Making Bakelite - Periodic Table of Videos

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  • čas přidán 29. 08. 2024
  • An audience in the lab as we make some Bakelite.
    Featuring Dr Darren Walsh and Professor Martyn Poliakoff.
    You can discuss this one on Brady's new subreddit too: redd.it/2e2pqe
    More chemistry at www.periodicvid...
    Follow us on Facebook at / periodicvideos
    And on Twitter at / periodicvideos
    From the School of Chemistry at The University of Nottingham: bit.ly/NottChem
    Periodic Videos films are by video journalist Brady Haran: www.bradyharan....
    A run-down of Brady's channels: bit.ly/bradycha...

Komentáře • 551

  • @iabervon
    @iabervon Před 10 lety +105

    It's funny to watch people make Bakelite with equipment made of various later polymers. You were protected from the flying bits of Bakelite (1907) by a layer of Plexiglas (1933), for example.

  • @Peter-iw3ob
    @Peter-iw3ob Před 9 lety +235

    I nearly died there when the professor said the molecule would end up looking like his hair. XD

    • @theLuigiFan0007Productions
      @theLuigiFan0007Productions Před 9 lety

      Peter Caron
      LOL me too.

    • @superchuck3259
      @superchuck3259 Před 6 lety +4

      He is a great teacher that will help you remember the info. And yes those molecules are all wrapped up in each other thus why they are strong solids and not the liquid chemicals they came from.

  • @PersonaRandomNumbers
    @PersonaRandomNumbers Před 10 lety +148

    "Baekeland was spelled in a quite complicated way"
    Professor Poliakoff, you're really one to talk! :P

    • @munjee2
      @munjee2 Před 4 lety +3

      It's the martyn that's more odd

    • @johanneshe6939
      @johanneshe6939 Před 4 lety +5

      "but the material he invented quite soon became much simpler"
      Looks at polyoxybenzylmethylenglycolanhydride(aka bakelite)

    • @iamanidiotbut5523
      @iamanidiotbut5523 Před 3 lety +1

      Poliakov could be spelled differently depending on who translates it from Russian

  • @zachwiseman1938
    @zachwiseman1938 Před 10 lety +461

    We need a shirt that says. "It squeaks... but that's not part of the scientific explanation."

    • @Slithy
      @Slithy Před 10 lety +27

      I think a woman with large breasts would look particularly good in this shirt.

    • @DanielRenardAnimation
      @DanielRenardAnimation Před 10 lety +71

      I quite enjoy Martyn's fun little side-comments so much. Very intelligent and a good sense of humour.
      The part about the written Bakelite chemical structure looking like _his hair_ got me too, haha.

    • @jllmmjj
      @jllmmjj Před 8 lety +4

      someone make this PLEASE I would so buy one

    • @Patrick.Weightman
      @Patrick.Weightman Před 6 lety +4

      A shirt that's just him but his hair is a mishmash of chemical skeletons would be neato

    • @mfx1
      @mfx1 Před 6 lety

      I just had one made

  • @Alchemydude667
    @Alchemydude667 Před 10 lety +485

    A moment of silence for our lost friend the magnetic stir bar.

    • @periodicvideos
      @periodicvideos  Před 10 lety +66

      Alex Graboyes I wonder what happen with that - forgot to ask!

    • @SherioCheers
      @SherioCheers Před 10 lety +5

      It will be missed!

    • @RealDealHolyfield2099
      @RealDealHolyfield2099 Před 9 lety +56

      Each stir bar that dies becomes reincarnated as the main space ship in the video game Arkanoid, and forever emulated.

    • @texasdeeslinglead2401
      @texasdeeslinglead2401 Před 8 lety +10

      +FlyingBootable the gladiators of chemistry.

