@@swupel3622 The guy who made this chemistry oriented video told you to come ask the viewers what wood cranked musical instrument thingy is?... Right..
I understand the reasoning behind removing the permethrin, but I did have to chuckle around 1:45 when you mentioned the toxicity to spiders, with the understanding we're making NAPALM. I'm afraid the permethrin would be the least of their worries! ha aha ah. Great video!
Nah, spiders are known to be immune to anything that isn't toxic to them. Have you ever TRIED to step on a spider which is scuttling across a limeolium floor, thinking about marring your immaculate corners with haphazard webbing? They just don't die. The napalm would hit everything except them.
@@tripleaffirmative5p & CDeanhartman. I think the spiders in question might be "huntsman spiders" They make no messy webs and besides, what decent self-respecting Aussie would ever want to hurt them anyway? They're the only thing here that's not lethally venomous.
Easy way to get the contents of a spray can out is to use the "Can tapper" tool that is intended for piercing refrigerant cans for use in automotive air conditioners. It looks like a large pair of pliers.
That's gonna be hard to find, as one time use refrigerant bottles are banned in most of the world. Not the US for some reason, but pretty much everyone else.
We use napthenic acid a fair bit in eco toxicology. As you mentioned it's usually kicking around after petroleum reactions. Up here in the Canadian oil sands we work with the left overs from bitumen mining and a lot of the biology and toxicology we do involves NA. Just food for thought.
Tip from an old clandestine chemist 🧪⚗️take and turn upside down and press down on the bottom of the can and depress under a few inches of water until can is free from all its pressure, then take and poke 2 holes in the can ... one at the top and one one the bottom outside edge of can and drain into proper lab container. 👍🏻
When dealing with an aerosol can, freeze it in the freezer and then puncture it with a small hole and let the propellant boil off. Then use tinsnips, scissors, hacksaw or a knife to breach the can.
My grandpa actually has a phd in chemistry for wood preservation and I've seen lot's of copper naphthenate, you can get gallon containers of it for not too much I think, though it might be due in part to him being in the business.
why not use a straw on the can when emptying? or when chilled, release the propellant by making hole beside the valve. (very dangerous, can be done safely) anyway, good to see you in good health and working furiously ;)
I mean the bit issue was just the time it was taking. I wasn't going to stand there for 40 minutes holding the button down. Straw might've been a better solution than cooling it down though
That's probably why he wants to remove all traces of permethrin from the final product. To eliminate the risk of transdermal absorption of the permethrin, which probably is not good for you.
England: Periodic Table of Videos; Highly professional, informative, a little fun. America: a whole variety of channels on chemistry ranging from Florida Man sets his pool on fire to professional back yard chem labs. Australia: Yeh imma just make napalm. Sorry spider bros. Cheap and volatile #relatable. I fking love this channel 😂😂
Personal opinion: you should put chemical structures in your videos more often, since it's more convenient than having to pause the video to search for it
This is a good point. I'll try to do it more, but it was hard for this video I guess because I didn't want to over generalise it, there's a huge range of compounds the 'naphthenates' can be really
Extractions&Ire: Cool, because I remember you were better at it in some of your earlier videos! Btw, I know you're busy and all, but I also want to say that I'm constantly looking forward to content from you! I barely understand how you've got time for it while also doing academic work! Keep it up!
Stronger copper naphthenate preparations may be available from specialist stores for use in vintage wooden boats. At least in EU only very weak solutions are allowed for general use but some exceptions are made for vintage work methods in boat construction and maintenance.
Is that can actually empty? Turning it upside down should've released most of the propellant. If it's not under pressure anymore, drill a hole in it and dump the rest?
I just found the best thing ever. This wikipedia article:en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/1-Diazidocarbamoyl-5-azidotetrazole has reffereced your video on synthesizing isocyanogen tetraazide. Amazing really.
I'm sure you've seen this already but if not apps.dtic.mil/dtic/tr/fulltext/u2/a801549.pdf is a publication put out by the US government on the production of the aluminum napthenate in napalm. They describe their Napthenic Acid as also being pale yellow, and having a fairly substantial iodine impurity. So from the looks of things you're pretty true to source.
