Making Nitric Acid From Air - Elementalmaker

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  • čas přidán 22. 07. 2022
  • In this video, were making a small scale birkeland-eyde reactor, which produces H NO3 from air! Please also check DBX Lab's video on the process, his video is incredibly informative and a great resource: • Making Nitric Acid Fro...
    Parts used for this video:
    -oil burner transformer: amzn.to/3OtU1jg
    -air pump: amzn.to/3z2CN6T
    -gas dispersion tube: amzn.to/3BcQcMv
    -cooling fan: amzn.to/3cv5SAd
    -Please consider saving this link as your amazon homepage, so when you shop its supports the channel: goo.gl/x1ehvA
    -Please consider supporting this channel directly through Patreon: / elementalmaker
    -Alternatively Paypal Donations can be sent through here: www.paypal.me/ElementalMaker
    -Follow me on Instagram @ElementalMaker ElementalMaker
    -The above contains amazon affiliate or ebay affiliate links which earn the channel a small commission and help me keep the channel rolling.
  • Věda a technologie

Komentáře • 793

  • @ElementalMaker
    @ElementalMaker  Před rokem +50

    Hope you guys enjoyed! Here's the parts used for this video:
    -oil burner transformer: amzn.to/3OtU1jg
    -air pump: amzn.to/3z2CN6T
    -gas dispersion tube: amzn.to/3BcQcMv
    -cooling fan: amzn.to/3cv5SAd

    • @SynKronos
      @SynKronos Před rokem +3

      Are you related to Ave?

    • @mickeyfilmer5551
      @mickeyfilmer5551 Před rokem +3

      @@SynKronos Certainly of the same crazy mentality as us who watch them both... 🤣🤣🤣

    • @unmanaged
      @unmanaged Před rokem +1

      what about using a microwave to make plasma inside the jar ...

    • @unmanaged
      @unmanaged Před rokem

      did you sulfuric or nitric acid ?

    • @ferrocene2427
      @ferrocene2427 Před rokem +1

      Can a Aquarium air pump work just as well

  • @crackedemerald4930
    @crackedemerald4930 Před rokem +513

    finally, a project that involves high voltage, toxic gasses, corrosive liquids, poison and baking soda

    • @tomirenfors2344
      @tomirenfors2344 Před rokem +10

      Codys lab made this some time a go

    • @kristyanne719
      @kristyanne719 Před rokem +24

      And no gloves and probably no eye protection. A man that thinks just like me.

    • @VerbenaIDK
      @VerbenaIDK Před rokem +1

      @@tomirenfors2344 5 years ago

    • @VerbenaIDK
      @VerbenaIDK Před rokem +1

      @@kristyanne719 no gloves is fine here but eye protection he pobably has

    • @johnyz656
      @johnyz656 Před rokem +3

      Use h202 in place of h2o. 35% is better yield than 3% but 3% gets better yields than h20. Droplets are better than bubbles. Good video!

  • @aggrogator4045
    @aggrogator4045 Před rokem +6

    yes. YES!! Hobby chemist, hand crafted equipment, and a basement. This is the kind of content I'm about!

  • @GMCLabs
    @GMCLabs Před rokem +61

    Actually that is a cost effective way to make HNO3. I've know about this process but most ppl were using MOTs that are over a 1KW, so it would be too expensive. At 35 watts over 2 days, you only used 1.6KW hours. At 10 cents/KW hour, you only used like 17cents worth of power to make 10ml. Last time I bought nitric with shipping it was like $270 for 10 liters or $27/liter. Your cost was $17/liter, not including your time and baking soda. Not too bad at all!

    • @Anon-xd3cf
      @Anon-xd3cf Před 6 měsíci +1

      My thoughts exactly...
      ESPECIALLY if shipping costs are a factor.

    • @user-xt3wt8cd7d
      @user-xt3wt8cd7d Před 4 měsíci

      Zzu

    • @Spencergolde
      @Spencergolde Před 3 měsíci

      If you're trying to get nitrite and not nitrate, this is a great and cheap method. Like you said, it's working out to about $0.01 per gram of the sodium salt, not including the electricity to boil off the water. To get pure nitrite, just recrystalize the mixed salts from ethanol. Sodium nitrite will crystallize out.