    • @MoparMilan
      @MoparMilan Před 7 lety

      Alex Graboyes RIP

  • @toast_recon
    @toast_recon Před 10 lety +35

    The change of that solution from clear to completely opaque was so abrupt, I thought it was a jump cut at first! It looks like it happened in the "fast-forwarded" part of the slow motion footage, but I was still able to catch a bit of the transition there. Really interesting to see this stuff happening at different timescales.

  • @montlejohnbojangles8937
    @montlejohnbojangles8937 Před 4 lety +13

    Doctor Poliakoff (and the wonderful crew), I just want to let you know that every one of your videos makes me smile, and the joy you clearly have for the field is completely infectious. ❤️

  • @crowbarstube
    @crowbarstube Před 8 lety +51

    bakelite is still the primary material used in marine driveshaft bushings that are exposed to salt water and most other bushes and bearings that are exposed to water and other reactive fluids just a fyi :)

    • @jimm3205
      @jimm3205 Před 8 lety +14

      +crowbarstube And Bakelite is still used for vintage re-issue Telecaster pickguards.

    • @BenjaminEsposti
      @BenjaminEsposti Před 8 lety +5

      +crowbarstube
      Wow that's cool! Never knew that!

    • @superchuck3259
      @superchuck3259 Před 6 lety +4

      I put this info in the back of my mind, these are cool ways to create things with chemistry. Notice this is something anyone could make with the right chemicals, no huge plant required. Pretty cool, from a liquid to a solid!

    • @lukethedrifter3363
      @lukethedrifter3363 Před 5 lety +3

      The only pickgaurd that should be on any telecaster not just a reissue

    • @pinksylvievgc4196
      @pinksylvievgc4196 Před 3 lety +1

      4 years late. It is also used in the composites industry for its flame retardant properties. When exposed to an open flame it melts into a gunk and then burns, which protects the interior core from further damage.

  • @carolnorton2551
    @carolnorton2551 Před 8 lety +35

    I have several pieces of Bakelite jewelry from the 1920's.
    I love Prof Poliakoff AND his hair.

  • @happycline
    @happycline Před 10 lety +28

    Thank you! I've been looking for this reaction for quite some time.

  • @KarbineKyle
    @KarbineKyle Před 8 lety +11

    Very interesting video! I know that many AK-74 (5.45X39mm) magazines are made of bakelite. The bakelite magazines made for the AK-47 (7.62X39mm) are quite rare.

  • @SteveFennelly
    @SteveFennelly Před 10 lety +6

    I went to a course in UCC, In Ireland a few months ago. It was a school trip for a few students invited from a few school but regardless, they showed us how they made nylon and it blew my mind. At the time I understood it but after a while It slipped away, you should make a video on that too. Such a cool experiment.

  • @louistournas120
    @louistournas120 Před 7 lety +13

    I once picked up a book on polymers at the library. Holly molly. There are plenty that I had not heard of. I learned about kevlar for the first time. There was one resistant to 500 C or something like that and also transparent.

  • @msaynevirta
    @msaynevirta Před 10 lety +54

    Can you make an episode about aerogel?

    • @sharpfang
      @sharpfang Před 3 lety +2

      The thing with aerogel is the chemistry part of it is rather boring and simple - it's the advanced physical processes that make it fancy.

  • @debrouillard2
    @debrouillard2 Před 9 lety +47

    Poliakoff really enjoys his chewtoys.

    • @josefblack
      @josefblack Před 8 lety +38

      +Michael Huard I'm sure they prefer to be called lab assistants.

    • @elephystry
      @elephystry Před 7 lety +5

      josefblack
      Where are their companion cubes?

  • @ChoppingtonOtter
    @ChoppingtonOtter Před 8 lety +12

    Why oh why was chemistry not taught in such an interesting manner when I was at school? These videos make it fascinating.

    • @benzenering2183
      @benzenering2183 Před 7 lety +1

      J. Hanna wow. That's awful. Glad there still is a lab in my school and students in my school get to do some practical work during chemistry lessons.

