As a nuclear chemist, this was very fun to watch :) I would never have the space and equipment in the lab to film such high quality footage. However I would have liked you said some words about the "UO4" being a bit misleading as its better described as UO2O2. UO4 is empirically speaking correct but makes it seem that there might be a octavalent Uranium present (which is not the case). Greetings from the nuclear lab in cologne^^
@scrappydoo7887 Nile Red did a cleanup video on it, and it was awesome. Considering how much volatility there is in this video, it would be good to see what he did, eg. with the fumes. Are the filters in his fumehood now considered radioactive waste?
You know its peak chemistry when several uranium compounds, HF, Anhydrous N2H4 and CO are all shown in same vedio. Not to mention, boiling Uranyl nitrite.
He made nuclear fuel from Factorio! In that game, it's a combustible fuel that is made by combining Uranium 235 with "rocket fuel" (which is made by combining "light oil" and "solid fuel", which in turn appears to be just carbon). It's the most powerful and space efficient fuel in the game.
arguably nuclear fuel isn’t the most space efficient because it only has a stack size of 1 - a full stack of 20 rocket fuel has more fuel content than one nuclear fuel
Maybe test the effects of radiation on silver salts or a chamber with alcohol vapors? Make some uranium hexafluoride or react uranium oxides with other reducing agents like alkaline metals, lithium hydride, borohydride,etc. Electrolize a small amount. It's not everyday that one can work with uranium salts.
There are already lots of comments about radioactive fumes and dust, and yes as a former worker in a radiation controlled facility I also got some goosebumps when seeing the Uranium evaporate but not seeing a negative pressure glovebox... Anyhow, many people on the world have been exposed to Uranium dusts, like soldiers affected by depleted Uranium ammunition, like workers in Uranium mining or even workers in nuclear fuel processing plants. There are a lot of cases where people suffered from long time exposition to this kind of stuff. That´s why the gut feeling tells, one single day of experiments will probably not kill you. But keep in mind that incorporating and especially inhaling even small amounts is not giving you extra health...
@@ChemicalForcebro are you safe? You know its peak chemistry when several uranium compounds, HF, Anhydrous N2H4 and CO are all shown in same vedio. Not to mention, boiling Uranyl nitrite
I ate 10 lbs. of the insoluble stuff, "Scientists were so preoccupied with whether or not they could, they didn’t stop to think if they should" - Jeff Goldblum
I never though I'd see reactions with uranium compounds on youtube but man you can make anything possible. Also you once said that antimony could show chemiluminescence, is it true?
As a chemistry graduate who hasn't worked Iin the field I'm intrigued as to how you deal with the waste. As an undergraduate we perhaps did a couple of reactions using Uranium (1980s) but there was never any discussion as to ultimate disposal although I'm fairly sure it didn't go down the lab sink as all activities took place in a fume hood even though there were no volatile products.. I get it that you concentrate and solidify into less harmful, perhaps insoluble salts, but ultimate disposal? Where's the 'kin around with Radioactive Materials Disposal Agency, so to speak? Before my time but that Sodium reaction was used as a determination for sodium in analytical chemistry.
Mix two common household cleaners together, and you could gas out your whole building ... but two of the most energy dense fuels known to humanity, one that litterally could destroy the earth one day from an explosion of it, and the other, powerfull enough to allow us to fly to other worlds in spacecraft... yet mix them together and you get a measly poof of smoke! (Although TBF, I wouldn't wanna breath in that smoke either lmao...) xD
Causes some damage because of the linear hypnosis of radiation. The danger becomes statistically smaller but never goes away. Unlike salt, which is poisonous when large amounts are ingested but harmless in small amounts.
Lmao people wondering where the experiment cleanup goes...as if yall don't have a sludge pit in the backyard for disposal of failed experiments, cleaning supplies, and car batteries
You should narrate other stories ,your accent is basically so unique you could say anything like elephants fly and people wouldnt question you whatsoever .😂
Your English is really good so please don’t take the following as a slight, old bean. That is not my intention at all, just a matter of centimetres. (Phon.) ‘centi-metres’ rather than (phon.) sen-tim-it-ers, would be the better pronunciation. Just that the former being how it is said within the English language. The latter being how some poorly-educated, banjo-playing hoodlums from the USA say it. Folks from the U.S. in general are not exactly good practitioners of the English language and those few I mention above are to be avoided at all costs :) :)
The centimeter/sontimeter thing in the US is a little quirk of linguistics, not something done out of ignorance. Especially considering it's mostly done by doctors and other medical practitioners. It's also fine for the guy to pronounce it how he wants. If people hear what he's saying and understand he's referring to a unit of length that is measuring one hundredth of a meter, then it doesn't matter. Languages are alive and trying to force them into an arbitrary box is extremely dumb.