  • @Thrustmaster64
    @Thrustmaster64 Před rokem +71

    Back in the day I built one of these. I achieved a ring of plasma with microwave oven magnetron magnets; you know, those toroidal ones with a really high curie temperature. I had a stack of two of them in the reaction chamber (which was a glass jar too :D), sitting on the inside of the lid, sealed with silicone, iirc.
    Between the magnets, in the hole, I had a ring of thin copper wire as close a possible to the size of the hole, as an anode. You can run the wire between the magnets, just flatten it with a hammer as to not have a huge gap between the magnets. I guess you could use the lip of the hole itself as an anode, as the magnets are really conductive. You'd probably have to cool the magnets somehow. The point of the ring is to not have the arc directly heat up the magnets.
    For a cathode, just a wire with it's tip in the middle of the ring. You can conveniently run the cathode wire through the inlet hose.
    I also read somewhere that it's more efficient the cooler the output gas is, something to do with an equilibrium reaction between NO and NO2 iirc, so I had the output run through a 1.5l bottle to give it time to cool. The chamber ran really hot 'cause I was pumping like a 100 watts in to it. I don't know the exact figure, but my crappy 555 -based driver was drawing like 150w; I melted a flyback to the carpet one time :D so I'm guessing it was really inefficient.
    It all ended when I joked with a friend of my dad's that I could make terrible gunpowder with the sodium nitrate I was making from the nitric, and my dad happened to hear. Out of worry of me playing with explosives, he banned the thing.
    I cried for an hour or two... It was the first project that I was really happy and proud of. At the time I really felt like it was the meaning of my life. It was all I could think about, I even forgot to eat while fiddling with it!
    I mean, with hindsight, it was the right decision, but come on, if you're gonna ban it, ban it because of the toxic gasses I was filling my bedroom with, or because of the high voltage, or because of the fire risk!
    I couldn't bare to disassemble the thing for months, so it just sat on the floor for that time. Some day I'm gonna build a version 2.0. I'm also gonna have a scrubber, I've breathed enough NOx and chlorine and HCl and ozone for a lifetime. A little tiny breath of chorine feels like a punch to the nose, and even a tiny concentration gives you a nasty runny nose and a cough, and makes the inside of your nose smell like bleach. Not healthy :D
    Okay I'm gonna stop rambling now :D

    • @gabrielbr1459
      @gabrielbr1459 Před rokem +3

      Hope u get enough safety to creat 2.0 version. And If u do that, do u plan to film it, or is it just smth that u will do far way from now?

  • @tuyenalyruk1896
    @tuyenalyruk1896 Před 10 měsíci +11

    I miss your videos hope you upload something soon! I didn't know where to post this.

  • @tomjohns8498
    @tomjohns8498 Před rokem +7

    OK OK we've waited long enough. When is the next elemental coming to entertain and teach us stuff 🤔 😊

  • @tnoutlaw73
    @tnoutlaw73 Před rokem +13

    I am a gearhead. This channel gets my attention a million times more than any horsepower channel on the net. I love this stuff.

    • @ElementalMaker
      @ElementalMaker  Před rokem +6

      Damn those are some kind words my friend thank you. I'm a wrench monkey myself, maybe one day I'll post some videos of my many Dino juice burning toys

    • @tnoutlaw73
      @tnoutlaw73 Před rokem +2

      @@ElementalMaker please do! That would be really great.

    • @tnoutlaw73
      @tnoutlaw73 Před rokem +1

      @@ElementalMaker Nitric acid and some propane mixture at the right amounts is nitromethane i think.

    • @freehat2722
      @freehat2722 Před rokem

      @@tnoutlaw73 That's neat, on wikipedia, it also says it produces other chemicals in the process.

    • @texasslingleadsomtingwong8751
      @texasslingleadsomtingwong8751 Před rokem +1

      Same for me as well

  • @shaunforcier
    @shaunforcier Před 8 měsíci +5

    It has been a while since your last post hope all is well with you and your family and love the videos

  • @leweyfountain8442
    @leweyfountain8442 Před 9 měsíci +4

    Really miss your videos, hope all is well

  • @dcallan812
    @dcallan812 Před rokem +15

    My Mum enjoyed watchinhg this. She was a pharmaceutical chemist and made peoples prescription up before everything came in boxs ready made. When my sister and I left school mum went back to university and trained as an industrial chemist and ended up running the testing labs for a UK manufacturer. (she is 86 now) great video 2x👍

  • @josephastier7421
    @josephastier7421 Před 6 měsíci +2

    Great video showing how to use "common air" as a feedstock! Your reactor is a cool idea.

  • @gutsngorrrr
    @gutsngorrrr Před 9 měsíci +8

    Hey @ElementalMaker, hope you're ok, been missing your channel and would live to know if you're going to come back. It would be great just to know whats happening.

  • @CandyGramForMongo_
    @CandyGramForMongo_ Před rokem +6

    Been a while, friend. Hope you’re well.

  • @EDesigns_FL
    @EDesigns_FL Před rokem +128

    The epoxy degradation may be attributable to the UV generated by the electrical arc. Standard epoxies don't have UV inhibitors and they are very susceptible to UV damage.

    • @benjaminmiller3620
      @benjaminmiller3620 Před rokem +8

      Could some of it have been due to ozone too?

    • @MadScientist267
      @MadScientist267 Před rokem

      For that length of time? 🤔

    • @Ma_X64
      @Ma_X64 Před rokem +6

      The amount of UV radiation emitted by the arc depends on the strength of the current. In this case, it may not be enough to noticeably degrade the plastic in such a short time. But plastics are very sensitive to ozone. And just a quite noticeable amount of ozone is released in this reactor.

    • @samfisher9413
      @samfisher9413 Před rokem +2

      What epoxy could stand up better to uv damage then? I have need of such epoxy for another project for some equipment I'm developing.

    • @ahaveland
      @ahaveland Před rokem +2

      @@samfisher9413 just add soot or carbon black to the epoxy.