Just be mindful there's usually a diptube in the can, going to the bottom. So when you invert the can the tube will only be picking up the gas. This will depressurise the can which you can then pierce and pour the liquid out. (think about a spray paint can - you hold it upside down to clear the nozzle as it only sprays gas out)
Once you have made your WWII era napalm are you going to compare it to modern (Vietnam era) napalm (one part unleaded gasoline and one part of a solution of one part polystyrene dissolved in one part benzene)? (The CEO of the company I used to work for was once threatened with imprisonment by the (US) house un-american activities committee because the company wasn't making napalm fast enough for the Vietnam war effort. This resulted in a new process for polystyrene synthesis and cheap, brittle, plastic picnic utensils for all.)
Yeah, comparison is what I'm going for. Was the new version just cheaper, or was it actually better? And yeah goddamn the US certainly was making some interesting decisions at that time...
@@ExtractionsAndIre The whole red-menace/McCarthyism mindset resulted in numerous aberrations, both in the US and abroad. Particularly the un-personing of WWII science heroes, like Oppenheimer and Turing, with "questionable associations". Seems like many of our current "leaders" have returned to this method of scapegoating (although on a more wholesale basis) to deflect scrutiny of their own inadequacies. Anyhow, looking forward to the comparison tests. Play safe, I once managed to drip some flaming plastic on my fingers, still have some faint scars 50 years later.
if you have a can like that, you can use pliers to pop the cap and you wil have a plastic tip under there. If you pull that out with pliers, it will shoot the contents out at one point when the plastic valve gives. Shouldn't be too violent
Funny thing about copper compounds...I was just pounding on a piece of dense igneous rock with my 3lbs hammer and a piece went shooting out like a bulley across the room, smashing a 1000ml flask I had sealed up for over two years. I have an entire litre of copper sulfate in my carpeted home office.
@@ExtractionsAndIre Nope. It was all liquid. LOL. It was bad enough to have some missing carpet due to a sulfuric acid spill last year, but now it is accentuated via a big blue blob. I'm sure it'll come right out!
You pouring out the organic layer through the ground glass joint of the sep funnel really triggered me. The tap is there for a reason, u even used it correctly for the aqueous phase NotLikeThis
That's the proper technique isn't it though?? I'm unsure. I've reached the point where people don't tell me if I do things wrong anymore. I teach a practical class on acid base extraction to first year uni students so, I'm the one deciding what is correct and isn't, and I honestly think no-one questions me enough haha
@@ExtractionsAndIre I think it is proper technique to pour out the top, you get less contamination, right? Wikipedia says "When the bottom layer has been removed, the stopcock is closed and the upper layer is poured out through the top into another container." Edit: Also, if you're on the east coast, it's like 5am. Why so early?
@@ExtractionsAndIre Might be. Now that i think of it, noone ever really tought me how to correctly use a sep funnel, iirc it was mostly learning by doing in my first organic lab. It wouldn't even cross my mind that you could pour things out the top. However, i have never seen anyone doing it that way. Might also be taught differently in different parts of the world.
Because the pouring happened completely off screen and you were picking it up with your elbow, it looked like you were drinking the Pentagon/hexane mix. 🤘😎
ext&ire: "napthalic acid has hardly any uses anymore" youtube comments: "actually..." file this under: instances where australia red came to accept his reaction turning yellow, the fifth stage of yellow chemistry: acceptance
I love it there's a lot of effort for fuck all return this reminds of going to work busting arse get rewarded with much the same that extraction I love chemistry.
I am not saying this is 100 percent chemically accurate. But it tends to work very similar, minus the aluminum they used for binding in napalm. White Naphtha Fuel (aka white camp fuel used for old Coleman lanterns with the metal "bulb") and Ivory Soap (Mostly pure Sodium Palmitate) You could use both ingredients as a starter, and purify or react them accordingly. Not sure if both are available in Australia, but here in the US you can grab both at any walmart or similar.
Okay this is going to sound crazy but since you heard it once and you know that some cool stuff been going on put some various different colored salts and you know what I mean how often and label those containers as you would dream them be and then as such you'll find things don't need to be just sawed solvent salts etc etc and then stuff you'd like equipment Dean Stark trap apparatus etc etc we'll go from there
I bought something like that. A wood preservative, but it wasn't in an aeresol can. It was a gallon of liquid... you could probably have found a better source.
For hobby or 'amateur' chemists who don't have the order hotline numbers of Sigma Aldrich, Alfa Aesar or Fisher on speed dial, being resourceful with OTC products is a necessary skill ;)
Well isnt it buthane that generates pressure? So if you would put it to freezer, there would be no pressure so you could just make a hole to can and just pour it?
Well since it went yellow its gonna polymerize for no good reason. Also its pretty much guaranteed to look and act like napthenic acid but have zero of it in it and, of course, you'll never be able to figure out what it is or what went wrong..
