 місяців тому

    1. EAT THE FORBIDEN CHEASE
    2. teach nile to teach us how to enrich uranium

  • @4Ninjastarz4
    @4Ninjastarz4 Місяць тому

    Meanwhile on NileGreen...
    "I decided to try snorting the powdered uranium to see if it would get me high, but all I got was radiation poisoning"

  • @ElderonAnalas
    @ElderonAnalas 11 місяців тому +1

    Now you just need to wear your uranium bead necklace to the local rave 😂

  • @dennisk5818
    @dennisk5818 11 місяців тому

    Uranium glass can still be found in antique shops. You can find the clear, lime-green glass as well as (usually marbles) a greenish, petroleum jelly looking glass. These, too, are fluorescent under UV.

  • @jasmeralia
    @jasmeralia 8 місяців тому

    Nile is truly dedicated to his craft, imo. Seeing a professional be impressed by his standards, safety precautions, and methods of approach is definitely validating of that opinion.

  • @trypt0faani161
    @trypt0faani161 6 місяців тому

    that's cool. my only experience with uranium was during a lab course in which we used uranyl acetate staining for electron microscopy

  • @LordDustinDeWynd
    @LordDustinDeWynd 11 місяців тому +1

    NileRed is great! Thank YOU for YOUR notes, twas quite interesting.

  • @killermoose
    @killermoose 11 місяців тому +1

    He has a video on his second channel NileBlue that goes over how he handled the waste he generated, it's only 5 minutes so probably not worth making a video on but might be an interesting watch for anyone curious.

  • @Schimenator
    @Schimenator 7 місяців тому

    Depleted uranium used to be used in airplanes too. It was used as a counter balance for control surfaces. I think it has been replaced by tungsten these days.

  • @snarky_user
    @snarky_user 10 місяців тому

    Uranium glass was produced simply as another color of glass. Uranium salts were mixed into glass to create particular yellow colors in natural light, just like other metals' salts would produce other specific colors. The fluorescence of the glass was a quality that wasn't apparent to people until years later when UV lights became available.

  • @jacobe2995
    @jacobe2995 11 місяців тому +1

    it's no longer on youtube but about 8 years ago there was a youtuber who made yellow cake...would have loved to see you react to that video.

  • @Satchmoeddie
    @Satchmoeddie 10 місяців тому

    You can easily find vintage & antique uranium glass bowls, dishes, cake plates, custard dishes, candle holders, cups, mugs, even glass lamps, etc. etc. at thrift stores.

  • @toddmarshall7573
    @toddmarshall7573 11 місяців тому

    31:40 To anneal glass, it is necessary to heat it to its annealing temperature, at which its viscosity, η, drops to 1013 Poise (1013 dyne-second/cm²).[2] For most kinds of glass, this annealing temperature is in the range of 454-482 °C (850-900 °F)[citation needed], and is the so-called stress-relief point or annealing point of the glass. At such a viscosity, the glass is still too hard for significant external deformation without breaking, but it is soft enough to relax internal strains by microscopic flow in response to the intense stresses they introduce internally. The piece then heat-soaks until its temperature is even throughout and the stress relaxation is adequate. The time necessary for this step varies depending on the type of glass and its maximum thickness. The glass then is permitted to cool at a predetermined rate until its temperature passes the strain point (η = 1014.5 Poise)[citation needed], below which even microscopic internal flow effectively stops and annealing stops with it. It then is safe to cool the product to room temperature at a rate limited by the heat capacity, thickness, thermal conductivity, and thermal expansion coefficient of the glass. After annealing is complete the material can be cut to size, drilled, or polished without risk of its internal stresses shattering it.

  • @Jack-The-Gamer-
    @Jack-The-Gamer- 11 місяців тому

    HEY! Love the shoutout to Cody’s Lab. Awesome channel. Cody is a great guy.

  • @TheMaskedGamer
    @TheMaskedGamer 10 місяців тому

    The Uranium Powder looked like Cheetos dust. Deadly, deadly Cheetos dust.

  • @mackdog3270
    @mackdog3270 11 місяців тому +2

    I think the green glow trope came from The Simpsons, at least for my generation. Maybe I'm misremembering this, but I think there can be a blue glow from an intensely radioactive source. Personally, I find the danger zone for radioactive materials and it's precipitous drop due to distance to be a fascinating phenomenon.

  • @Lobituki
    @Lobituki 11 місяців тому +1

    i remember asking myself "what would an actual nuclear engineer say to this video?" upon watching it originally
    thank you for appeasing my curiosity

  • @rileymosman2808
    @rileymosman2808 11 місяців тому

    This was really interesting to watch, I'm glad to have gotten the chance to learn some more!