Congratulations Patrick ball from Buffalo New York. Our winner of the Galaxy S9 +. Thanks everyone else who entered, and standby because we've got more cool stuff to give away in the next couple weeks.
This may sound crazy but what if u rigged up a vaporizer/humidifier somehow to get the full effect and use the glow fluid so it would produce glow in the dark clouds. Of course i know its not meant for inhalation but a controlled scenario could be created safely. I know you can do it so lets see it.
To bounce off of your idea, what about using glow stick fluid in a fog machine and turning it on? Or if that is too dangerous due to inhaling the vapor, what about just adding tonic water instead of regular water and turning on a black light? Also, what does glow stick fluid do if added to tonic water? With carbonation or without? Id love to know!
I'm not a chemist, but I'm quite sure their needs to be a collected amount of the liquid for the reaction to take place.. If you make it into a cloud there may not be enough of the liquid collected together in the air for the reaction to take place
@@RejectedInch I wouldn't put glow stick fluid on my tongue either but he did it in the last video. I wouldn't put it in the microwave as well (look for youtube video of the kid who did that and had it blow up on him).
I don't really thing the humidifier will turn it into fog because it works best with fluids the density of water but maybe if you increase the frequency of the vibration, it just might be possible.
It would be awesome to see you make Isaac Newton’s recipe for the Philosopher’s Stone (you’ll end up with a cool purple alloy/stone). His recipe is available online.
Try sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS). It's a surfactant used in soaps. I'm assuming that it's the surfactant that makes dish soap work, and SDS could give a purer, stronger effect.
Nicke Probably not as the reaction can't take place in frozen fluid. However, it will most likely glow again when melted. That would sure look interesting 🤔😁
NO. The closer things get to absolute zero (They cant reach it but they can get very close to it) The less molecules in it move and so the less light is produced.
SeLf_MaDe don't think that would work. Those bubbles in the vacuum didn't glow. I think there's not enough of the fluid in them for them to visibly glow.
Well technically if you get the bubbles thicc enough they can glow. sadly its near impossible to do so unless you use a different gas with a lower PSI. :)
You should try mixing the various chemicals with each part of the glow stick separately to see if they trigger a reaction individually. Also, do the chems that reduce the light output cause the glow to last longer overall?
Make secret ink from glow sticks. Here’s how. Cut a glow stick and break the glass vial and write from the liquid on a paper from the glass vial. your invisible ink is ready. Now brush the activator on the paper and it will become visible.
Hey Kings Of Random :p How about doing something that contains liquid nitrogen and glow sticks? Thanks for the amazing content. Love from South - Africa
What would happen when you put hydrochloric acid or nitric acid or any kind of acid I'm liquid nitrogen? Will it be frozen and still be toxic to touch or not?
1- How about Vinegar VS Baking Sode in glow stick. Maybe the Ph has an effect on the glow intensity 2- Try to make frozen cubes of the activating liquid and pour the colored one on it 3- Figure out who activate who. Maybe we can find out a new activator and do a DIY one Thanks for the awesome video as always
Logan I know, but his had some anti coagulant in... I think it'd be cool because I think the red blood cells would coagulate in a weird putty and separate from the plasma
I'd like to see some constructive and useful things with LEGOs as well as experiments with LEGOs be careful anything can happen. I don't have any ideas yet but try anything with LEGOs please. Thanks and have a great day!
if you add the glowy stuff to a flammable liquid what happens? Can you freeze glowsticks in liquid nitrogen? what happens if you pour glowstick liquid onto molten salt? Great experiments people :) TY
Glow sticks have two component: The coloured section and an oxidiser. When you heat them up the reaction goes faster, hence the increase in brightness, and the decrease in time. Using different strengths of oxidiser will speed up or slow down the reaction. I think the dish soap is a stronger oxidiser and hence is why it does that. Quite the lucky discovery there. Cleaning supplies often contain strong oxidisers (hence the bleach). Try pool chemicals as well. Source: I am a chemistry student
Basics of liquid chemical reactions. Hotter temps mean more collisions which means faster reaction. Higher pressure means more collisions which means faster reactions. You will lose brightness in the vacuum chamber and it would be more pronounced in room temp liquid.