    • @superchuck3259
      @superchuck3259 Před 6 lety +1

      Seems like all that the schools want to teach today is subjective subjects that pretend to be sciences like the humanities. Chemistry is bedrock of our modern society! Better living thru chemistry!

    • @Fenriswaffle
      @Fenriswaffle Před 6 lety

      whiny PTA members on "safety concerns" and that demonstrations can get pricey when you do them at least 6-8 times in a day, and that's assuming only the instructor does it.

    • @gardensofthegods
      @gardensofthegods Před 5 lety

      We had a pretty cool guy in our high school who taught physical science and bits of chemistry and physics and all that... his name was Mister Berner .. I think it was Bill Berner. He was really nice and he made everything fun... and then sometime later I found out he was in a lot of trouble for having an affair with a student who I think was 16 years old... oh well .
      It was really a shame because I think he lost his right to teach.. but I couldn't understand how smart guy like him got caught up in writing love letters to a student... letters of course that could be found later

  • @mickenoss
    @mickenoss Před 10 lety +2

    I have an awesome old radio with a bakelite case. Good stuff!

  • @toncent
    @toncent Před 10 lety +21

    Would have liked to see the exact moment where it turns pink in slow motion - since it seemed to happen almost instantaneously. I felt like the fast-forward part ended just a little too late. Still great video though!

  • @gasdive
    @gasdive Před 10 lety +86

    both my dogs jumped up and ran over.

    • @periodicvideos
      @periodicvideos  Před 10 lety +27

      gasdive ha ha - Lulu does it every time

    • @JoelHudson
      @JoelHudson Před 6 lety +4

      Who knew benzine rings were so squeaky? Prof. Poliokoff knew!

  • @chichimilker
    @chichimilker Před 9 lety +20

    I have a Bulgarian am 47 that has Bakelite furniture on it I also own a a couple Bakelite ak magazines

  • @ExaltedDuck
    @ExaltedDuck Před 10 lety +6

    So the name "bakelite" is not very common anymore (I think it's owned by Sumitomo) but the condensation reaction of phenolic compounds with formaldehyde is still an important and industrially relevant bit of technology. While most plastic products are composed primarily of other plastics, phenol- and cresol- based resins are still some of the best adhesion agents available to formulators of adhesives, sealants, and coatings of a variety of chemistries, and it is a virtual certainty that phenolics are binding the pulverized friction material into a cohesive units in your car's brakes and clutch. They are also still the preferred bonding agent in the manufacture of plywood and particle board. It's interesting to note the proteins used by many simple sea creatures like barnacles and bivalves also use a large amount of aromatic moieties to achieve a strong bond (all while constantly immersed in sea water, no less) to whatever rocks or boat hulls they choose to call home. There is actually a lot of very interesting chemistry to study with them. Or engineering, as the case may be. Regardless, I would relegate the phenol-formaldehyde condensation reaction history no sooner than I would with Goodyear's vulcanization reaction. It is every bit as important to the course of human development, and every bit as still-relevant to modern industry.

    • @superchuck3259
      @superchuck3259 Před 6 lety

      While I know this is a dated reply, you can see "grown" space ships in Sci-Fi movies. I think that is the next wave of organic "living" chemistry. Could you imagine a paint that was alive and lived off the light and kept your home looking great? Those ideas abound!

  • @redneckhippiefreak
    @redneckhippiefreak Před 6 lety

    Distributor caps and rotors, interior components, Phones, Ashtrays, Fans and shrouds, Steering wheels shifter knobs, Jewelry boxes, Lamp shades, Radios, toys ect ect ect..Its amazing how much stuff was made with Bakelite.

  • @jamest.5001
    @jamest.5001 Před 4 lety +4

    Radio knobs! And casing,
    Some reason it reminded me of my sisters cooking, that's why I had to do the cooking growing up!

  • @malevolentburrito
    @malevolentburrito Před 8 lety +39

    These guys could fund their chemistry lab selling bakelite AK magazines.

