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Posted

Hey guys,

 

I am searching how I can make a solution of plastic. I have some plastic stars that glow in the dark, but would like to make a solution of it with the same properties (glowing in the dark). Has someone an idea. I don't even know what kind of plastic it could be. I don't think acids will work. I've tried to melt the plastic. It melts very fast at low temperatures, but loses it's yellowish color and becomes brown, due to combustion i think. And even if I would be able to melt the thing, it would become solid again. And i want a liquid.

Posted

If you are lucky acetone may work, xylene or white spirit are more realistic. There are still lot of plastics that can not be properly liquified with easyli available solvents. Really strong solvents for plastics are dichlorometane, acetonitrile, chloroform or molten phenol.

Posted

you can also try DMSO (dimethyle sulfoxide, i believe). Id ealso try tolene and other solvents found at the hardware store.

Posted

Petrol works as the stars (if they`re the same as the bag I have) are a styrene base, you`ll need to heat it carefully though and use plenty of petrol so the liquid isn`t TOO viscous when you pour off the liquid, after a few washes you`ll get you Zinc Sulphide material, although there are Better sources of this than those star and Moon thingies!

 

have you tried the hallow`en glow in the dark face make-up? simple washing up liquid and warm water will do the trick AND give you more product per gram of starting weight :)

Posted

So, I put some stars in an erlenmeyer and heat it carefully with a lot of petrol. But what do you mean with 'washes'. Does the zinc sulpide precipitate ?? And what would be better sources ?

Posted
So, I put some stars in an erlenmeyer and heat it carefully with a lot of petrol. But what do you mean with 'washes'. Does the zinc sulpide precipitate ?? And what would be better sources ?

 

in reverse order my post #6 gave you an ideal source.

 

as for washing, you need to use petrol again, and then when not so viscous you may introduce detergents, the "glow in the dark" material is a crystal unaffected by these and will drop out to the bottom of the flask as they`re insoluble.

 

I PERSONALY wouldn`t even bother with such an extraction unless I was desperate, it`s a bad waste of good fuel and materials, but it`s your choice, and that`s how you`ll do it.

Posted

Petrol = gas. In England, as well as many non-US countries, they call it that. And if it's cheaper for petrol/gas there, than it better be here, 'cause it's darned expensive over there. What is it YT, like 2 pounds per liter? That's what I heard...

Posted

gasoline is a mixture of C5-C10 aliphatic hydrocarbons. the "octane" rating in gasoline is basically a measurement of the concentration of octane (C8H18) present in the gasoline.

octane is generally the best hydrocarbon of the C5-C10 aliphatic hydrocarbons because it requires more force to combust.

 

just a followup: "unleaded" gas refers to gas that doesn't have tetraethylplumbane in it.

Posted

Acetone is cheeper than gasoline in the USA (well, not close, but it getting expensive, TIME FOR H2 vehicles!!!)

 

 

But ya, gasoline is a mix of various hydrocarbons derived from the catylactic cracking of crude oil (and also distillation).

Posted

I'm not so sure about that... Even the (about) $2 for a gallon of gas is better than what it costs me at home improvement stores... Maybe you just have better sources than I do.

  • 2 weeks later...
Posted

I've tried to make a solution of the glow-in-the-dark-plastic with acetone, but I had to scratch some of the plastic of the stars, and I obtained a sort of gummy ball. So it certainly didn't disolve in acetone. I think I'm going to try it with petrol like YT2095 said.

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