Yay I managed to get here within 10 mins after it’s upload 🤣❤️btw this is a pretty awesome video ... as usual😆😆 Edit: thx for like King of Random 🤣❤️❤️
A bunch of chemiluminescent chemical reactions that may be used to produce a glow in glow sticks, but the luminol and oxalate reactions are the most common way of doing so. A glow stick is a light source based on chemiluminescence. Snapping the stick breaks an inner container filled with hydrogen peroxide (which is why hydrogen peroxide didn't affect the glowsticks when it was added). The peroxide mixes with diphenyl oxalate and a fluorophore or the dye. The hydrogen peroxide oxidizes the diphenyl oxalate, to form phenol and an unstable peroxyacid. (when the dish soap was added to the glow stick solution it increases the chemical reaction, by increasing the amt oxygen taken out per second or bubbling out air)
When the oil, glue, Heet or glycerin was added it limited the amt of oxygen able to be taken out, it limited the flow of oxygen basically speaking. And the bleach just started to dissolve the fluorophore or dye!
You should combine several dozen glowsticks together in one jar then heat the glow fluid up. In another container heat up some dish soap. Combine both quickly along with activator fluid and then hoist the jar up into the air. Film this at night or in the dome to see how well you can illuminate an area with glowsticks!
really cool effects, but before cracking open those things, did you check the chemical compounds before mixing? Checking the labels look like they're not only toxic, but also best to be kept AWAY from other chemicals, looks like they can cause burns, at best.
Use the amount of soap to vary the brightness and duration of the glow. One drop, 10 drops, 20 drops, etc. and see where the optimum amount would be for different applications. Does 20 drops make a bright flare that peters out in 5 minutes, 10 minutes, 20 minutes ... or a super bright flare that lasts 20 seconds, etc. Or does adding one drop of soap make a brighter light for nearly as long as no soap.
The reactions from degassing in the vacuum chamber makes me think there's a gaseous component involved. Maybe try adding things that have gas infused with liquid, like carbonated water? Or an Alka Seltzer tablet?
Thanks for an awesome video! Totally had me enraptured! Maybe you could get an old microwave and put a glowstick in it that hasn't been cracked until it explodes? (We likes the explosions!)
Hey what if you use invisible ink with glowstick activator because invisible ink also glows under a blacklight and maybe it will be similar to how the blue glow sticks work.
I don’t think the glue (or soap) is necessarily stoping the chemical reaction so much as speeding it up. This would mean the chemical reaction is loosing heat energy faster which would be why it gets dim so quickly. Basically it just speeds up the process until the reaction has nothing left. Another way to look at it is, the glue and soap are consuming all the energy need for the reaction to occur and sustain. But I could be wrong and it could be more of a chemistry thing though. It created the ring because bubbles always move to the edge. This is because of surface tension . The vacuum also helped to speed this up.
Have you thought of doing a mixture of Tide clean and clear laundry detergeant, clear elmer's glue and the low fluid to try and make glowing slime with it?
What would soy lichen do? Would you mix the glow fluid with water based liquids as the fluid is oily and the lichen is an emulsifier and would help break the oil/water barrier and cause it to mix.... maybe
The glowsticks glow when the base inside them react with the inactive ingredients. Washing liquid is a base, as is all cleaning products. So it increases the reaction
Try loading a plastic tube with a chemical agent that gets hot with water like chlorine powder that you can fill a glass tube with and break like a glow stick then attach it to a glow stick "hot glue it ? " to break at same time when glow stick is broke and activated. The heat transfer may make it glow brighter and longer .
I'm not entirely sure that are those mixtures that are making it lose light quicker...because when you shake the glow fluid,you increase the contact surface of the reaction...so i think they get dimmer because you're shaking the fluid more
You could test how the different colors react to these chemicals. For example I'm curious about the super glue really change the color or it just dim the magenta much more, than the orange.
Why not use glow in the dark powder pigment or paint? Seems more stable than the glow fluid, although I can appreciate the curiosity on how different things effect the chemical reaction.
Glow fluid, UV LED strips, and the little water vortex fountains. You get the idea. I'm thinking you could do two versions, with & without propane bubbles :-D
I would have liked to have seen what the liquid from a worn out glow stick would do in the microwave. Could it be revived? I know that those "Hot Hands" warmers that hunters use are reusable by placing them in boiling water. I am wondering if you can get a glow stick to work again. Cool episode. Thanks!