I think it could have been a little simpler if you directly started with a solvent extraction with aqueous NaOH or Na2CO3 first, to precipitate most of the copper and recover the acid as the sodium salt, and then acidified it for a final solvent extraction with your gasoline distillate. ^^
So does anyone know what a Drehleier is?
Anticonny And what is it?
Anticonny Thx
But when?
Why?
Who?
And what was it used for
Anticonny I hate music learning and everything related, but I don’t think I really have to know it, because Imma just copy like last year
Evi1M4chine The guy who made the video told me I should ask you (viewers) music questions
Thx
@@swupel3622 The guy who made this chemistry oriented video told you to come ask the viewers what wood cranked musical instrument thingy is?... Right..
0:54
"Ligma Aldrich"
HA GOT EM
Finn Hambling why does he call it this?
Extractions&Ire why do you not like Sigma?
Well BOFA chemical are much better.
@@matthewbatchelor3547 did you know that explosions and fire died of ligma?
The brick weighted contraption held in place by the lab stand is more ghetto than anything I've seen Cody do. Well done.
This pressure can extraction apparatus is definitely step outside of the box for chem
cody only do shitty videos nowdays, got to popular.
+
I love that most things on this channel are "probably not toxic" to humans😂
It makes a nice change from 'definitely toxic to humans'
@@ExtractionsAndIre Indeed :D
@@ExtractionsAndIre definitely a change from “definitely going to spread the human across the room”
7:04 "because its cheap and its volatile which is very relatable" bahaha
"You can't look out for everyone all the time"
- Ghandi, probably
who is Ghandi?
@@sandorvas3954 "ghan di rock is."
-Yoda
I understand the reasoning behind removing the permethrin, but I did have to chuckle around 1:45 when you mentioned the toxicity to spiders, with the understanding we're making NAPALM. I'm afraid the permethrin would be the least of their worries! ha aha ah. Great video!
Nah, spiders are known to be immune to anything that isn't toxic to them. Have you ever TRIED to step on a spider which is scuttling across a limeolium floor, thinking about marring your immaculate corners with haphazard webbing? They just don't die. The napalm would hit everything except them.
@@tripleaffirmative5p & CDeanhartman. I think the spiders in question might be "huntsman spiders" They make no messy webs and besides, what decent self-respecting Aussie would ever want to hurt them anyway? They're the only thing here that's not lethally venomous.
lordchickenhawk I love HuNTZmen c;
Easy way to get the contents of a spray can out is to use the "Can tapper" tool that is intended for piercing refrigerant cans for use in automotive air conditioners. It looks like a large pair of pliers.
That's gonna be hard to find, as one time use refrigerant bottles are banned in most of the world. Not the US for some reason, but pretty much everyone else.
Australian Nile Red
Nile Yellow
Opposite both in character and location.
More like Aussie CodyRed
wreck less Nile
At least they have horrible yields in common
The sequence of hacked together engineering solutions at 3:00 is definitely my favorite part
We use napthenic acid a fair bit in eco toxicology. As you mentioned it's usually kicking around after petroleum reactions. Up here in the Canadian oil sands we work with the left overs from bitumen mining and a lot of the biology and toxicology we do involves NA. Just food for thought.
captainbigmac Hi how can i connect with u ?
Our email is mail@gagchem.com
Bravo, you have me so excited to see chemistry that I actually got the happy brain juices when I saw this notification
These chemistry shitpost videos you do seem expensive, dangerous, and trying to infuriate youtube. Appreciate ya m8
0:56 "Ligma-Aldrich" 🤣
2:35 so that's where blue raspberry flavouring comes from!!!
change the nozzle to one with a tube, you will get more liquid and less vapour
3:16 ,now that real lab work.
Shout out to Dolmio jars for being amazing at keeping all kinds of shit in.
yeah pretty mad, use mine to make jar hash
Step 1. Turn can over. Step 2. Expel propellant. Step 3. Cut can open. Step 4. Empty contents. You’re welcome.
alot more messy in my opinion idk
Ahh the joys of creating a war crime (by modern standards) at home.
Good luck, I'll keeping up with this one.
2:40
fantastic videography of smart problem solving...
brick it!