    • @jasonhull3069
      @jasonhull3069 Před 8 lety +13

      or they can fund it due to it being a university

    • @tacticalultimatum
      @tacticalultimatum Před 8 lety +4

      Or make some canola oil and sell it as firelube

    • @tacticalultimatum
      @tacticalultimatum Před 8 lety +3

      Or make some canola oil and sell it as fireclean

    • @tacticalultimatum
      @tacticalultimatum Před 8 lety +3

      Or make some canola oil and sell it as fireclean

    • @bobthemity
      @bobthemity Před 8 lety +3

      +Tactical Ultimatum Or make some canola oil and sell it as fireclean

  • @omgitznumbers
    @omgitznumbers Před 9 lety +3

    Fun Fact: Bakelite was used in aviation engineering as some planes were still largely made of wood. Coating the wood components of the airframe prevented it from rotting and reduced its flammability.

  • @tassiehandyman3090
    @tassiehandyman3090 Před 6 lety

    1984. I was six. My family moved to a farmhouse in Devon that had been built in the late 19th century, and extended by successive generations of the same family. The whole house was filled with light switches, power outlets and wall sconces, all made out of Bakelite. I loved that house.

  • @EvanDeitrich9
    @EvanDeitrich9 Před 10 lety +6

    His hair makes these videos 10 times better.

  • @weylin6
    @weylin6 Před 9 lety

    That's a very fascinating reaction, the way it just flash-foams, expands, contracts, and THEN explodes.

  • @MrAlbedo39
    @MrAlbedo39 Před 9 lety

    From what I've read, the glue used to manufacture plywood used to be phenol-formaldehyde (Bakelite), which was very successful because the resin is water-resistant and immune to rot. Nowadays, it's apparently only used for outdoor or marine plywood. Indoor plywood is now made using urea-formaldehyde.
    I think Formica (commonly used for kitchen counter-tops) also used to be made by gluing sheets of paper together using a phenolic resin, with melamine used for the decorative top layer (because it's transparent).

  • @rjlchristie
    @rjlchristie Před 3 lety

    It's the best plastic ever for so many rigid purposes, it machines well and feels like polished ebony. Very aesthetically pleasing.

  • @TheChipmunk2008
    @TheChipmunk2008 Před 10 lety +1

    Some bakelite used to use asbestos fibers I believe instead of wood flour. Something to be aware of if working with it in a way that creates dust

  • @andrewl9472
    @andrewl9472 Před 5 lety +2

    I didn't realize the actual polymerization happened so fast. I'd love to see more polymer chemistry on here.

  • @squidcaps4308
    @squidcaps4308 Před 2 lety +1

    Bakelite is still used in applications where rigidity is important. If you have a desktop CNC, it sides may be bakelite. It has no give, it holds its shape very well. Instead of wood dust, glass and carbon fiber can be used, which is the kind that you are most likely to see these days.

  • @74KU
    @74KU Před rokem

    Bakelite is also a great insulator I have a intake manifold for a motorcycle machined out of some to prevent the carb from heating up so much.
    That idea came from using a slab of it to make an adaptor for a Webber carburetor to an "incompatible" manifold, the plus side was it kept the carb temperature much more stable.

  • @RMoribayashi
    @RMoribayashi Před 10 lety

    Bakelite was commonly used in US home light switches and power sockets well into the 1980's. It's high electrical and thermal resistance made it a nearly perfect material. The development of less brittle heat resistant plastics left Bakelite to niche products.

  • @henpest2
    @henpest2 Před 2 lety

    They're like hovering parents, I love the passion chemists have for demos.

  • @M00shimaroo
    @M00shimaroo Před 8 lety +90

    They list multiple things made from bakelite but, the only thing that came to my mind was Russian AK mags lol

    • @NikovK
      @NikovK Před 8 lety +9

      +AlexNKnives MP-40 furniture.

    • @Ntmoffi
      @Ntmoffi Před 8 lety +11

      AK furniture too!