You should totally try putting a vacuum chamber into your foundry, will the softened glass implode on itself, or will the chamber shatter and put out the fire? Maybe even try to roast some marshmallows while they are inflated inside the chamber.
I think maybe one chemical is water base and the other is oil based so by adding dish soap which is an emulsifier it allows them to react at a higher rate
The soap is probably breaking down the cohesion of the chemicals and allowing them to mix faster. The heat is just allowing faster movement which slightly increases the mixing because more chemicals can meet up. Just my guess, but I'll bet a chemist would agree.
Congratulations Patrick ball from Buffalo New York. Our winner of the Galaxy S9 +. Thanks everyone else who entered, and standby because we've got more cool stuff to give away in the next couple weeks.
The King of Random I had 60 entrees!
The King of Random
Could you try dropping the glowsticks in liquid salt (or metal)?
And also the same thing with marsmellows :)
The King of Random howdy
Eyyy
1. Make a bar of soap where one side has dye mixed in and another has activator.
2. Lather soap
3. Relish in glowing soaplather
simon köhlström YES!
This may sound crazy but what if u rigged up a vaporizer/humidifier somehow to get the full effect and use the glow fluid so it would produce glow in the dark clouds. Of course i know its not meant for inhalation but a controlled scenario could be created safely. I know you can do it so lets see it.
To bounce off of your idea, what about using glow stick fluid in a fog machine and turning it on? Or if that is too dangerous due to inhaling the vapor, what about just adding tonic water instead of regular water and turning on a black light?
Also, what does glow stick fluid do if added to tonic water? With carbonation or without? Id love to know!
I'm not a chemist, but I'm quite sure their needs to be a collected amount of the liquid for the reaction to take place..
If you make it into a cloud there may not be enough of the liquid collected together in the air for the reaction to take place
i wouldn't breath that stuff, check the chemicals used to make glowsticks.
@@RejectedInch I wouldn't put glow stick fluid on my tongue either but he did it in the last video. I wouldn't put it in the microwave as well (look for youtube video of the kid who did that and had it blow up on him).
I don't really thing the humidifier will turn it into fog because it works best with fluids the density of water but maybe if you increase the frequency of the vibration, it just might be possible.
It would be awesome to see you make Isaac Newton’s recipe for the Philosopher’s Stone (you’ll end up with a cool purple alloy/stone). His recipe is available online.
Try sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS). It's a surfactant used in soaps. I'm assuming that it's the surfactant that makes dish soap work, and SDS could give a purer, stronger effect.
Dave Power #6 I thought it was because of the bubbles in soap.. I thought maybe it would trap the light and cause it to illuminate brighter
Wasnt there a video where a kid put glow sticks in the microwave and as he pulled them out they blew up on him and burned him?
Probably did more than 10 seconds or had a high powered wave
jd1060 "IT'S IN MY EYES DAD" "Ohh no I've said to you to not put them in the microwave oh nooo"
Yeah
Yup i saw that vid
I'm curious what happened to that kid.
Paintballs with two compartments. One for dye and one for activator. Burst and mix on impact. Glowing battlemarks.
What will happen if you mix glow sticks with liquid nitrogen. Will it keep that same glow?
Nicke Probably not as the reaction can't take place in frozen fluid. However, it will most likely glow again when melted. That would sure look interesting 🤔😁
Simple, it slows down and stops when frozen. Is this really that exciting to you?
it just stops the reaction
NO. The closer things get to absolute zero (They cant reach it but they can get very close to it) The less molecules in it move and so the less light is produced.
so it slows down the reaction is what your saying
try adding gelatin to the glowfluid to make glowing jelly
Cool idea: freeze one part of the glow stick fluid and microwave the other. Pour the hot liquid onto the glow stick ice.
Glowsticks with dry ice/liquid nitrogen!
Mix it with dish soap and blow multi colored glowing bubbles off the balcony at night.
SeLf_MaDe don't think that would work. Those bubbles in the vacuum didn't glow. I think there's not enough of the fluid in them for them to visibly glow.