  • @benlee4940
    @benlee4940 Před rokem +36

    Great informative video on the topic, nice to see you posting again. I've been meaning to make one of these, Nitric acid is difficult to get hold of in the UK (I understand why, regulations changed after a bunch acid attacks)
    - My best bit of advice would be to look for a free online copy of "Absorption of Nitrous Gases" by H. W. Webb. Published in 1923, it's a bit of a dense read and some of the science is outdated, but for free information on the topic it's the best resource I've found so far. The search function in the book is surprisingly good.
    - I suspect the damage to the epoxy might be due more to UV or Ozone rather than the NO2, although damp air in the chamber would make a hot nitric environment. Not many materials are going to last long there. Provided the silicone tubing isn't too badly damaged then perhaps cutting some silicone baking trays as disposable gaskets could be an option.
    - The reaction of Nitrogen and Oxygen to NO is a fast process, the conversion to NO2 is slower and the equilibrium is favoured at lower temperatures. Having a longer (ideally Teflon or other resistant material) tube between the jar and bubbler should improve the conversion of NO to NO2. Back in the day they had a large chamber to allow for this.
    - When dissolved in water, the NO2 forms Nitric and Nitrous acid. The Nitrous acid decomposes with heat or higher Nitric concentrations to give Nitric acid and NO. Keeping the first bubbler warm might improve yield, or jump starting the first bubbler with a bit of your fuming acid might improve your next run.
    - Nitrous Acid can be oxidised to Nitric acid by Oxygen, adding a second bubbler (or the second output of the air pump, ideally with a one way valve sold as aquarium supplies) to the absorption chamber would aid in oxidising the nitrous acid. This could be done after running the arc, provided you kept running the second jar to avoid losses. A timer setup on the arc supply might also work, and avoid the need for more plumbing.
    - I would add an additional scrubber with some form of base, such as Sodium Carbonate, Calcium Hydroxide or similar to get as much yield as possible and reduce Nox emissions. This last scrubber will have a mix of Nitrates and Nitrites though. Too many scrubbers will make your air pump flow rate decrease, so be mindful of that.
    - I would advise caution with the salt you produced. Nitrites are quite toxic, affecting haemoglobin and oxygen supply. It's nothing compared to NO2 and a poisoning you'd notice, but still something to keep in mind.
    - The book I mentioned in parts discusses Ozone reacting with NO and other things, this wasn't feasible at the time, but with cheap AliExpress aquarium Ozone modules it might be worth experimenting. There's some stuff on Google Scholar about Ozone turning Nitrites to Nitrates, but it's mainly focused on wastewater treatment. Still worth considering.
    -Not sure about using magnets, the videos I've seen look good, but it's not my area of expertise. Others have mentioned Magnetrons from microwaves, but old hard drives might be an alternative source that avoids the ceramic containing Beryllium found in old microwaves.
    - With the cooling fan; perhaps putting a large plastic container over the arc vessel with the fan glued on top and vents cut in the side would work well. It would also prevent anything from shorting the spark coil and help accidentally touching any high voltage. The cooling would be focused on the jar and keeps fingers away from high voltage.
    - Really looking forward to version 2, I might just have to get up off my arse and make my version 1. Hope the reply wasn't too long.

    • @ElementalMaker
      @ElementalMaker  Před rokem +7

      Really great suggestions! I'm gonna be getting a couple of those silicone baking mats and trying that for sure!

  • @FyoungK
    @FyoungK Před rokem +8

    In some countries nitric acid is highly regulated. So the only way to get it is to produce it by yourself. And that is how I was getting nitric acid for my needs.

  • @Enigma-Sapiens
    @Enigma-Sapiens Před rokem +2

    Even though I don't have a clue as to what you are talking about most of the time, I still enjoy the hell out of your videos! Thank you!

  • @tenlittleindians
    @tenlittleindians Před rokem +12

    Let's see, what was the acid in grade school that turned your fingers yellow quickly? Yep, I think it was this stuff... I don't have a clue what experiments we were doing back then but I do remember the teacher taking the smoking version after class and diluting it down for the student variety we used for those experiments.
    Decades later I was working at a dairy where they occasionally poured the concentrated version directly down a floor drain to unclog it. There were flames three foot tall coming out of that floor drain for awhile. Not sure what milk product buildups we're down in that clog to cause such a violent reaction but it was cool to watch! 20 minutes later and that drain was cured.

  • @jadenephrite
    @jadenephrite Před rokem +8

    Thank you for your video. For those who are unfamiliar, Nitric Acid was also known as "Aqua Fortis" from the Latin words for strong water.

  • @EgonSorensen
    @EgonSorensen Před rokem +19

    Great project, fine result.
    I know you say not to do this 'at home' - but if done elsewhere, I'd surely recommend covering up the outputs from the HV-generator.
    It's an easy way to improve on a bit risky setup, where lots of things can/will go wrong. Better safe than hurting while dying ;ø)

  • @Backyard.Ballistics
    @Backyard.Ballistics Před rokem +2

    Well done Bob, one of the most interesting projects so far!

  • @EdwardTriesToScience
    @EdwardTriesToScience Před rokem +1

    I love the smell of NO2 in the morning! I need to revisit this at some point and make it proper and efficient

  • @peterk8909
    @peterk8909 Před rokem +1

    Glad you're back. Good video, as usual.

  • @freehat2722
    @freehat2722 Před rokem

    Yes! I've been waiting for a very long time to see someone do this. Thank you.

  • @secondhandlyon2603
    @secondhandlyon2603 Před rokem +1

    Man, when I see a new video I get all excited......lol. ... I've been watching you for a long time and it allows me to let my inner science geek out. I'm a retired carpenter and I have no real need to know how to make nitric acid but I still want to know...

    • @ElementalMaker
      @ElementalMaker  Před rokem

      Glad you enjoy the videos! Man I could use a carpenter right about now!

    • @secondhandlyon2603
      @secondhandlyon2603 Před rokem

      Too bad we aren't neighbors. I sorta do it for fun these days.

