boris_73 Posted November 16, 2004 Posted November 16, 2004 what other type of thermites are there except the iron oxide and aluminium one and what ratio are they mixed in
boris_73 Posted November 16, 2004 Author Posted November 16, 2004 i have found one more which is ment to be a good one Cuo/Al mixture ratio 4:1 or 75% CuO 25% Al
jdurg Posted November 16, 2004 Posted November 16, 2004 Pretty much any metal oxide with a good reducing agent will produce a nice thermite. Thorium oxide and aluminum powder works, as does pretty much any oxide with aluminum powder. (Basically, if you go by the activity series of metals, and metal which is below aluminum will work in a "thermite" reaction. Any metal oxide, that is).
raivo Posted November 16, 2004 Posted November 16, 2004 Yes, jdrug is right, but some oxides ( like Cr2O3 ) need preheating. Otherwise there will not be enough heat for reaction to continue. At high temperatures is thermite reaction possible even with sand (SiO2) and Al.
boris_73 Posted November 16, 2004 Author Posted November 16, 2004 how great of reaction would lithium oxide and aluminium give because that is more reactive then CuO so it should give a better reaction
boris_73 Posted November 16, 2004 Author Posted November 16, 2004 also do you know how well a lead thermite would be
Lance Posted November 16, 2004 Posted November 16, 2004 I’m going to try to make thermite with plaster of paris and aluminum later.
boris_73 Posted November 16, 2004 Author Posted November 16, 2004 LOL that's ment to be a thermite bomb i have read that before i would'nt try it but if you do have a very long fuse, but this lead thermite does sound interesting, you have the iron thermite which produce's slag and moltern iron, you have the copper thermite which burns very fast and you have the lead thermite which burns even faster this one sounds like my favourite Edit: will the ratios for the lead thermite still be 4:1/ 75% PbO, lead oxide 25% Al, Aluminium
boris_73 Posted November 16, 2004 Author Posted November 16, 2004 LOL that's ment to be a thermite bomb i have read that before i would'nt try it but if you do have a very long fuse, but this lead thermite does sound interesting, you have the iron thermite which produce's slag and moltern iron, you have the copper thermite which burns very fast and you have the lead thermite which burns even faster this one sounds like my favourite Edit: will the ratios for the lead thermite still be 4:1/ 75% PbO, lead oxide 25% Al, Aluminium
jdurg Posted November 16, 2004 Posted November 16, 2004 Well, Lithium, Potassium, Calcium, Sodium, and Magnesium are higher up on the activity series than aluminum, so I don't believe that the thermite will work with the oxides of those metals. (Since if the ions were oxidized back to the metal, the metal would immediately reduce the aluminum oxide produced).
jdurg Posted November 16, 2004 Posted November 16, 2004 Well, Lithium, Potassium, Calcium, Sodium, and Magnesium are higher up on the activity series than aluminum, so I don't believe that the thermite will work with the oxides of those metals. (Since if the ions were oxidized back to the metal, the metal would immediately reduce the aluminum oxide produced).
budullewraagh Posted November 16, 2004 Posted November 16, 2004 what other type of thermites are there except the iron oxide and aluminium one and what ratio are they mixed in you can do a thermite with just about any metal salt/oxide and a pure metal of greater activity. just make sure you powder them for nice results. usually aluminum or magnesium is used with any of the following: Copper(II) Oxide Iron(III) Oxide Iron(II)(III) Oxide Lead(II) Oxide Manganese(IV) Oxide Zinc Oxide
budullewraagh Posted November 16, 2004 Posted November 16, 2004 what other type of thermites are there except the iron oxide and aluminium one and what ratio are they mixed in you can do a thermite with just about any metal salt/oxide and a pure metal of greater activity. just make sure you powder them for nice results. usually aluminum or magnesium is used with any of the following: Copper(II) Oxide Iron(III) Oxide Iron(II)(III) Oxide Lead(II) Oxide Manganese(IV) Oxide Zinc Oxide
boris_73 Posted November 16, 2004 Author Posted November 16, 2004 thank you bud and jdurg, do you know the ratio of lead oxide/aluminium, magnesium
boris_73 Posted November 16, 2004 Author Posted November 16, 2004 thank you bud and jdurg, do you know the ratio of lead oxide/aluminium, magnesium
boris_73 Posted November 16, 2004 Author Posted November 16, 2004 one more thing where can you buy lead oxide from
boris_73 Posted November 16, 2004 Author Posted November 16, 2004 one more thing where can you buy lead oxide from
budullewraagh Posted November 16, 2004 Posted November 16, 2004 eh, im not so sure where to get lead oxides... thank you bud and jdurg, do you know the ratio of lead oxide/aluminium, magnesium depends on your lead oxide... for the monoxide: 3 moles PbO for 2 moles Al 1 mole PbO for 1 mole Mg for the dioxide: 3 moles PbO2 for 4 moles Al 1 mole PbO2 for 2 moles Mg
budullewraagh Posted November 16, 2004 Posted November 16, 2004 eh, im not so sure where to get lead oxides... thank you bud and jdurg, do you know the ratio of lead oxide/aluminium, magnesium depends on your lead oxide... for the monoxide: 3 moles PbO for 2 moles Al 1 mole PbO for 1 mole Mg for the dioxide: 3 moles PbO2 for 4 moles Al 1 mole PbO2 for 2 moles Mg
boris_73 Posted November 16, 2004 Author Posted November 16, 2004 where did you get this information on thermites i have tried searching the internet for ratios ect but i have found very little
boris_73 Posted November 16, 2004 Author Posted November 16, 2004 where did you get this information on thermites i have tried searching the internet for ratios ect but i have found very little
budullewraagh Posted November 16, 2004 Posted November 16, 2004 i figured it out myself. think of it: your lead reduces from either +2 or +4 to 0. your aluminum oxidizes from 0 to +3. just do the math and you come up with those proportions. remember, those proportions are in MOLAR values, not MASS values.
budullewraagh Posted November 16, 2004 Posted November 16, 2004 i figured it out myself. think of it: your lead reduces from either +2 or +4 to 0. your aluminum oxidizes from 0 to +3. just do the math and you come up with those proportions. remember, those proportions are in MOLAR values, not MASS values.
DandyGurl Posted November 17, 2004 Posted November 17, 2004 Back in the day we tried that. I figured out the mole ratio and we used Al powder from the milling machine and rust from the metal in the garage. My friend was a machininst. Ferric, Ferrous? We did'nt know. We used Mg shavings to light it. He made parts for F-16's, thats how we had the Mg. It didn't work though. My thought was that the Al was too course. We did find that if you stuff Mg ribbon into a beer bottle half full of beer and light it, it will explode once the Mg touches the water(beer). Dont put water on Mg to put it out... This should be a thread....
DandyGurl Posted November 17, 2004 Posted November 17, 2004 Back in the day we tried that. I figured out the mole ratio and we used Al powder from the milling machine and rust from the metal in the garage. My friend was a machininst. Ferric, Ferrous? We did'nt know. We used Mg shavings to light it. He made parts for F-16's, thats how we had the Mg. It didn't work though. My thought was that the Al was too course. We did find that if you stuff Mg ribbon into a beer bottle half full of beer and light it, it will explode once the Mg touches the water(beer). Dont put water on Mg to put it out... This should be a thread....
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