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/sci/ - Science & Math


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15776360 No.15776360 [Reply] [Original]

I thought Nitroglycerin would denotate because it would eventually settle in very fragile microscopic crystals that can easily self-denotate in a chain reaction in specific chemical conditions.
Why is it not true anymore? Is this yet another Mandela effect?

>> No.15776405

>>15776360
Because it's 5% :(
I came here to say that, if you got some you could purify the hardware store or online product with chemistry to have an explosive maybe. I didn't realize it was hospital supplies but I'm not a doctor
At the same time I think that it's because it's 5%. And also that I wouldn't want that in my body! Sugar is based though

>> No.15776413

Never trust a chemical with too many N's. Around nitrogen, never relax.

>> No.15776414 [DELETED] 

>>15776360
I think the nitroglycerin is neither trans nor cis, but it is right rotated clockwise (Dextro), but I don't know if glycerin is a sugar (like glycose - glucose, also clockwise rotated). The other part is definitely left-rotated and neither of the two products it's in (like from glucose, it isn't ose, is in like I mentioned, so it's mixed in with it or whatever) and ide would be already processed. The left rotated products (everything but the Nitrous) can't be processed by the body

>> No.15776416

>>15776405
No i'm specifically talking about medicla nitroglycerin (pic in the op), but nitro in general.
>>15776414
>>>/pol/

>> No.15776421

I think the nitroglycerin is neither trans nor cis, but it is right rotated clockwise (Dextro), but I don't know if glycerin is a sugar (like glycose - glucose, also clockwise rotated). The other part is definitely left-rotated and neither of the two products it's in (like from glucose, it isn't ose, is in like I mentioned, so it's mixed in with it or whatever) and ide would be already processed. The left rotated products (everything but the Nitrous) can't be processed by the body. The entire reason for knowing this is to understand what gets processed in the body; you can process it by rotating the sugar; this is rotating (inverting) it, usually adding water - this will change it from negative rotations to positive as water is added. I would add a negatively charged chemical to see through water if I stretch it really far to not use alcohol to evaporate and I don't know, but I don't want to post again although I'll be away thinking about it. The explosive would need something to attach to

>> No.15776423
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15776423

>>15776413
>Air is mostly N
HELP

>> No.15776424

>>15776416
I'm both those posts. I think the first post answers your question or I hope you find it, so good luck with the thread- or what do YOU think

>> No.15776436

>>15776424
Fair enough.
I remember Nitroglycerin being unstable because even in its liquid state it would desolute in extremely fragile Nitrotoluene crystals that would chain-reaction and cause the detonation of the entire compound.
That was 15 years ago when I was in my chemistry class in college.

>> No.15776442

>>15776436
That's sad. I guess it's 5% (30% nitrous 70% oxygen) in the inactive part. It's sad because I hope you can find out a way to get it out and keep it safely as a more powerful concentrate

>> No.15776443

>>15776436
can you read? look at what concentration it's in

>> No.15776447

>>15776442
No i have no interest in obtaining Nitroglycerin compounds in any form or shape, either desoluted because of their application in medical appliances or construction, chemistry or explosive manufacturing.
I just want to understand why I can't find anything about Nitro crystals anymore.
>>15776443
Re-read the thread, dumbass.
We're not talking about the picture in the OP.

>> No.15776465

If you invent a new explosive you get to name it -- explosions & fire

>> No.15776487

>>15776360
No, it's because of the formation of cavitations bubbles and their subsequent compression by shocks which causes localized heating. All liquid explosives have this problem.
https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s001930050064

>> No.15776490

>>15776487
Nice, thanks.
That's what I was looking for.
No idea where the crystals thing came out from, are you sure they didn't change shit because muh science?

>> No.15776498

>>15776487
how does the cavitation happen in such an unstable liquid
compound decay or what?

>> No.15776502

>>15776498
Pressure, mostly.
Cavitation is not unique to mechanical interference, any low pressure ambient can easily cavitate liquids.

>> No.15776517

>>15776490
The crystal thing is true for other substances, just not nitroglycerin. Picric acid based cleaning solutions can precipicate out explosive sensitive picrate salts and just explode in storage
>>15776498
An impact will cause mutiple shocks in the fluid. Tensile stresses of rarefaction waves from earlier shocks will cause cavitation near micro-inhomogenities that are then compressed again by the later shocks

>> No.15776546

>>15776502
>>15776517
thanks
chemistry sounds fun

>> No.15776550

>>15776423
one wrong breath and your lungs explode

>> No.15776710

I thought nitroglycerin crystals was a dynamite thing.

>> No.15776712

Well I thought the vials were vacuumed (or had nitrogen N2 bubbled into them) but I'm just a monkey staring at chemical bottles making up things

>> No.15776714

And I guess it's the oxygens ability to be accessed rapidly to be explosive to react

>> No.15776737

>>15776423
>"NITROGENS could be here" he thought, "I've never been in this lab before. There could be NITROGENS anywhere." The cool CO2 felt good against his bare chest. "I HATE NITROGENS" he thought. She Blinded Me With Science reverberated his entire fume hood, making it pulsate even as the $119 MilliporeSigma anhydrous ethanol circulated through his powerful thick veins and washed away his (merited) fear of functional groups after dark. "With a chemistry degree, you can go anywhere you want" he said to himself, out loud.

>> No.15777067

>>15776737
hehe