  • @hawks9142
    @hawks9142 Před rokem

    I bet the local ham radio operators just LOVE that you're running that lol

    • @ElementalMaker
      @ElementalMaker  Před rokem

      Would it be that bad? It's the same oil burner transformer used all over the country for oil burners... But I guess it isn't contained within a big steel box acting as a Faraday cage.

    • @hawks9142
      @hawks9142 Před rokem

      @@ElementalMaker oh I was mostly just kidding 😄 I doubt it'd be too bad. One interesting note though is if I'm using an AM radio while in the car the radio will pick up the static from the sparkplugs igniting, pretty neat!

    • @nainportekel6431
      @nainportekel6431 Před 6 měsíci

      @ElementalMaker I think it definitely could be a nuisance to ham and SWL a few hundreds yards around. Especially because it's sparks, surge discharges ( blank large spectrum produced).
      You could just Faraday it a bit with metal mesh/grid on the jar and around the xformer, and by working on a metal table/plane (no matter if wood is on top of it, grid below the table would be ok too), all grounded. Quick dirty grounding already does a lot in that matter. ( sowy for bad english, I'm a french SWL, tryin' to hear your lab on air right now :)

  • @chemicalvamp
    @chemicalvamp Před 2 měsíci +4

    If you're still doing cool stuff, I hope you get back into uploading it.

  • @shazzz_land
    @shazzz_land Před rokem

    for the fact that you gave the original Inspiration ideea I left the video working. Thank you.

  • @Ecksterphono
    @Ecksterphono Před 4 měsíci +1

    So for the Berkland Eyde reactor next time run two copper tubing loops instead of the coils for the electrodes . Pump cold water through them to cool them via a water pump and recurculate it back through copper coils in an icebath so you have supercooled water going through the electrode loops. However a fan works good if you plan to leave it for hours. You can also make the charging device from a 24-volt supply to a ZVS driver to a flyback transformer. On the transformer you want about 8 turns on the primary and 1000 turns on the secondary which pretty much gives you 9400volt output. You also want a grounded center tap on the transformer. This prevents the secondary from potential arcing to the transformer core.

  • @Owlsleeper
    @Owlsleeper Před rokem

    Good to see you posting videos again man . Keep them coming . I have definitely learned a lot from your videos love the channel

  • @mikestewart4752
    @mikestewart4752 Před rokem +22

    Over the pandemic lockdowns from April 2020 to May 2021, I built and operated a larger scale B-E reactor that ran almost continuously. It produced 22L of approximately 40% HNO3 that I use for gold recovery/refining.

    • @ElementalMaker
      @ElementalMaker  Před rokem +7

      I'd love to see some video of your setup! Sounds awesome!

    • @JohnLeePettimoreIII
      @JohnLeePettimoreIII Před rokem +5

      @@ElementalMaker
      I have PDF's of 7 old chemistry books from WAAAAY back (early 1930's if I recall correctly). If you're interested, I could either email them to you, or give you download access from my Google Drive.

    • @anonimoqualquer5503
      @anonimoqualquer5503 Před rokem

      ​@@JohnLeePettimoreIII10 them mouths ago
      But you can send me the google drive link? I am interisting in making one after making the HHO generator

    • @y33t23
      @y33t23 Před 9 měsíci +1

      ​@@JohnLeePettimoreIIIif you ever reply to the other guy, I'd like them too, would be amazing

    • @JohnLeePettimoreIII
      @JohnLeePettimoreIII Před 9 měsíci

      @@y33t23 here ya go. 7 PDF's
      #1
      drive.google.com/open?id=1EEVlTzeFpGTCRkY186qUrvemU60gT7G6&usp=drive_fs
      #2
      drive.google.com/open?id=1WIKuRDRvNKQELWvH5dk4qMZkmUiBNKMV&usp=drive_fs
      #3
      drive.google.com/open?id=1AwHbQmaoSbwfv2McfQlxW2UYYg6xtwhT&usp=drive_fs
      #4
      drive.google.com/open?id=1rO8c11zpZpbz0UsuYS__h6qMZqWS5la0&usp=drive_fs
      #5
      drive.google.com/open?id=1pX7wgLqq5CckpUDqA4pPTktGNtuq-YGU&usp=drive_fs
      #6
      drive.google.com/open?id=1AFWPyDH4O5bRS6NINvLFL5V9TIkToLLw&usp=drive_fs
      #7
      drive.google.com/open?id=1YdDSjkSClFhXcZ_y81tScqltP-YWSOHI&usp=drive_fs

  • @heikeltoumi4989
    @heikeltoumi4989 Před rokem

    WOW I have everything I need to make this so now I know what my next project will be, thanks for sharing this !

  • @derivativ3
    @derivativ3 Před rokem +10

    great project! at least when handling dilute nitric acid and sulfuric acid try and wear gloves, always better to be safe. Now with fuming nitric acid wearing certain gloves is actually worse than not wearing them. Glad I found your channel

    • @bdnugget
      @bdnugget Před rokem

      Your fatty hands are a pretty good protective layer and it will just stain you a bit yellow if you clean it off right away. Better than having gloves ignite and getting welded into your skin lmao

  • @tomjohns8498
    @tomjohns8498 Před rokem +1

    Hi and greetings from the UK 🇬🇧 a late happy new year to you and yours, simple question have you forgotten us mortals? 😊 you do know we really enjoy watching 👀 your channel 😉

    • @ElementalMaker
      @ElementalMaker  Před rokem +4

      Hey Tom! Happy new year to you as well. I most definitely haven't forgotten the channel, unfortunately with the 1yr old and new work I've been very short on time. Hoping to get some new stuff in the works posted soon

  • @MyAvitech
    @MyAvitech Před rokem +6

    Very nice. A chemist friend and I made some NA years ago. Our setup was in the garage before realizing everything that was bare steel rusted overnight.
    Also the UV from the arc is probably what degraded that epoxy like that. Most epoxies are not UV stable and I've seen it come out like that after being in a UV-C chamber I have.