As someone who was raise by said banjo-playing hoodlums, I have never heard it pronounced that way until I went to college and had a foreign professor (a great one at that). All he's doing is dividing the syllable at a different spot (common if your native language doesn't allow coda-clusters, like most languages if I'm remembering correctly)
@@isaacthedestroyerofstuped7676 yeah acting like that's something done by ignorant Americans, specifically those in like rural Appalachia, is itself pretty ignorant. The subject of why some Americans use a French-sounding pronunciation (particularly doctors) is actually pretty fascinating, so just chalking it up to poor, ignorant American..."hoodlums" is just depriving yourself of a chance to learn about something neat.
As a nuclear chemist, this was very fun to watch :) I would never have the space and equipment in the lab to film such high quality footage.
However I would have liked you said some words about the "UO4" being a bit misleading as its better described as UO2O2. UO4 is empirically speaking correct but makes it seem that there might be a octavalent Uranium present (which is not the case). Greetings from the nuclear lab in cologne^^
bone hurting juice + bone hurting powder
= (almost) harmless insoluble powder
@@ChimeraChemLab I'll bet the peroxide hydrate is pretty bioavailable
Yellow chemistry is toxic and radioactive but it's soooooo cooollll
my milkshake glows all the boys in the yard
@@aaronsmith8073 *cursed, yellow chemistry is cursed 🤭
You should actually post a cleanup video after this one. Just for the record. It would be interesting.
Yea I did wonder what the issues after the reaction would be and how to clean it up
@scrappydoo7887 Nile Red did a cleanup video on it, and it was awesome. Considering how much volatility there is in this video, it would be good to see what he did, eg. with the fumes. Are the filters in his fumehood now considered radioactive waste?
He just sold the whole lab on the black market
@@Dinnye01 agreed. There are many factors to potential pollutants and contamination of work areas and equipment
city sewage
You know its peak chemistry when several uranium compounds, HF, Anhydrous N2H4 and CO are all shown in same vedio. Not to mention, boiling Uranyl nitrite.
I love how uranium (and plutonium) make a variety of beautiful colours in compounds and solutions.
CF making all the forbidden Lemon Lime stuff
Uranium tetrafluoride huh? I made that in a dream once...
So relatable.
Beautiful production values - best among chemical TH-camrs. As always. Thank you!
Finally ChemicalForce I been waiting for you to work with
Uranium! 👍
He made nuclear fuel from Factorio!
In that game, it's a combustible fuel that is made by combining Uranium 235 with "rocket fuel" (which is made by combining "light oil" and "solid fuel", which in turn appears to be just carbon). It's the most powerful and space efficient fuel in the game.
arguably nuclear fuel isn’t the most space efficient because it only has a stack size of 1 - a full stack of 20 rocket fuel has more fuel content than one nuclear fuel
Maybe test the effects of radiation on silver salts or a chamber with alcohol vapors? Make some uranium hexafluoride or react uranium oxides with other reducing agents like alkaline metals, lithium hydride, borohydride,etc. Electrolize a small amount. It's not everyday that one can work with uranium salts.
Good to see more people interested in uranium chemistry!
There are already lots of comments about radioactive fumes and dust, and yes as a former worker in a radiation controlled facility I also got some goosebumps when seeing the Uranium evaporate but not seeing a negative pressure glovebox...
Anyhow, many people on the world have been exposed to Uranium dusts, like soldiers affected by depleted Uranium ammunition, like workers in Uranium mining or even workers in nuclear fuel processing plants. There are a lot of cases where people suffered from long time exposition to this kind of stuff.
That´s why the gut feeling tells, one single day of experiments will probably not kill you. But keep in mind that incorporating and especially inhaling even small amounts is not giving you extra health...
3 days later : FBI, open the door !!