Well technically if you get the bubbles thicc enough they can glow. sadly its near impossible to do so unless you use a different gas with a lower PSI. :)
Will Turk hmm. Perhaps put a bubble in a vacuum chamber? 🤔
Well if you replace the atmosphere with a diff. gas you definitely can
You should try mixing the various chemicals with each part of the glow stick separately to see if they trigger a reaction individually. Also, do the chems that reduce the light output cause the glow to last longer overall?
I’m pretty sure glow sticks are one of the things I WASN’T allowed to put in the microwave 😂🙌
Thanks mom 😒😂😂
Let me finish this sentence.
BUT NOW I WILL >:DDDD
Cody Whitlock 100th like
I think peeps were though
Make secret ink from glow sticks.
Here’s how.
Cut a glow stick and break the glass vial and write from the liquid on a paper from the glass vial. your invisible ink is ready. Now brush the activator on the paper and it will become visible.
This is awesome! Imagine if the glowsticks exploded all over the room... I WOULD HAVE AN EDM PARTY! HAHAHA! I enjoyed the video! Nice Job TKOR!
Lmao yes that would have been pretty epic
Hey Kings Of Random :p
How about doing something that contains liquid nitrogen and glow sticks?
Thanks for the amazing content. Love from South - Africa
Rocket propelled by acetylene gas . Gaseous propellant in rocket are cool please try it .
Mix glow stick liquid with dry ice
What would happen when you put hydrochloric acid or nitric acid or any kind of acid I'm liquid nitrogen? Will it be frozen and still be toxic to touch or not?
1- How about Vinegar VS Baking Sode in glow stick. Maybe the Ph has an effect on the glow intensity
2- Try to make frozen cubes of the activating liquid and pour the colored one on it
3- Figure out who activate who. Maybe we can find out a new activator and do a DIY one
Thanks for the awesome video as always
Try mixing green blue and red to see if gets white. That'd be realy cool.😎😎
Its blue, yellow, and red to get white
Jack Palumbo
Nah, it's green, blue and red.
when you added the oil, the light got dimmer but did it last any longer glowing?
How about making a glowing table top fountain ??
Put blood in the vacuum chamber! I think the red blood cells would separate from the plasma
Chelsea Keeley action lab has already done that
Logan I know, but his had some anti coagulant in... I think it'd be cool because I think the red blood cells would coagulate in a weird putty and separate from the plasma
Chelsea Keeley gotta wait till Halloween to do that one
Can you electrolysis molten salt to get sodium metal and chlorine gas please
Vignesha K What's the point in doing that tho?
DANDAN THE DANDAN I want to see that if we manufacturer sodium and chlorine in our own house
What would glow fluid do if you supercooled it in say liquid nitrogen or hydrogen?
I wonder if you would get glowing vapour?
Can you make a glowing smoke cloud
rockon Does he look like a wizard to you?
Boil glow stick fluid and activator and activated glow stick fluid
SomeRandomGuy
make a invisible with the glow stick fluid after it has reacted and shine it with a black light
I really wish that y'all would plz try poring the glow sticks on and or in molten salt or try something with molten salt with the glow sticks
Welcome to UA-cam where everybody is first
This is amazing. So far my favorite glow stick experiment. Love your guys videos. Keep up the great work TKOR crew.
Dip lithium in liquid nitrogen and light it on fire! Like if u agree
Clash Tuition *liquid oxygen
Ahsen Mirza I feel like doing that would make it explode even more than usual
Mikolaj Popik lol
I'd like to see some constructive and useful things with LEGOs as well as experiments with LEGOs be careful anything can happen. I don't have any ideas yet but try anything with LEGOs please. Thanks and have a great day!
Try to make your one glow stick
Please
this
U did an escape room at my wife's work that's sooo awesome if watched ur vids forever thumbs up
Super cool. 😎
Could you put Mercury in
1. Liquid nitrogen
2. Metal foundry
3. Molten salt
4. Vacuum chamber
1 minute ago upload hype
if you add the glowy stuff to a flammable liquid what happens? Can you freeze glowsticks in liquid nitrogen? what happens if you pour glowstick liquid onto molten salt? Great experiments people :) TY
great video
abdulla nr 8 hello
Every like is one more eye on the illuminati!!!