Tip from an old clandestine chemist 🧪⚗️take and turn upside down and press down on the bottom of the can and depress under a few inches of water until can is free from all its pressure, then take and poke 2 holes in the can ... one at the top and one one the bottom outside edge of can and drain into proper lab container. 👍🏻
2:55 Truly an engineer at heart
When dealing with an aerosol can, freeze it in the freezer and then puncture it with a small hole and let the propellant boil off. Then use tinsnips, scissors, hacksaw or a knife to breach the can.
ah yes , emptying cans of aerosol- my favourite indoor activity
My grandpa actually has a phd in chemistry for wood preservation and I've seen lot's of copper naphthenate, you can get gallon containers of it for not too much I think, though it might be due in part to him being in the business.
@Varstel i searched for it, sadly it's aways just 2% solutions (which in total is still plenty) and it is nowhere available :(
Varstel How can i connect with u? our email is mail@gagchem.com
why not use a straw on the can when emptying? or when chilled, release the propellant by making hole beside the valve. (very dangerous, can be done safely)
anyway, good to see you in good health and working furiously ;)
I mean the bit issue was just the time it was taking. I wasn't going to stand there for 40 minutes holding the button down. Straw might've been a better solution than cooling it down though
God dammit you just HAD to post this while I'm out getting groceries and can't immediately watch it
I posted this at 5am so it was a good time for exactly you, and you had to go SHOPPING
Do the safe and responsible thing.. pull over and watch it.
@@jhyland87 I drive stick so I wouldn't be able to watch and drive. Plus, I enjoy driving too much for shit like that
Rhodanide
when's your next vid gonna drop?
@@BothHands1
Hopefully sometime in the next week or two. My computer is dying and it'll take a bit of time to rescue my data and fix the issue.
These videos are infinitely interesting.
It seems like another video on DCM is due?
I do need to get more DCM, do you think it's worth doing a video on that?
@@ExtractionsAndIre worth it? I don't know. Would I watch it? Yes!
@@ExtractionsAndIre Naa. Just distil more petrol. It's cheaper, and now we know that it works.
Im assuming you'll test the final product's adhesion to skin and also its burn quality..
'biting into napalm'
That's probably why he wants to remove all traces of permethrin from the final product. To eliminate the risk of transdermal absorption of the permethrin, which probably is not good for you.
Gary Card
they use permetherin cream as a prescription to treat scabies, so i think it's ok.
don't ask me how i know
@@ExtractionsAndIre You could always use pig skin.
@@garycard1456 it's not. Put me in the emergency room once.
England: Periodic Table of Videos; Highly professional, informative, a little fun.
America: a whole variety of channels on chemistry ranging from Florida Man sets his pool on fire to professional back yard chem labs.
Australia: Yeh imma just make napalm. Sorry spider bros. Cheap and volatile #relatable.
I fking love this channel 😂😂
The evolution of spray container extraction was very satisfying.
Personal opinion: you should put chemical structures in your videos more often, since it's more convenient than having to pause the video to search for it
This is a good point. I'll try to do it more, but it was hard for this video I guess because I didn't want to over generalise it, there's a huge range of compounds the 'naphthenates' can be really
Extractions&Ire: Cool, because I remember you were better at it in some of your earlier videos!
Btw, I know you're busy and all, but I also want to say that I'm constantly looking forward to content from you! I barely understand how you've got time for it while also doing academic work! Keep it up!
Permethrin ensures that this will not be a Chem Player wildlife knockoff. Looks like you got what you were going for. Yes!
Stronger copper naphthenate preparations may be available from specialist stores for use in vintage wooden boats. At least in EU only very weak solutions are allowed for general use but some exceptions are made for vintage work methods in boat construction and maintenance.
Is that can actually empty? Turning it upside down should've released most of the propellant. If it's not under pressure anymore, drill a hole in it and dump the rest?
Making napalm purely for shits and giggles, god damn I'm glad I found your channel.
I confess. I thought you were drinking the first bolus of hexane when you added it to the sep-funnel off screen.
I don't understand a thing you say or do, but the presentation is top notch.
I love the colour transitions in this one... First purple, then green + blue, then yellow, then black, then red...
Ah yes, I am also "cheap and volatile" 😂
Congratulations to 100k, great videos!
8:01 looks like he is drinking it again
I just found the best thing ever. This wikipedia article:en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/1-Diazidocarbamoyl-5-azidotetrazole has reffereced your video on synthesizing isocyanogen tetraazide. Amazing really.
bunnings coming in clutch as usual
I'm sure you've seen this already but if not apps.dtic.mil/dtic/tr/fulltext/u2/a801549.pdf is a publication put out by the US government on the production of the aluminum napthenate in napalm.