  • @Aaron48219
    @Aaron48219 Před rokem

    Nice to see you back on CZcams!

  • @anthonygiaconia7880
    @anthonygiaconia7880 Před rokem

    Really cool video. Thanks for making it.

  • @synth1002
    @synth1002 Před rokem

    Dutch Farmer need to know this !

  • @lloydevans2900
    @lloydevans2900 Před rokem +3

    Before the Haber process was developed, this was actually the main industrial route to making nitric acid: Air was blown through a huge spark array, making a mixture of NO and NO2 - this was further oxidised to convert the NO into more NO2, and finally absorbed into water to make nitric acid. In that last step, the NO2 disproportionates, some being oxidized further to nitric acid, the remainder being reduced back to NO. The latter was of course recycled back into the second oxidation step to make more NO2, enhancing the overall efficiency.
    This was of course a vast improvement in nitric acid / nitrate production over mining guano deposits, which was a truly disgusting but necessary pastime. But as you correctly point out, it was also an extremely inefficient way of using electricity, since the vast majority of the electrical energy input was wasted as heat. So it was only really viable where power could be cheaply generated, which explains why the first plants were built near to the Norwegian hydroelectric power stations.

    • @ElementalMaker
      @ElementalMaker  Před rokem +1

      Man I might have to hire you to write some script for my videos. That was a great and concise explanation! I tried to explain all that in the video (or at least in filming), but I always ramble and then end up cutting out a ton of stuff during editing.

    • @lloydevans2900
      @lloydevans2900 Před rokem +2

      @@ElementalMaker I can certainly try, if you are serious about that offer. Just give me an idea of what you want to do for forthcoming videos and the kind of information you want to get across. Plus how much detail you want and what you want the maximum video length to be.

  • @TheExplosiveGuy
    @TheExplosiveGuy Před rokem +1

    Where are you Elemental Maker? It's been like 8 months, we're all fiending for more videos!😁

    • @ElementalMaker
      @ElementalMaker  Před rokem +3

      Working on some more content, sorry for the delay, new work and first child really put a damper on workshop time

    • @TheExplosiveGuy
      @TheExplosiveGuy Před rokem

      @@ElementalMaker Wow that was a quick response lol. I'm glad to hear their is something cooking in the oven, I'm excited to see what it is! No worries about the delay, I didn't know about your new kid, congratulations!

  • @ntal5859
    @ntal5859 Před rokem

    Good to see you have acid proof hands.

  • @matthewbecker3285
    @matthewbecker3285 Před 8 měsíci +12

    what happend to the channel

  • @tinkeringclaws5559
    @tinkeringclaws5559 Před rokem +1

    awesome video man!

  • @g45sp4
    @g45sp4 Před rokem +4

    Remember kids, the first rule of handling rocket fuel is to have fun

  • @DesertJeff
    @DesertJeff Před rokem

    Good to watch a video again from you.

  • @jcdro2234
    @jcdro2234 Před rokem

    pressed subscribe as hard as i could great work man keep it up your gona go far

  • @senorjp21
    @senorjp21 Před 6 měsíci +1

    Hey elemental maker. Merry christmas. Long time no see. Just wanted to say thanks for all your videos over the years.

    • @ElementalMaker
      @ElementalMaker  Před 6 měsíci +4

      Merry Christmas to you as well! Thank you! I plan to make more videos soon

    • @pika6238
      @pika6238 Před 2 měsíci

      @@ElementalMaker 🥺

  • @ferrocene2427
    @ferrocene2427 Před rokem

    I binge watch you Chanel, that how good it is!!

  • @shatunyra
    @shatunyra Před 5 měsíci

    GOOD job!

  • @erikhartwig6366
    @erikhartwig6366 Před rokem

    love the Aldi's jars, nothing says DIY better

  • @SciDOCMBC
    @SciDOCMBC Před 8 měsíci

    As a doctor and organic chemist, I definitely need to get something off my chest. For an amateur you make great videos. Plus, you can laugh at yourself, which is what I appreciate most. keep it up 👍

  • @flyback_driver
    @flyback_driver Před 10 měsíci +3

    Hope you are doing well man. I need yotubes Patrick Warburton showing off the next cool project. First time I watched one of your videos I was laughing at Brocm Samson telling me how to make a forge from a helium tank.

  • @telotawa
    @telotawa Před rokem

    i was just looking this up yesterday!

  • @waynedungey5491
    @waynedungey5491 Před rokem

    great to see you doing new videos cant wait to see more

  • @PS-vk6bn
    @PS-vk6bn Před rokem

    Nice work!

  • @AtlasReburdened
    @AtlasReburdened Před rokem +14

    Nice demo man. It's always fascinated me that this is a viable route to nitrogen fertilizers from just electricity, air, and basically whatever additional fert reagent you have on hand.