(for your comment)
So far it has nine
Glow sticks have two component: The coloured section and an oxidiser. When you heat them up the reaction goes faster, hence the increase in brightness, and the decrease in time.
Using different strengths of oxidiser will speed up or slow down the reaction. I think the dish soap is a stronger oxidiser and hence is why it does that. Quite the lucky discovery there.
Cleaning supplies often contain strong oxidisers (hence the bleach). Try pool chemicals as well.
Source: I am a chemistry student
Wow so early! Anyway I love your vids! And can you please melt osmium? Thumbs up if u agree!
Yeah that stuff is super expensive
Basics of liquid chemical reactions. Hotter temps mean more collisions which means faster reaction. Higher pressure means more collisions which means faster reactions. You will lose brightness in the vacuum chamber and it would be more pronounced in room temp liquid.
So what you are saying chemical reactions happen faster when they are warmer what a breakthrough
James Holbrook shut up
Dudewiththegun why
I knew King of Random would have something on glow sticks LOL. Love this channel.👍
Yay I managed to get here within 10 mins after it’s upload 🤣❤️btw this is a pretty awesome video ... as usual😆😆
Edit: thx for like King of Random 🤣❤️❤️
The structural integrity of my cup has been compromised
That is the best thing I’ve ever heard
If you put a spoon in the microwave it will do something cool too
Ishan you want him to die😂
No, just kidding XD
A bunch of chemiluminescent chemical reactions that may be used to produce a glow in glow sticks, but the luminol and oxalate reactions are the most common way of doing so. A glow stick is a light source based on chemiluminescence. Snapping the stick breaks an inner container filled with hydrogen peroxide (which is why hydrogen peroxide didn't affect the glowsticks when it was added). The peroxide mixes with diphenyl oxalate and a fluorophore or the dye. The hydrogen peroxide oxidizes the diphenyl oxalate, to form phenol and an unstable peroxyacid. (when the dish soap was added to the glow stick solution it increases the chemical reaction, by increasing the amt oxygen taken out per second or bubbling out air)
When the oil, glue, Heet or glycerin was added it limited the amt of oxygen able to be taken out, it limited the flow of oxygen basically speaking. And the bleach just started to dissolve the fluorophore or dye!
Im only in high school chem so dont take me word for word, but I can kinda figure out what is happening in the reaction
Superglue makes glowstick fluid last longer
super cool the glowstick fluid and see if it works when frozen.
No, i have not. But i will in a few minutes.
K
??
Love these glowsticks experiments...don't know why haha...btw nice video!
I’m late...Noooo....LATE SQUAD HERE
Kokkki Rasheed struggles
Lol
Put the glowfluid in your table vortex fontain and look how it get into it.. and mix it with soap water
Btw I'm learning Deutsch
I really like these kinds of videos! Keep up the great work!
what happens when mixing the glow stick liquid with molten salt. ??
The end of the world?
Can you put an electric arc out with nitrogen vapors?
You should combine several dozen glowsticks together in one jar then heat the glow fluid up. In another container heat up some dish soap. Combine both quickly along with activator fluid and then hoist the jar up into the air. Film this at night or in the dome to see how well you can illuminate an area with glowsticks!
really cool effects, but before cracking open those things, did you check the chemical compounds before mixing? Checking the labels look like they're not only toxic, but also best to be kept AWAY from other chemicals, looks like they can cause burns, at best.
Use the amount of soap to vary the brightness and duration of the glow. One drop, 10 drops, 20 drops, etc. and see where the optimum amount would be for different applications. Does 20 drops make a bright flare that peters out in 5 minutes, 10 minutes, 20 minutes ... or a super bright flare that lasts 20 seconds, etc. Or does adding one drop of soap make a brighter light for nearly as long as no soap.
idk if you have done this before but i reckon you should try to freeze water by boiling it
The reactions from degassing in the vacuum chamber makes me think there's a gaseous component involved. Maybe try adding things that have gas infused with liquid, like carbonated water? Or an Alka Seltzer tablet?
Add gasoline and light glow stick fluid on fire
Can you try make a copy of a key and cast it in some metal so that it works with a lock
Thanks for an awesome video! Totally had me enraptured! Maybe you could get an old microwave and put a glowstick in it that hasn't been cracked until it explodes? (We likes the explosions!)
