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budullewraagh

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Everything posted by budullewraagh

  1. tcap is very easy to synthesize and all the reagents are cheaper and otc btw, U-233 is fissionable as well. and U-238 is used to produce plutonium...
  2. greetings. im 16 and am very enthused with chem, especially orgo. i'll be taking orgo I this summer, so i could probably use a bit of advice. if there is any you can give me, kindly let me know. also, if you are willing to give me your contact info (AIM, MSN, yahoo, etc) so we could talk about chem, i would be most appreciative.
  3. this sounds like a homework/test question. this belongs in the homework section. make an attempt to find the answer and i will reply
  4. it would give epinephrine in addition to a number of hormones
  5. you cant exactly transport armstrong's or tcap either
  6. get some adrenal glands and extract
  7. wet NI3 isnt particularly bad. dry NI3 is very sensitive; comparable to TCAP and armstrong's. it explodes with less force than TCAP and armstrong's.
  8. i happen to be immune to chlorine
  9. "NI3 is more unstable, but also less practical, so in many ways safer. :-P" than ARMSTRONG'S and TCAP??? no way man. just for clarification, are alkali and the lower alkaline earth metals, thermites, etc taboo? oh, and what about toxic/carcinogenic chems?
  10. mek isnt dangerous at all... mekp is:\ btw, jdurg, we we cant talk about armstrong's or tcap and they're incredibly unstable, but we can talk about nitrogen trihalides? sorry, i'm just trying to find consistency
  11. new york is one of the few states that actually have regents exams. the regents are state-specific. "probably the only place youd make some gold compounds is like inside a volcano or sometin" or in some nitrosyl chloride...
  12. again, the new york state regents is messed up. btw, define "laboratory conditions"
  13. you can get gold oxides, selenides, etc...
  14. Ti, and no, it's definitely not inert
  15. i dont have gold/silver to polish:\
  16. i thought kennedy figured this one out. anyway, considering china is absolutely huge and japan has quite a bunch of WWII restrictions still pending, china would "win"
  17. i could have sworn i saw silver below gold on the new york regents tables. i checked the potentials though and recognize the greater activity of silver relative to gold
  18. the extra electrons add a negligible amount of mass
  19. perhaps it's an oxide layer?
  20. i was reading my organic book the other day and i came across the haloform reaction, which intrigued me. for those not familiar, it involves the oxidation of a methyl ketone by a hypohalite to a carboxylic acid, liberating chloroform. in short: R-C(O)CH3+3NaOCl---->R-C(O)CCl3+3NaOH----->R-COO- + Na+ + HCCl3 i was wondering if anyone knew of specific conditions for this reaction to occur under, the expected yield and perhaps some other notes that should be made concerning this reaction. also, since acetone is a ketone with two methyl groups coming off from the carbonyl group, does anybody not think that one could do the following? H3C-C(O)CH3+NaOCl---->Na+ -OC(O)O- Na+ + 2HCCl3 (pretty much the same reaction as above but the acetone oxidizing on both sides)
  21. your word over the state of new york? ok
  22. i forgot ruthenium. and i guess i'll take back what i asid about nickel
  23. why? ag is less active than, say, Au. Ni isnt very active either
  24. the potassium citrate should be an antiurolithic and an antacid. it's a bit alkaline, so i suggest you make the dibasic salt. why waste potassium though? if you want, i'll make some K citrate for you and trade it for K(s)
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