    • @bcubed72
      @bcubed72 Před 7 lety +11

      I live in a house built in 1920 and the light switch plates are all bakelite.

    • @Deadlyaztec27
      @Deadlyaztec27 Před 6 lety +4

      Most AK's use AG-S4 instead of Bakelite

    • @InzuDraRagna
      @InzuDraRagna Před 6 lety +5

      The glorious TKB-022 prototypes used glorious Comrade Bakelite furniture.

  • @jfjoubertquebec
    @jfjoubertquebec Před 8 lety +3

    I loooove bakelite! Used to eat on bakelite dishes as a kid... somehow I love the sound they have when you cut, or pick up food from them. Weird probably..

    • @2degucitas
      @2degucitas Před 8 lety

      Is it the same thingvas Melamine?

    • @JohnDoe-pv2iu
      @JohnDoe-pv2iu Před 4 lety

      I too, Love Bakelite. It was all around growing up and it was some tough stuff!

  • @stanleyfranks8252
    @stanleyfranks8252 Před 4 lety

    Reichhold Chemicals in Houston Tx used to make phenolic resin in the early 1980's. The stuff exotherms as it is mixing. One day the heat in the reactor got away from the operators. Rather than have it harden in the vessel the shift supervisor opened the bottom-out valve and dumped the whole batch on the ground. It looked like a huge pile of afterbirth and took days to clean up.

  • @SoCPlasma
    @SoCPlasma Před 10 lety

    Just finished working with Bakelite today in my Materials Engineering lab. We used it to mount a metal sample so we could grind, polish and etch it so we could observe the crystal grains.

  • @rogerscottcathey
    @rogerscottcathey Před 5 lety +1

    Bakelite is a very utile material still. It will make a comeback someday. The smell of a bakelite phone is nostalgic for some of us.

  • @texjarhead
    @texjarhead Před 10 lety

    I remember the window handles in my 1948 Plymouth. They had very fine cracks all through them and looked great.

  • @Kumquat_Lord
    @Kumquat_Lord Před 4 lety +4

    2:23 notice how all the scientists are holding their cameras in landscape mode.

  • @ic08jy700
    @ic08jy700 Před 4 lety

    I made phenol formaldehyde in the lab, but I definitely did not use either acetic or hydrochloric acids. We did use hexamethylene I seem to remember as an accelerator or modulator, I can't remember exactly, this was over 40 years ago, but then we used the resin after polymerisation, mixing it with wood flour and various other additives and we made ash trays out of the stuff. I also made some fibre filled resin ( a bit like Tufnol) and even paper filled, but wood flour was definitely the preferred filler.

  • @Westyrulz
    @Westyrulz Před 5 lety

    It must be very durable as I have stayed in many old pubs over the years that still have old light switches and fittings made from Bakelite.Also the Red Rattler trains in Sydney which ran from the 1920's to the 1990's all had Bakelite electrical fittings.

  • @jaggonjaggon7695
    @jaggonjaggon7695 Před 4 lety

    I love the solid and smooth cold heavy feel of bakelite. So shiny, too. Way better than other plastics, but I guess it has it's drawbacks, if it'a brittle. Most people like lighter plastics, too.

  • @S3v3n13tt3r5
    @S3v3n13tt3r5 Před 10 lety +10

    More Organic Chemistry please, and while your at it, Non-Organic Chemistry too. Thanks.

  • @SoonRaccoon
    @SoonRaccoon Před 10 lety

    Here's my hypothesis about why the reaction from the previous day sprayed bakelite further. It looked like there was less liquid in the beaker. The gases generated from the reaction could immediately fling the bakelite out of the beaker, whereas when there is more bakelite in the beaker, the gases have to build up to a higher pressure to fling the bakelite, giving more time for gases to escape around the sides of the bakelite.

  • @coolipopy
    @coolipopy Před 10 lety

    Holy balls. I am currently learning about aldehyde and just finished phenols in school. This is wonderful timing. Thanks!