They describe their Napthenic Acid as also being pale yellow, and having a fairly substantial iodine impurity. So from the looks of things you're pretty true to source.
That beaker thing is actually an incredible way of getting shit out of spray cans thank you
Just be mindful there's usually a diptube in the can, going to the bottom. So when you invert the can the tube will only be picking up the gas. This will depressurise the can which you can then pierce and pour the liquid out. (think about a spray paint can - you hold it upside down to clear the nozzle as it only sprays gas out)
@@Thermoelectric7 Puncturing steel engine starter cans to get at the diethyl ether contained within doesn't seem like such a hot idea to me lol!
Once you have made your WWII era napalm are you going to compare it to modern (Vietnam era) napalm (one part unleaded gasoline and one part of a solution of one part polystyrene dissolved in one part benzene)? (The CEO of the company I used to work for was once threatened with imprisonment by the (US) house un-american activities committee because the company wasn't making napalm fast enough for the Vietnam war effort. This resulted in a new process for polystyrene synthesis and cheap, brittle, plastic picnic utensils for all.)
Yeah, comparison is what I'm going for. Was the new version just cheaper, or was it actually better? And yeah goddamn the US certainly was making some interesting decisions at that time...
@@ExtractionsAndIre The whole red-menace/McCarthyism mindset resulted in numerous aberrations, both in the US and abroad. Particularly the un-personing of WWII science heroes, like Oppenheimer and Turing, with "questionable associations". Seems like many of our current "leaders" have returned to this method of scapegoating (although on a more wholesale basis) to deflect scrutiny of their own inadequacies. Anyhow, looking forward to the comparison tests. Play safe, I once managed to drip some flaming plastic on my fingers, still have some faint scars 50 years later.
if you have a can like that, you can use pliers to pop the cap and you wil have a plastic tip under there. If you pull that out with pliers, it will shoot the contents out at one point when the plastic valve gives. Shouldn't be too violent
Next time try a bit of aquarium air tube to more safely empty a spray can. It fits fairly well to most spray can stems.
The fact that you showed yourself fail trying to get the can empty and then said yup that just took 40 min was so funny lol I was dying
Bogan Nile red
Nice.. a new video, i love your stuff
love your channel
Wishing i could give him a the little tube my empty air can has
This video has an old-school UA-cam vibe, esp with the bgm
Quick tip: hold the can upside down, releas all the propellant, then when there's no pressure left cut the can open and pour the contents out.
Funny thing about copper compounds...I was just pounding on a piece of dense igneous rock with my 3lbs hammer and a piece went shooting out like a bulley across the room, smashing a 1000ml flask I had sealed up for over two years. I have an entire litre of copper sulfate in my carpeted home office.
Oh nooo, was there any good crystals though?
@@ExtractionsAndIre Nope. It was all liquid. LOL. It was bad enough to have some missing carpet due to a sulfuric acid spill last year, but now it is accentuated via a big blue blob. I'm sure it'll come right out!
They sell it on Amazon EASTCHEM Naphthenic Acid, CAS: 1338-24-5(500g)
You pouring out the organic layer through the ground glass joint of the sep funnel really triggered me. The tap is there for a reason, u even used it correctly for the aqueous phase NotLikeThis
That's the proper technique isn't it though?? I'm unsure. I've reached the point where people don't tell me if I do things wrong anymore. I teach a practical class on acid base extraction to first year uni students so, I'm the one deciding what is correct and isn't, and I honestly think no-one questions me enough haha
@@ExtractionsAndIre I think it is proper technique to pour out the top, you get less contamination, right? Wikipedia says "When the bottom layer has been removed, the stopcock is closed and the upper layer is poured out through the top into another container."
Edit: Also, if you're on the east coast, it's like 5am. Why so early?
@@ExtractionsAndIre Might be. Now that i think of it, noone ever really tought me how to correctly use a sep funnel, iirc it was mostly learning by doing in my first organic lab. It wouldn't even cross my mind that you could pour things out the top. However, i have never seen anyone doing it that way. Might also be taught differently in different parts of the world.
Cheap and volatile
#relatable
I've only very recently discovered your channel, i can't find the follow up video to this and the soap one.
Nice!!! third one here!
I love chemistry videos like this.