Hey what if you use invisible ink with glowstick activator because invisible ink also glows under a blacklight and maybe it will be similar to how the blue glow sticks work.
I don’t think the glue (or soap) is necessarily stoping the chemical reaction so much as speeding it up. This would mean the chemical reaction is loosing heat energy faster which would be why it gets dim so quickly. Basically it just speeds up the process until the reaction has nothing left. Another way to look at it is, the glue and soap are consuming all the energy need for the reaction to occur and sustain. But I could be wrong and it could be more of a chemistry thing though.
It created the ring because bubbles always move to the edge. This is because of surface tension . The vacuum also helped to speed this up.
the reaction is temperature dependent, use CO2 ice, and LN2, and H2O ice to do tests on brightness and duration.
I don't know if anyone has suggested it or not but, it could be the phosphorus in the dish soap that causes the glow fluid to glow brighter.
Have you thought of doing a mixture of Tide clean and clear laundry detergeant, clear elmer's glue and the low fluid to try and make glowing slime with it?
What would soy lichen do? Would you mix the glow fluid with water based liquids as the fluid is oily and the lichen is an emulsifier and would help break the oil/water barrier and cause it to mix.... maybe
The glowsticks glow when the base inside them react with the inactive ingredients. Washing liquid is a base, as is all cleaning products. So it increases the reaction
Throw em into the backyard furnace... 😂😂
Could you see if its posible to add molten copper brass and aluminum?
Try loading a plastic tube with a chemical agent that gets hot with water like chlorine powder that you can fill a glass tube with and break like a glow stick then attach it to a glow stick "hot glue it ? " to break at same time when glow stick is broke and activated. The heat transfer may make it glow brighter and longer .
Freezing the glow stick fluid with sugar or coke in it
Can you try to freeze the glow with liquid nitrogen
See that can u make a glowing snow
Thats how science should work... now lets make dancing skeletons with Xrays.
Is it the heat, or the microwaves? Would putting the cup into boiling water also increase the brightness?
"Let's see what it looks like with some house hold Bleach"
*Takes Swig*
You will dim out with the glow stick.
I'm not entirely sure that are those mixtures that are making it lose light quicker...because when you shake the glow fluid,you increase the contact surface of the reaction...so i think they get dimmer because you're shaking the fluid more
You could test how the different colors react to these chemicals. For example I'm curious about the super glue really change the color or it just dim the magenta much more, than the orange.
Why not use glow in the dark powder pigment or paint? Seems more stable than the glow fluid, although I can appreciate the curiosity on how different things effect the chemical reaction.
You should put a bar of soap in the microwave and then put that in a vacuum chamber 💗💗 I‘d love to see that
Glow fluid, UV LED strips, and the little water vortex fountains. You get the idea. I'm thinking you could do two versions, with & without propane bubbles :-D
what if you could make some sort of like edible food but it glows.
Or Slurp Juice
He did, check out the Moana candies
I would have liked to have seen what the liquid from a worn out glow stick would do in the microwave. Could it be revived? I know that those "Hot Hands" warmers that hunters use are reusable by placing them in boiling water. I am wondering if you can get a glow stick to work again.
Cool episode. Thanks!
if you put a glow stick in a cold space (a freezer works best) after they have completely dimmed down when you take it out it should glow
You can burn glowstick-alcohol mix. I wonder if it will be brighter at the top of the mix.
You should totally try putting a vacuum chamber into your foundry, will the softened glass implode on itself, or will the chamber shatter and put out the fire? Maybe even try to roast some marshmallows while they are inflated inside the chamber.
I think maybe one chemical is water base and the other is oil based so by adding dish soap which is an emulsifier it allows them to react at a higher rate
Could you freeze the glowsitck fluid until it gets solid??
The soap is probably breaking down the cohesion of the chemicals and allowing them to mix faster. The heat is just allowing faster movement which slightly increases the mixing because more chemicals can meet up. Just my guess, but I'll bet a chemist would agree.
What will happen if you put the two glow stick liquids separately in the vacuum chamber and then mix it, will it still glow normally.
The soap is a catalyst for the glowstick reaction... neat.
My mouth was on the ground the whole video
This actually makes me really interested in chemistry!