  • @allentremper8243
    @allentremper8243 Před 3 lety

    I actually made a little toy from Bakelite in my middle school shop class, it came in granular pieces about the size of a normal BB.
    We used heat and a hydraulic press to make pretty much anything we could imagine, though it is rather brittle.

  • @EricHonaker
    @EricHonaker Před 10 lety

    Very cool. I'm a modern user of early 20th century shaving methods. There are quite a few people in the online community that seek out Bakelite razors, and razors with Bakelite handles.

  • @Tangobaldy
    @Tangobaldy Před 9 lety

    If only i had teachers like u at school. Imagine where i would be now? Fantastic videos. Love the hair!

  • @texasdeeslinglead2401
    @texasdeeslinglead2401 Před 8 lety +3

    if you ever wonder if people are interested in your business, well let me tell you , knight hood , global fan base, people wanting pictures taken with you guys , school teachers using your videos..........
    amazing, love you guys , thank you professor pliko😉 , Neil , and gang

  • @MrDannyArcher
    @MrDannyArcher Před 10 lety

    Im a bio-composite student, this is great! I would make this as my final year project! thank you so much for making this video!

  • @Khaltrops
    @Khaltrops Před 9 lety +18

    that's so funny my dog ran over to me.

  • @DaneBrooke
    @DaneBrooke Před 5 lety

    Here in the states a remarkably large number of things are *still* made of bakelite, I suppose on the "don't fix what isn't broke" principal. Many components of a completely operational electric home fitted with "knob and tube" wiring were bakelite, especially junction boxes and the round ceiling mounted boxes for supporting light fixtures. Those bakelite components remain in widespread use, tho newer 'blue plastic' alternatives are also available. And other things... I suppose the fact that it is durable, cheap and easily molded, and that production facilities are already 'tooled up', makes folks reluctant to demand other materials.

  • @jasonhentrich
    @jasonhentrich Před 10 lety +8

    Yay Brady's greyhound!

  •  Před 7 lety

    Nile Red gives a better explanation on how to actually make Bakelite and the different methods for doing so. But these videos are still fun and educational. I enjoy them.

  • @abyssallagiacrus4650
    @abyssallagiacrus4650 Před 10 lety +5

    That escalated quickly.

  • @grahamrdyer6322
    @grahamrdyer6322 Před 8 lety +18

    I say Bring back Bakelite.

    • @spudmckenzie4959
      @spudmckenzie4959 Před 4 lety +1

      Methinks, part of the reaon would be that the bakelite products dont wear out so fast. So not enough money to be made in the long run possibly.

  • @chaim0001
    @chaim0001 Před 10 lety

    Bakelite is also used as a pan handle, so you did own bakelite, unless you don't have pans at home.
    My uncle had a factory in Brazil and the odor was very characteristic, you could feel blocks away.

  • @mrdr9534
    @mrdr9534 Před 8 lety +17

    What makes it pink ?

    • @fleecemaster
      @fleecemaster Před 7 lety +1

      Probably conjugation of the phenol groups, would be my guess :)

    • @pietrotettamanti7239
      @pietrotettamanti7239 Před 5 lety +3

      @@vitollock575
      Phenophtalein is obtained from phtalic anhydride and phenol if I remember correctly. This polymerisation sure is a messy reaction, but I doubt that phenophtalein can be produced. The pink colour happens only in the acid catalyzed polymerisation, the base catalyzed one is much slower and ends up with a more yellowish colour.
      Overall I'm not able to come up with a decent explaination, so I'll leave it up for someone more informed than me.

  • @edepillim
    @edepillim Před 6 lety

    I remember a time when the only common plastics were Bakelite and nylon. Our phone and radio were Bakelite . Always a grotty brown or black. How does it get from pink to those colors and how is it moulded . I remember being excited when the first polythene buckets and basins were sold.