Of course I posted this video after I'd destroyed all the evidence and all the witnesses.
@@ChemicalForcebro are you safe? You know its peak chemistry when several uranium compounds, HF, Anhydrous N2H4 and CO are all shown in same vedio. Not to mention, boiling Uranyl nitrite
@@ChemicalForce Wait, I watched the video, I'm a witness..
Oh no..
1:35 forbidden poprocks
The intro was radiant♥️✨
The lab area is now radiant!
Soluble uranium compounds are actually dangerous whereas insoluble kinds will go straight through your system and out the other end.
I ate 10 lbs. of the insoluble stuff, "Scientists were so preoccupied with whether or not they could, they didn’t stop to think if they should" - Jeff Goldblum
Medical diagnostics use this for imaging.
4:05 Uranium tetrafluoride sounds like something I don't want to be near with
I made uranium dioxide via electrolysis of uranyl nitrate 7:51
sounds perfectly safe, next, why not make water soluble gaseous salts of u?
How do you clean this up?
He really should do it vid on cleanup sometime. I eo wwnf to see his process.
If Hanford and Oak Ridge are indicators, with millions of dollars and government oversight
I never though I'd see reactions with uranium compounds on youtube but man you can make anything possible.
Also you once said that antimony could show chemiluminescence, is it true?
yummy soluble uranium salts!!!
Which uranium oxide and Al would make the best thermite? (Obviously the Mg/UF4 Ames process is the commercial process.)
Ya I was really hoping he'd show this reaction or at least reduce to some uranium metal.
Eastern European sounding voice, Rocket fuel, and Uranium = You are going on some of the finest lists this country has to offer 😂
Best chemical channel , love your content.
You are superb and one of the most underrated youtube channel I have seeen
The music in this one is just great!
You know it's a special video when the intro is different!
As a chemistry graduate who hasn't worked Iin the field I'm intrigued as to how you deal with the waste. As an undergraduate we perhaps did a couple of reactions using Uranium (1980s) but there was never any discussion as to ultimate disposal although I'm fairly sure it didn't go down the lab sink as all activities took place in a fume hood even though there were no volatile products.. I get it that you concentrate and solidify into less harmful, perhaps insoluble salts, but ultimate disposal? Where's the 'kin around with Radioactive Materials Disposal Agency, so to speak? Before my time but that Sodium reaction was used as a determination for sodium in analytical chemistry.
It's probably your first video, where i've actually worked with all the chemicals you've shown lol
How do you dispose of radiactive material in your chemical laboratory ? Do you have a special company dealing with that radioactive waste ?
Nice accent, crazy idea, dangerous intro
Have i found the best yt Chanel?
love the "Cody's Lab style" intro ahah
I would love to see a video on the cleanup process! This is fascinating. It's like 10 Wikipedia articles in one well made educational video.
I feel like I need a decon shower after videos like this, and I probably spent half the video subconscious holding my breath😅
you should have mixed these oxides with aluminum powder or magnesium, for a more effective reaction :)
О, Легенда! Приветствую 🖖
@@nisagavasidzirashi654 😳 кто здесь
@@ADpirotek давно твой канал смотрел, по ТОСам
@@nisagavasidzirashi654 ну все там же, только ещё и с песнями теперь :)
Does ANYONE need Uranium thermite ??????
Merry xmas!
It's nice when the theory lines up with the experiment :)
That's not lemonade powder?....
Should I go to the doctor? I had two glasses...
0:28 _hooooow can you seeeee into my eyes, like open doooooors_
Mix two common household cleaners together, and you could gas out your whole building ... but two of the most energy dense fuels known to humanity, one that litterally could destroy the earth one day from an explosion of it, and the other, powerfull enough to allow us to fly to other worlds in spacecraft... yet mix them together and you get a measly poof of smoke! (Although TBF, I wouldn't wanna breath in that smoke either lmao...) xD
your videos are best of the best!
Urinal Nitrate
You're wild g I just started the video i can't wait!
are we SURE this isn't just a ground up Urinal Cake 🤔
A uranal cake
Taste it and find out
@messiermitchell4901 you can taste that too
UO3 _is_ referred to as Yellow Cake in the refinement industry
5:02 bluetooth boiling
forbidden colored cake sugaring
I'd love to see the subsequent cleanup.
