rthmjohn Posted July 10, 2005 Posted July 10, 2005 The only thermite I knew of until recently was the ferroaluminum thermite. I now know that any oxide can be used (as is stated in the definition of thermite). Does this mean that V205 or MnO2 can be used in thermites? What are some other strange thermites that you've heard of?
Aspirin Posted July 10, 2005 Posted July 10, 2005 CuO/Al is another nice thermite and all these oxides can be used with aluminium: Fe3O4, Co3O4, CoO, NiO, MnO2, Mn2O3, Mn3O4, CrO3, MoO3, MoO2, V2O5, SnO2, CuO and Cu2O
rthmjohn Posted July 10, 2005 Author Posted July 10, 2005 Sweet. btw... I've almost exhausted my supply of Al powder, and unitednuclear has discontinued its sale. Where do you guys get yours?
Aspirin Posted July 10, 2005 Posted July 10, 2005 http://www.skylighter.com is another source for Al powder
latentheat Posted July 10, 2005 Posted July 10, 2005 Have a look at the activity series of metals, or the standard reduction potentials table. A metal with a more negative reduction potential can reduce a metal with a more positive reduction potential from its oxide. For example, ferro aluminum thermite works because the reduction potential of Al3+ is -1.66 volts while the reduction potential of Fe3+ is -0.04 volts. Al wants to give up its electrons more badly than Fe, and we know this because it takes more energy to reduce Al from an oxidized state. Here's a good table of reduction potentials... http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Table_of_standard_electrode_potentials This table is very useful for predicting thermites and other types of single displacement reactions.
rthmjohn Posted July 10, 2005 Author Posted July 10, 2005 Thanks latentheat. Aspirin, do you know if skylighter discloses personal info?
weldermanx Posted July 10, 2005 Posted July 10, 2005 hey you know etcha sketches? well the powder in them is very pure aluminum and it will serve its uses for thermite just fine
ThermiteMan Posted July 11, 2005 Posted July 11, 2005 That was very messy......verryyyy messy. its so fine your hands get covered in it.
Silencer Posted July 11, 2005 Posted July 11, 2005 Doesn't the etcha sketch work with magnets? Aluminum isn't magnetic...
rthmjohn Posted July 12, 2005 Author Posted July 12, 2005 I was thinking maybe I could use Al electrodes (I'm guessing they should be pretty pure since their from a supply co.) and file them down with a bastard file and then place the filings in a ball mill...
ThermiteMan Posted July 12, 2005 Posted July 12, 2005 EtchaSketches workwiht a pointer mechanism that is operated with pullies from the dials.when you turn the thing upside down, the aluminum covered plastic beads coat the plexiglass again.
6E30306200 Posted July 16, 2005 Posted July 16, 2005 Sulfates can also be used. These three thermites have a calculated temperature of over 5000 Kelvin Y + MnO2 Nd + PbO2 Nd + I2O5 Remember to protect your eyes against the ultraviolet radiation that is created from thermites.
weldermanx Posted July 23, 2005 Posted July 23, 2005 the etchasketch i used was perfect the was not plastic in the powder it works perfectly for thermite
jowrose Posted July 31, 2005 Posted July 31, 2005 skylighter is ok, but i find that they're a bit on the expensive side. I got some great quality aluminum powder on ebay, 5 pounds for 25 bucks. Works perfectly in the thermite reaction with Fe2O3, never had to relight any of it. I'm going to get my hands on some magnetite soon though, I'll see how that works out. I've heard that it's safer (less splatter) and even that it burns hotter. I'll have to see for myself. Does anyone know if the ratio between aluminum and iron oxide is different for a magnetite reaction? or is it still 1 to 3?
jowrose Posted August 1, 2005 Posted August 1, 2005 Just got back from the beach, collected about 2 pounds of impure magnetite. I plan on running my magnets over the magnetite/sand mixture several times to purify it; i have seen pictures of what the pure stuff should look like (it's also the stuff used in etch-a-sketches, i think). I'll post again once the purification is complete, then it's on to the thermite testing...
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