  • @slngblde
    @slngblde Před rokem +2

    Holy shit.. you are still alive

    • @ElementalMaker
      @ElementalMaker  Před rokem +2

      Holy alive, I'm still shitting

    • @slngblde
      @slngblde Před rokem

      @@ElementalMaker at least you aren’t constipated 💩

  • @pyrophoria2206
    @pyrophoria2206 Před rokem +3

    I use that same brand of drain cleaner for H2SO4. I've done extensive testing and reviewed the SDS - as far as I can tell there are no additives at all and my titrations and density tests put the concentration at 96-98%. I bought several jugs in case it disappears for some reason. Such a great and inexpensive source of clean H2SO4.

    • @ElementalMaker
      @ElementalMaker  Před rokem +3

      Yeah it's really good stuff. I also have a few gallons back up just in case lol

    • @MrHowzaa
      @MrHowzaa Před rokem

      @@ElementalMaker in nyc you can buy NA otc

  • @DanielSMatthews
    @DanielSMatthews Před rokem +9

    If your electrode wires are actually small copper tubes that also act is your gas inlets then it should stay cool from the inflow of gas.

  • @stihl888
    @stihl888 Před rokem

    Having done gold refining before this project was very cool!

  • @TheRustiestShackleford
    @TheRustiestShackleford Před 10 měsíci +1

    I hope you are well. I quite enjoyed your videos.

  • @Mr6Sinner
    @Mr6Sinner Před 11 měsíci +2

    I have watched every video and I need more.

  • @BeastM140i
    @BeastM140i Před rokem

    Ayyyyeee he’s back!!

  • @SodiumInteresting
    @SodiumInteresting Před rokem

    Highly inefficient I love it 😀

  • @Enjoymentboy
    @Enjoymentboy Před rokem +6

    Good to see you back. This setup reminds me very much of the rig I built for silver recovery/refining. Instead of your reaction chamber I have a vacuum flask with an air pump at the vacuum port and the silver dissolving in the flask. All the NO2 is then piped out into multiple flasks to capture as much as possible. Last in line is a gas trap with KOH. Zero smell after final venting. It's shocking how much nitric I can recover and feed back into the first flask eliminating the need to buy more.
    But I like what you've got going here. Have you noticed any condensation in the bottom of the reaction chamber? I'd expect some NO3 would slowly build up and settle in the bottom.

  • @raymonroe1983
    @raymonroe1983 Před rokem

    I see you are a man of taste and class. Glenfiddich is good stuff.

  • @HoneyBadgerRy
    @HoneyBadgerRy Před rokem +1

    The extractions and ire reference had me dying. 😂

  • @donsivak9546
    @donsivak9546 Před rokem +2

    Been waiting for a new video for a while when's the next one coming

  • @whatthefunction9140
    @whatthefunction9140 Před rokem +1

    Thankyou for posting a video that doesn't suck

    • @ElementalMaker
      @ElementalMaker  Před rokem

      It's a hard thing to get away with on CZcams now a days, but I'm glad you enjoyed! Thank you!

    • @whatthefunction9140
      @whatthefunction9140 Před rokem

      @@ElementalMaker back to the roots. Making stuff with elements

  • @4984Snake
    @4984Snake Před 9 měsíci +6

    Dude where did you go

  • @ashspring7498
    @ashspring7498 Před rokem

    Oh wow the lightning cycle in a bottle very cool dude

  • @capsfederation3154
    @capsfederation3154 Před rokem

    Thank you for the very informative and useful video.
    I had read about this process on Wikipedia however they did not or could not specify the process clearly.

  • @HogwartsBasement
    @HogwartsBasement Před rokem

    Hello from Scotland 🏴󠁧󠁢󠁳󠁣󠁴󠁿 I see traditional golden medicine in the back ♥️♥️♥️

    • @ElementalMaker
      @ElementalMaker  Před rokem

      The Scottish sure know how to make the Golden good stuff! I hope to visit some day and spend plenty of time in the distilleries!

  • @ChristmasEve777
    @ChristmasEve777 Před 8 měsíci

    I love it! I found your channel by watching hydrogen generator videos and here I am. I considered making one of these as well. If you use solar panels to run the pump and to create the arc, you spend nothing at all. You could have the apparatus set up and automatically running whenever the sun is shining. You'll get some very freakin pure HNO3 over time. In fact, if you forget about it for too long, NO2 will start to escape from your final bubbler and get into the air (UGH!) But, hey, FREE nitric acid! 😅

  • @DanielLopez-up6os
    @DanielLopez-up6os Před 10 měsíci

    Awesome channel

  • @Engineerd3d
    @Engineerd3d Před rokem

    5 months and no video? I have been watching some back videos. Com on man you can do this!

    • @ElementalMaker
      @ElementalMaker  Před rokem +2

      There will be more! Have a one yr old and very heavy workload right now, so tinker time has taken a huge hit, but I'm getting back at it

    • @Engineerd3d
      @Engineerd3d Před rokem

      @@ElementalMaker ah this explains it. I totally understand, kids always take priority. Well Merry Christmas, happy new year. And congratulations on the baby.

    • @Garjahn
      @Garjahn Před rokem

      @@ElementalMaker
      A one year old? Yeah, that'll do it.
      See you again in a few years buddy, hang in there.