  • @prwexler
    @prwexler Před 10 lety

    GREAT EPISODE! Some applied chemistry! This is what it's all about: making stuff! Now, if UofN still has an industrial engineering school (my alma matter doesn't, which is outrageous), then it'd be great to see what could be done with that plastic. I am surprised that wood "flour" was part of the manufacturing process, using Bakelite. I do know the Bakelite plastic, though. It was still very much in use when I was a little kid. I was born in 1965. I remember those ashtrays and telephones. Moreover, I remember quite well the special placement of the one phone in the house. This episode took me back for just a moment...
    THANK YOU!

  • @20kilovolt
    @20kilovolt Před 10 lety +1

    Philips had made its own formula to make some thing similar as bakelite because the name bakelite were not allowed to use.
    This had the name Philite and one of the ingredients of it was beetle wings.

  • @Serachja
    @Serachja Před 7 lety +1

    I've read about this reaction a few times and now finally I get to see it. Didn't know it was that violent :-) Thank you for sharing!

  • @ArturdeSousaRocha
    @ArturdeSousaRocha Před 6 lety

    And Prof. Poliakoff had an epic model of a molecule handy, as usual. :)

  • @BlackWolf18C
    @BlackWolf18C Před 10 lety +1

    When you squeaked the toy my dog heard it from the other room and came running to find out what it was. When he got here and sat down I looked at him and said "But the professor needs his dog toys to explain chemistry."
    He glanced back and forth, looked down at the ground, stood up and sulked away.

  • @TimSter15
    @TimSter15 Před rokem

    Bakelite is also still used to make thermostat housings in vehicles because it's cheap and fairly resistant to heat for a while

  • @Lucius_Chiaraviglio
    @Lucius_Chiaraviglio Před 2 lety

    Bakelite and its relatives still aren't obsolete, either -- in addition to having seen quite an assortment of knobs made of phenolic plastic on equipment that is still in service (and even manufactured within the last couple of decades), I think the handles of some cookware are of a similar substance, and screw caps for media/chemical bottles with 35 mm mouths are often phenolic (although another type of plastic is also used for these -- the phenolic caps are slightly less dark, and definitely less flexible; either way, the limit on durability usually isn't the plastic of the cap itself, but the binding to the interior seal).

  • @jeromewink557
    @jeromewink557 Před 5 lety +1

    I think the grip panels on the Colt 1903 pistol were Bakelite.

  • @medexamtoolscom
    @medexamtoolscom Před 3 lety

    I did this in 11th grade chemistry. We didn't make the piece of bakelite into anything useful, it just ended up a useless plug shaped like the bottom half of a shallow porcelain bowl. So a puddle shaped piece of black plastic. But very high quality plastic. They should make more things out of bakelite. It is truly the classiest plastic. The same black plastic as is found in irons. Unlike regular plebeian plastic, it doesn't melt so easily in heat.

  • @stargazer3424
    @stargazer3424 Před 10 lety

    Crazy how suddenly the mixture shifts, it looks like a jump cut

  • @EddieVBlueIsland
    @EddieVBlueIsland Před 4 lety

    It is still used in metallography to mount metal & alloys for polishing.

  • @gardensofthegods
    @gardensofthegods Před 5 lety +1

    It was pretty cool... we used to have some BAKEKITE stuff at our house when I was a kid.. I'll bet you a lot of it got thrown out where my brother sold it for pennies at flea markets knowing him

  • @patrickbo2045
    @patrickbo2045 Před rokem

    Interesting to see how much material actually formed out of that "bit" of solution.

  • @erwinmaes780
    @erwinmaes780 Před 4 lety

    at 5:40, "when you write down the formula it quickly looks as my hair! " Classic :-)

  • @Wilc0
    @Wilc0 Před 10 lety

    Could you show the *full* polymerisation of PET (polyethyleneteraphtalate), so starting with the melting polymerisation and continue with the solid-state polymerisation. This leaves a lot of room for explanations, and it looks pretty nice at the end!

