Nave Posted May 18, 2005 Posted May 18, 2005 the other day i made some liquid CO2 by placing frozen CO2 into a tube and clamping each end and letting it sublime. Since iodine does sublimes would you be able to make liquid iodine. Because the only other way we see it is mixed with alchohol. Would it be possible to do? What could you do it in because i know its far more reactive then CO2.
budullewraagh Posted May 18, 2005 Posted May 18, 2005 yes, it is possible. anything that sublimes can still be a liquid, you just need to know where the triple point is and stay towards the liquid side of it. you need proper pressure and temperature.
akcapr Posted May 18, 2005 Posted May 18, 2005 well i mean, u couldnt turn it all liquid by his method.
jdurg Posted May 18, 2005 Posted May 18, 2005 Liquid iodine is fairly easy to make. You don't really even need a whole lot of pressure to do so. You just need a small opening in a glass container. In my element collection, I took some round iodine spheres and put them in a glass test tube which would then be melted shut. Before it was melted shut, I took the burner flame and put it under the iodine to see the nice purple vapor. Low and behold, because I2 is such a dense gas the vapor created its own 'high pressure' area and the iodine crystals began to melt into a deep purple liquid. It flowed like water and I coated the inside of the tube with it before sealing it shut. (I then re-melted it so it would stay at the bottom of my tube). But it was REALLY surprising to see it as I didn't think you could get liquid iodine unless you had some pretty good pressure over the solid element.
H2SO4 Posted May 18, 2005 Posted May 18, 2005 the other day i made some liquid CO2 by placing frozen CO2 into a tube and clamping each end and letting it sublime. Since iodine does sublimes would you be able to make liquid iodine. Because the only other way we see it is mixed with alchohol. Would it be possible to do? What could you do it in because i know its far more reactive then CO2. I imagine placing dry ice in a glass tube and clamping it closed would cause it to explode. I dont imagin eclams, or a glass tube can take that kind of preessure.
akcapr Posted May 18, 2005 Posted May 18, 2005 ya wat h2so4 said. What kind of tube were you using? someone gonna try making liquid co2 like you and is gonna end up with glass in his skin
Nave Posted May 18, 2005 Author Posted May 18, 2005 I imagine placing dry ice in a glass tube and clamping it closed would cause it to explode. I dont imagin eclams, or a glass tube can take that kind of preessure. First off if u tried to clamp a glass tube with a vice....wouldnt that break the gas? lol its just clear rubbertubing... u would have to be an idiot to use glass! Ohh by the way does anyone know What I2's Triple point is?
H2SO4 Posted May 18, 2005 Posted May 18, 2005 akcapr, you mustve stayed home from school today. I HAVE A SORE THROAT AND AM FATIQUES SO THATS WHY I DID (DAMN CAPS LOCK).
akcapr Posted May 18, 2005 Posted May 18, 2005 you did wat? and no i satyed at schoo actually i just went on the forum in the library after lunch
Nave Posted May 19, 2005 Author Posted May 19, 2005 i made the liquid I2... It was actually really easy after i found the triple point. Its color was really amazing too.. I took a small test tube put in the I2 sealed the one end then heated it. Works very nicely
akcapr Posted May 19, 2005 Posted May 19, 2005 seems like it might explode if u heat a sealed container
H2SO4 Posted May 19, 2005 Posted May 19, 2005 yes, i try to stay away from heating sealed containers or sealing containers that have something in them producing a gas.
Nave Posted May 20, 2005 Author Posted May 20, 2005 well the glass is strong enough to withstand the pressure. Its not much pressure anyway because I2 tripple point is just over 1atm and 125 C so theres really nothing to worry about.
Recommended Posts
Create an account or sign in to comment
You need to be a member in order to leave a comment
Create an account
Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!
Register a new accountSign in
Already have an account? Sign in here.
Sign In Now