  • @constantprayerwarrior

    This reminds me of the video Cody from Codyslab did a few years ago I'm so glad I can see a hands on video about it

  • @trickywoo356
    @trickywoo356 Před rokem

    What an awesome way to generate the good stuff, thanks for sharing! It might not be a viable way to produce from bought electricity, but imagine creating a self contained nitric acid production unit the size of a beehive with a solar panel to power it that also serves as its roof to catch rainwater with, which in turn can be used in the generator. Once a month you drive by it and pick up the produce. With a few Niter Hives you'd have many years of free product.

    • @ElementalMaker
      @ElementalMaker  Před rokem +2

      Love the name niter hives! I've actually bought a few solar panels to try and do just that! Great idea for the water collection too!

  • @Vash612584
    @Vash612584 Před rokem

    you're back!!

  • @johnmckeel8762
    @johnmckeel8762 Před rokem

    I've watched several of your videos to this point and I enjoy your content. However, I would like to see more documentation of details. In many of your processes, I would feel uncertain in attempting some of these projects myself. thank you

  • @Artemis-zl5cs
    @Artemis-zl5cs Před rokem

    Love the bottle of Glenfidditch just sitting in the background the whole time

  • @notamouse5630
    @notamouse5630 Před rokem +9

    Magnetic arc manipulation is all about the forces on an electron flowing through the magnetic and electric fields.
    F_e=q*E + cross(q*v, B);
    Where E and B are vector fields, q is charge of the electron, and v is the velocity of the electron.
    For a proton, negate q.
    Solve the multivariate differential equation or find the solution with thought experiments and examples followed by actual experiments.

    • @notamouse5630
      @notamouse5630 Před rokem +2

      @@dandan-gf4jk Velocity is a vector, as is magnetic field and q is a scalar multiplying the whole vector. Looks all good. and yes, I know what the right hand rule is.

    • @notamouse5630
      @notamouse5630 Před rokem +1

      @@dandan-gf4jk v is lowercase because it is also with respect to time now that I think about it. Notation is hard when you only have text. It is also inconsistent in different fields of study.

  • @impatientpatient8270
    @impatientpatient8270 Před rokem +2

    i will make use of this thank you good sir. niric acid is hard to get for me and so is sulphuric so making it from KNO3 was off the table. didn't know about this. very informative

    • @buckstarchaser2376
      @buckstarchaser2376 Před rokem +2

      If you can't get sulfuric, and this electrochemistry appeals to you you (as it should), you can make sulfuric from electrolysis of copper sulfate (I call it crystal smurf), which is a fun and beautiful process, and much more enjoyable than burning sulfur in air and sucking the fumes through water, like a dirty victorian. It's common enough that a lot of chemistry channels show how to do it.

    • @isaacm1929
      @isaacm1929 Před rokem +1

      @@buckstarchaser2376 You can do sulphuric acid, burning sulphur,and passing the SO2 in water don't? Distilling water from sulphuric is more easier than making electrical shenanigans I think...

    • @buckstarchaser2376
      @buckstarchaser2376 Před rokem +1

      @@isaacm1929 You would need to distill it either way, I think. I've never done the burning method, but the copper II sulfate electrolysis becomes very useful later for some uses, such as precious metals refining.

  • @wolvenar
    @wolvenar Před rokem +1

    Huh, the man, the myth, the legend has gone MIA.

    • @ElementalMaker
      @ElementalMaker  Před rokem +7

      Not dead yet! Just crazy busy with new work and 1yr old daughter making shop time very limited. Working on some fun stuff though!

    • @wolvenar
      @wolvenar Před rokem

      @@ElementalMaker Ahh I remember days like that well.
      Now as grandpa of twins... oof. Glad that we cannsend them back home to parents. But working and college again in my 40s is rather harder than I remember.

  • @fajile5109
    @fajile5109 Před 22 dny +1

    4:52 i think possibly the bell from a CRT tv could be used as to spread the plasma disk. Take the windings off the plastic part and wrap them around the jar. I might try it lol its just so dangerous to try an manipulate the arc WHILE its running.

  • @t33th4n
    @t33th4n Před rokem +1

    And the scores are in End result: 9/10, Details on technicality: 7/10, Safety compliance: What?!

  • @jozefnovak7750
    @jozefnovak7750 Před 3 měsíci

    Super!

  • @leon13noelspy
    @leon13noelspy Před rokem +43

    You can use a disc magnet from a magnetron and a washer and sone dc high voltage to make the plasma run in circles. Obviously you need to cool the magnet pretty good or it won't last long. For ac high voltage an electromagnet might work which flips polarity at the same time as your hv source. This is why an universal motor runs on ac and on dc. You are basicly making one of those battery motors where you take an aa cell put a magnet on it and hang a wire on it so that it touches the other pole and the magnet. It works het same way with plasma

    • @ashspring7498
      @ashspring7498 Před rokem +1

      The electromagnet would be better , you could have multiple anodes and cathodes and pulse them also.

    • @TestyCool
      @TestyCool Před rokem

      I have used those magnets before. You don't need a washer or anything. If you just center a wire in the middle and have a high enough voltage to make an arch then it will work. It doesn't even need to be perfect just close. You don't either need to cool it is your don't run a lot of watts.

    • @leon13noelspy
      @leon13noelspy Před rokem

      @@TestyCool less power also means less nitrous oxide generation. These ceramic magnets are absolute horrible conductors so why would you do it like this.