Man, I haven't seen much wildlife around this episode 🐜
Says eight leged friends, calls them insects. Biology degree straight ahead 👍🏻
Piss off into the atmosphere. Global warming prevention tip 101
i wish i could go back in time to give you a tube to put on the nozzle of that spray can, poor Tom
you sir are an inspiration
I saw naphthenic acid in the title and thought you were going to make NaPalm... Turns out, you were! Yeah! You know whats up!
"Ligma-Aldrich"
Fuck me that's a good one
got em!
Because the pouring happened completely off screen and you were picking it up with your elbow, it looked like you were drinking the Pentagon/hexane mix. 🤘😎
ext&ire: "napthalic acid has hardly any uses anymore"
youtube comments: "actually..."
file this under: instances where australia red came to accept his reaction turning yellow, the fifth stage of yellow chemistry: acceptance
You can get straight naptha nearly anywhere as zippo-type lighter fluid FYI
Sooo... Napalm...
...
**Nam flashbacks**
This is gonna be great! :D
I love it there's a lot of effort for fuck all return this reminds of going to work busting arse get rewarded with much the same that extraction I love chemistry.
"Ligma Alderich" lmaooo
Someone buy this man an LC.
Great, I'm now on an ASIO watch list
I always thought napalm was just the inventors name... neat
I am not saying this is 100 percent chemically accurate. But it tends to work very similar, minus the aluminum they used for binding in napalm.
White Naphtha Fuel (aka white camp fuel used for old Coleman lanterns with the metal "bulb") and Ivory Soap (Mostly pure Sodium Palmitate)
You could use both ingredients as a starter, and purify or react them accordingly. Not sure if both are available in Australia, but here in the US you can grab both at any walmart or similar.
Okay this is going to sound crazy but since you heard it once and you know that some cool stuff been going on put some various different colored salts and you know what I mean how often and label those containers as you would dream them be and then as such you'll find things don't need to be just sawed solvent salts etc etc and then stuff you'd like equipment Dean Stark trap apparatus etc etc we'll go from there
Yes dude was waiting for one of your videos xxx
naphthenic acid one of the most common raw materials I use at work
You should patent that half-brick extraction method.
I bought something like that. A wood preservative, but it wasn't in an aeresol can. It was a gallon of liquid... you could probably have found a better source.
www.doitbest.com/products/772460?gdffi=46857429cc1343fcae2c0324cc87e14a&gdfms=E108B22F5AAC4E3BAA4597B730BED407&gclid=EAIaIQobChMI1YWegtSQ5QIV7x-tBh0qGg2jEAQYAyABEgLCEfD_BwE
Extracting from cans is always pain in the ass, great work tho
Yeah I've been thinking I could do with some ether, but getting it all out of the cans will be a pain
For hobby or 'amateur' chemists who don't have the order hotline numbers of Sigma Aldrich, Alfa Aesar or Fisher on speed dial, being resourceful with OTC products is a necessary skill ;)
@@garycard1456 true xd companies make it hard for everyone of us, and gov regulations make even greater mess
Well isnt it buthane that generates pressure?
So if you would put it to freezer, there would be no pressure so you could just make a hole to can and just pour it?
@@drd1449 i tried it once.. tbh dry ice bath ftw, my freezer sucks and back then i had access to dry ice so getting stuff off cans was easy...
Watching you try to extract that copper from the can hurt me. Wheres your little straw mate?
Nice work.
Remember benzene? It’s back
You should challenge yourself and make a good amount of 1-Napthol. It will be vital for some strong yellow dyes you can make in the future.
Couldn't you have used an addition funnel to add the thing from the spray can to the flask?
This made my week to see
Sooo... How are your spiders and mud wasps doing? I'm curious if that stuff in the general area would have them leaving town.
I mean hopefully, it's not wasp season yet but it will be soon :(
How about abietic acid from rosin? Useful metal soaps.
Well since it went yellow its gonna polymerize for no good reason. Also its pretty much guaranteed to look and act like napthenic acid but have zero of it in it and, of course, you'll never be able to figure out what it is or what went wrong..
Sick brick bruh
I think it could have been a little simpler if you directly started with a solvent extraction with aqueous NaOH or Na2CO3 first, to precipitate most of the copper and recover the acid as the sodium salt, and then acidified it for a final solvent extraction with your gasoline distillate. ^^
I'm pretty sure you can but that in a liquid non-aerosol format in large jugs. I've seen it in 4 litre jugs at my home reno store.
That would've been easier !
Shellite, zippo lighter fluid, and mineral turpentine are good sources of naphtha in the land of Aus.
Oof sorry about that low heild I mean 15$ for that 0-0 is that enough?