How did you obtain your uranium compound?
Now, that’s something I’ve never played with. Very cool!
Thanks for teaching me this.
peroxohydrates or hydrates in general are less violent than the non hydrate species :)
Try uranyl nitrate with hydrazine if you think it will decompose to oxidize the hydrazine.
does the uranium not reflect the uv when liquified because it is becoming less dense and allowing the uv through?
Causes some damage because of the linear hypnosis of radiation. The danger becomes statistically smaller but never goes away. Unlike salt, which is poisonous when large amounts are ingested but harmless in small amounts.
2:17 and 2:53 ... I'm guessing that the bubbling and condensation are from water of hydration? Thanks for another cool video!
i like new intro
The activated carbon filter of the fumehood has to be exchanged after it at latest... 😉
9:56 the ignition is not instant so theres a loss of energy within contact thats why its not that ''cool'' in terms of effectivnesss
Now try hydrazine with calcium peroxide and sodium peroxide
Now we are talking!
hey. you could make..... radioactive gunpowder!
can you do experiment with metallic uranium
Don't forget to change the gas mask filter..
Barium hydroxide solutioms love to go cloudy even in air 8:21
TH-cam must stop forced video title translations. I want to see the Original title!
I Mixed Rocket Fuel with Nuclear Fuel ... of course you did ... :) Why am i not surprised?
Lmao people wondering where the experiment cleanup goes...as if yall don't have a sludge pit in the backyard for disposal of failed experiments, cleaning supplies, and car batteries
Wow, look at the warning signs in the video!
Should add biofuel
Sulfuryl chloride please 😢
"and forms uranium trioxide" woa....
ingredients to make grandma’s cupcake
You should narrate other stories ,your accent is basically so unique you could say anything like elephants fly and people wouldnt question you whatsoever .😂
Te joci cu viata ta😮😮😮😮😢
viata este un joc
Meanwhile in Penemunde ...
Hi guys
Mix with aluminium powder for firecracker. Aim long Time ago use with red lead mix extremaly powerfull flash powder!!😂😂 Mix red uranium compound!!!!
3:56 What kind of ions? 👉URINAL👈 ions?!⁉
Well it is yellow!!!
@@aaronsmith8073 😂🤣
So that's what those urinal cakes are! Yellow Cake!
WE ALL ON THE FBI WATCHLIST ON THIS ONE
🗿
🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥
A Nitrated Urinal does NOT sound nice, even in theory.
Fun, but not nice. 😂
Jesus you live life dangerously. I hope it's worth it, and I hope you are cleaning up properly when you are done.
3:11 sodium di 👉URINATE?!👈⁉
THANK YOU TRUMP ❤
Great vids, hope you get some calories soon
doublle cancer
♋♋
Your English is really good so please don’t take the following as a slight, old bean. That is not my intention at all, just a matter of centimetres. (Phon.) ‘centi-metres’ rather than (phon.) sen-tim-it-ers, would be the better pronunciation. Just that the former being how it is said within the English language. The latter being how some poorly-educated, banjo-playing hoodlums from the USA say it. Folks from the U.S. in general are not exactly good practitioners of the English language and those few I mention above are to be avoided at all costs :) :)
The centimeter/sontimeter thing in the US is a little quirk of linguistics, not something done out of ignorance. Especially considering it's mostly done by doctors and other medical practitioners. It's also fine for the guy to pronounce it how he wants. If people hear what he's saying and understand he's referring to a unit of length that is measuring one hundredth of a meter, then it doesn't matter. Languages are alive and trying to force them into an arbitrary box is extremely dumb.
As someone who was raise by said banjo-playing hoodlums, I have never heard it pronounced that way until I went to college and had a foreign professor (a great one at that).
All he's doing is dividing the syllable at a different spot (common if your native language doesn't allow coda-clusters, like most languages if I'm remembering correctly)
@@isaacthedestroyerofstuped7676 yeah acting like that's something done by ignorant Americans, specifically those in like rural Appalachia, is itself pretty ignorant. The subject of why some Americans use a French-sounding pronunciation (particularly doctors) is actually pretty fascinating, so just chalking it up to poor, ignorant American..."hoodlums" is just depriving yourself of a chance to learn about something neat.
First!
The most boring video known to man.