    • @TestyCool
      @TestyCool Před rokem

      @@leon13noelspy less power doesn't mean less nitrous oxide. As long as you have enough voltage to ionize the air it will work. Watts or power is voltage times Amps. so you can have really high voltage but really low amps. I used a neon light ballast from Lowes. 15w but it puts out around 500v. Then I stepped that up again with a flyback transformer I got out of a TV. That got me up to 16Kv at .0009375 amps. Worked like a charm. Yes those magnets are bad conductors but hell almost anything conducts at 16kv. The watts are so low though you dont even need to worry about heat or cooling.

    • @leon13noelspy
      @leon13noelspy Před rokem

      @@TestyCool i used flyback transfprmers for oxydising nitrogen before. Using one of these ceramic magnets and a washer on top so the plasma can spin better. I didn't cool the magnet since i didn't think i needed to. After an hour that magnet wasn't a magnet anymore

  • @platima
    @platima Před rokem

    Hahah absolutely love the reference to Explosions&Fire 👌👌

    • @ElementalMaker
      @ElementalMaker  Před rokem

      Need to throw in some love for the Australian youtube chem God

    • @platima
      @platima Před rokem

      @@ElementalMaker hah absolutely Or Australian CZcams Chem Crackhead perhaps? (podcast reference). Much appreciated -

  • @garypinholster1962
    @garypinholster1962 Před rokem +3

    But where did you go?

  • @OsamaMohamed-uz2lu
    @OsamaMohamed-uz2lu Před rokem

    ماشاء الله
    أنت رائع حقا مشكور جدا صديقي

  • @davidlaurence6256
    @davidlaurence6256 Před rokem

    Hey buddy, Former USMC turned family man.
    Gotta say, I smell what you're stepping in. Absolutely love the videos. It's hard to find a fellow man who is as fiercely intelligent with a good sense of humor.
    Anyways, not trying to give you pick up lines cause I don't bark up that tree but stay strong keep the videos coming. Just bought a tombstone welder to copy you. Not gonna do videos trying to one up.
    Just gonna do those projects.
    Making nitric acid next to make aqua regia.
    Doin my own thing too.
    Best Regards, Dave Malarky

    • @ElementalMaker
      @ElementalMaker  Před rokem

      Much appreciated Dave! Thank you for your sacrifice for our freedoms.

  • @jamesbooth3360
    @jamesbooth3360 Před rokem

    Love your videos!
    SPARK GAP! Geez, that should get the FCC searching for the source of radio interference.😂

  • @bobbylong2202
    @bobbylong2202 Před rokem

    Wow loved video u make making acid fun lol u would be a good science teacher in school making deadly gas with a laugh 😃😁

  • @Qwertypp10
    @Qwertypp10 Před rokem +4

    You can also join both end of air pump output, there are special adopters for that in animal shops.

  • @burgerbobbelcher
    @burgerbobbelcher Před rokem

    A lab set up with a bottle of glenfiddich in the center. Beautiful.

  • @barthooghwerff1682
    @barthooghwerff1682 Před rokem +1

    Great video, i was just watching veritasiums new video, which is also about taking nitrogen from the air (to grow crops ideally)

  • @dylanbeddoes24
    @dylanbeddoes24 Před 8 měsíci +1

    A ring magnet with an electrode in the center producing a spark gap in witch the plasma will rotate along the natural magnetic field of the ring magnet producing a spirel plasma wall in the ring magnet. That's how you can build the plasma wall you need to increase the efficiency of your reaction.

  • @Charlie8food
    @Charlie8food Před rokem +4

    Nice generator. This is also by far the best video on this topic out there. I tried making a nitric acid generator last year using a microwave transformer with much less success. I struggled to keep the arc going without melting the copper electrodes.

    • @buckstarchaser2376
      @buckstarchaser2376 Před rokem

      You can use copper tubing for the air supply and exit, and energize the tubes. That way, they get a bit of cooling, but there is a risk of them burning in the electrical fire, with the air blowing right at the hotspot. The last one I built had the air input as a copper tube, some stainless steel wire as the electrode for that tube, and the other electrode was a tungsten "W" TIG welding electrode, in the exit tube, so the air could leave while tightly surrounding the tungsten.

    • @Basement-Science
      @Basement-Science Před rokem +1

      A microwave transformer will put out WAY too much current and not very much voltage. That's why it wont work too well, the arc just gets way too hot which destroys most of the gases you want and it just turns back into regular air.
      You could get some succes by limiting the current a lot, but ideally you want a completely different transformer. A neon sign or oil ignition transformer is closer to what you want, a TV flyback may be the best commonly available way though. You basically want a big, but cold arc.

    • @benjaminmiller3620
      @benjaminmiller3620 Před rokem

      @@Basement-Science Could you drive the B-E reactor with an electrostatic generator? (I imagine the throughput would be tiny even if it worked though.)

    • @Basement-Science
      @Basement-Science Před rokem +1

      @@benjaminmiller3620 That's more the direction you'd want to go in, yes. Although I'm not sure what type of generator you mean exactly, something like a van de graaf would be very weak for example.
      As I said, I think a TV flyback (driven by slayer exciter or other single-transistor driver) would be ideal here. The electrode layout is also very impactful of course.

    • @benjaminmiller3620
      @benjaminmiller3620 Před rokem

      @@Basement-Science I was thinking Wimshurst, and more as an experimental low tech solution, than an optimized one. One could build such a generator with copper age tech!