fidlersgrn Posted November 28, 2016 Posted November 28, 2016 (edited) In building some gyroscopic navigation equipment for a company, we used a very heavy clear liquid to suspend a spinning ball in this liquid. The liquid must have weighed over 100lbs in a 5 gallon can. What kind of liquid would it be? What is the heaviest known non-metallic liquid? Edited November 28, 2016 by fidlersgrn
imatfaal Posted November 28, 2016 Posted November 28, 2016 Metrification-Stations! 100lbs = 45.4 kilograms 5 gallons (presume US) = 19000 cm^3 = 0.019 m^3 Mass density of your liquid = 45.4/0.019 = 2389 kg.m^-3 Carbon Tet and Percholethylene are around the 1600 kg.m^-3 so need denser than that (btw mercury is 13500 kg.m^-3). The seriously concentrated acids are a little higher at the 1800 kg.m^-3 mark. To get past 2000 kg.m^-3 the only thing I can see is liquid bromine at 3100 kg.m^-3 And just after finding that I found wikipedia's list https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Heavy_liquid 1
John Cuthber Posted November 28, 2016 Posted November 28, 2016 By far the least toxic of those liquids is the sodium polytungstate solution.
fidlersgrn Posted November 29, 2016 Author Posted November 29, 2016 Thanks Imatfaal and John. It was probably Carbon Tet.
studiot Posted November 29, 2016 Posted November 29, 2016 (edited) Gryoscopic fluid suspension is usually accomplished with a ferrofluid https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=Wr6l42rEizUC&pg=PA649&lpg=PA649&dq=gyroscopic+suspension+fluid&source=bl&ots=xoDrd0_oW-&sig=jFqQ4v7LKrU8uqpCytdwK__Voxw&hl=en&sa=X&ved=0ahUKEwiBmJrm9s3QAhWrAMAKHU2pDUAQ6AEIMzAG#v=onepage&q=gyroscopic%20suspension%20fluid&f=false Typical densities range from 850 kg/m3 for oil based ferrolfluids to 1400 kg/m3 for water based ones. http://faculty.washington.edu/finlayso/ferrofluid/Prop/all.html The liquid must have weighed over 100lbs in a 5 gallon can. Was the 100lbs a guess or an actual weighing and did this include the can and was that Imperial or US Gallons and was the volume a guess as well? I ask this because of these comparisons. 1 UK gallon of water weighs 10 lbs and a US gallon about 8.4 lbs. By comparison with imatfaal's figures Earth and rock is about 2000 - 2200 kg/m3 Concrete is 2200 - 2400 kg/m3 Edited November 29, 2016 by studiot
hypervalent_iodine Posted November 29, 2016 Posted November 29, 2016 Depending on how long ago you're talking, I doubt it was carbon tet. That stuff is next to impossible to get a hold of these days.
fidlersgrn Posted November 30, 2016 Author Posted November 30, 2016 STUDIOT; This was about 25 years ago, and I remember lifting the 5 gallon (US measure) metal can full of this liquid and it felt like the weight of a 100 lb bag of cement. I was just curious as to what type of liquid it could be. I don't remember them telling me what it was back then. To me, as a layman, I figured all clear liquids should weigh about the same. I appreciate your patience with me, I know very little about chemistry. HYPERVALENT-IODINE, Thanks for coming back on this. The incident I referred to was 25 years ago. I have since learned that it is a toxic chemical and harmful to the environment.
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