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budullewraagh

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Everything posted by budullewraagh

  1. word to indie. postal service and death cab arent so indie anymore. check epitonic for some quality indie
  2. tellurium is also a good way to kill yourself
  3. it's not expensive!
  4. i love indium. my gf works with the perchlorate and makes indium nanowire. fun stuff
  5. the heat of vaporization of magnesium is incredible
  6. i would imagine it would decompose though upon radioactive decay of the uranium, yielding some crazy fluorine compounds
  7. there is some correlation, although mass has significantly less to do with phase than intermolecular forces do
  8. yeah, fractional crystallization-->NaCl
  9. chances are a solid. i hate how people correlate atomic and/or molecular mass with phases though. my bio teacher tried doing that at the beginning of the year while talking about hydrogen bonding in water and how it's amazing that a substance that "small" is a liquids at STP and has such a "high" boiling point. it's all about intermolecular forces. uranium hexafluoride is bloody huge, but it's a gas at STP. compare that to beryllium, which is tiny and a solid.
  10. oh come on, it's not that difficult to make
  11. well, there shouldnt be much HCl at all. just a small amount from potential fumes
  12. DNA is a compound... it's a macromolecule, and is, for all intents and purposes, a polymer, despite the fact that it doesnt actually always have the same base sequence.
  13. so yes, 1mg would dissolve. what do AgCl and NaCl share in common? Cl-. it's their common ion. think about it a bit and respond
  14. oleum will. but anyway, it's not so bad; the bromine should be under the water anyway, so when you want to distill it and dry it, you can just transfer your mixture to another apparatus
  15. yes, jdurg, the above chart is one of the many reasons why phosphorus is the coolest element. many of those allotropes are hard to find information about. this summer when i have access to harvard libraries, i'll look for phosphorus books
  16. phosphorus allotropes:
  17. " its supposedly the most reactive substance known to man." fluorine monoxide and dioxide are more reactive. so is hypofluorous acid and probably all hypofluoride salts. dont forget permanganyl fluoride, fluorine nitrate, etc WHERE IS MY PHOSPHORUS???????????? come on man. and seriously, people should like phosphorus
  18. i suggest at least 20% H2O2
  19. it's the isotope of hydrogen known as H3, yes. Anamantium=adamantium actually "Anamantium (not spelled right) From X-Men A very shiny non mallibule non corrsive mettal that is virtually industrucitiable and once forged cannot be destroyed. probably a transition metal related to osmium, iridium, tungsten Naquada From SG-1 Non radioactive highley reactive super heavy element looks like grafite. probably ununquadium Naqaudria SG-1 same as naquada but more reactive and is more unstable. probably below ununquadium Maclarium SG-1 does not exist in nature atomic weight over 200 most likley non radioactive. inconceivable based on the fact that it is not found in nature AND it's NOT radioactive"
  20. i really like lithium as well, and it has the most negative reduction potential of all elements, so it's definitely high on my list. i like its red, but i also like the deep slightly magenta look of strontium. hard decision to make
  21. oh come on, if you like pretty things, just look at phosphorus (there are MANY more allotropes than red, white and black), bismuth (oxide), strontium (excited electrons, red colour) and osmium (pretty blue)
  22. and my particular bleach brand definitely has calcium hypochlorite in it, that i am positive of
  23. for all intents and purposes, it does not exist
  24. nitric oxide is a vasodilator. it readily oxidizes to NO2/N2O4 at equilibrium at STP, and in the body oxidizes as well, and tends to hydrolyze
  25. platinum also makes a good catalyst
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