  • @joeclone345
    @joeclone345 Před 8 lety

    fun fact: in the super slow mo at the end that flashing light is a normal light. all lights resonate at the frequency of the electricity that powers them

  • @zer0kelvin212
    @zer0kelvin212 Před 5 lety

    I think that the last polymerisations were more explosive and created puffier bakelites because the chemical reaction occuring from the monomers to form a polymer is a condensation, so each monomer releases one molecule of H2O and during the second experiment where the professor increased the temperature, H2O created a highER pressure and POOOF

  • @zorro456
    @zorro456 Před 4 lety +1

    If you run the reaction slower at a lower temperature do you get less gas holes and a more solid Bakelite?

  • @Havazik
    @Havazik Před 8 lety +1

    I've made Bakelite before. We made a puck of it with steel samples embedded in my engineering materials course

  • @Blak2blue
    @Blak2blue Před 3 lety

    “And it squeaks...but that’s not part of the scientific explanation.” 😂😂😂

  • @AntiDot70
    @AntiDot70 Před 4 lety

    To this day I remember the distinctive smell of burning bakelite. It's unmistakable!

  • @seffard
    @seffard Před 9 lety

    It's impressive that his hair can be remembered in many sort of chemical things shown on these videos. The ultimate chaos model lol

  • @NathanOkun
    @NathanOkun Před 7 lety

    A little known fact about Bakelite: Early in WWII, the US Navy began to notice that some of their armor-piercing (AP) projectiles were not exploding property when they hit their target, even if the shell's explosive charge and base fuze (located as far from the impact area of the shell's nose against the armor as possible) was undamaged. An investigation revealed that the new, higher-strength base fuzes recently developed and introduced, replacing the older fuzes that had problems when the shell hit heavy armor at an acute angle, were in too many cases not functioning properly after being inside the shell for 6 months or more in storage. What was happening was the explosive used, ammonium picrate or "Explosive 'D'" (very insensitive so that it would not explode on impact, but only when the fuze's detonator set it off, unlike some explosives used in WWI by other nations), emitted fumes and this corroded steel very slightly. The new fuze, the Mk 21 Base Detonating Fuze used in almost all US Navy AP shells in WWII, had higher tolerances and a more complex, Chinese-puzzle-box-style arming mechanism for added safety when stored and when fired down the gun barrel, could not tolerate even this slight corrosion, which interfered with the fuze arming and firing properly on impact. After some months of tests, it was discovered that coating with Bakelite the entire upper portion of the fuze that was sticking into the shell's explosive-filled cavity sealed the fuze and by mid-1943 the problem was completely solved.

    • @superchuck3259
      @superchuck3259 Před 6 lety

      A great base of chemistry taught at colleges like this allowed some smart person to fix this engineering problem, of course to help win the war!

  • @Albrat28
    @Albrat28 Před 10 lety

    I know why it was more violent the day before... Smaller quantity of chemicals in the jug.
    Less chemicals = less mass of bakelite and therefore the movement of the spinner causes a larger "poof" effect.
    Basically the weight of the larger amount reduced the explosive effect.

  • @DrThunder88
    @DrThunder88 Před 10 lety

    Soviet-era Bakelite furniture can be a sought-after feature of military firearms. The reinforcing fibers have a burly wood grain appearance on some Bulgarian AKM hanguards I own, and the swirly, light streaks in the brownish-orange body of my Russian magazine are similarly uniquely organic for something made of plastic.
    Maybe I misunderstood the professor. I didn't think Bakelite was a thermoforming plastic.

  • @atcaleb
    @atcaleb Před 10 lety +7

    Again I learned something here! Thanks!

  • @Cinncinnatus
    @Cinncinnatus Před 3 lety

    I was out hiking along the river and found a old trash dump/pile guess that was long forgotten and I found a old brown glass 'Clorox' bottle and was surprised to find it had a intact Bakelite cap still on it. estimated was made about 1930

  • @waitaminutedoggie8048
    @waitaminutedoggie8048 Před 5 lety

    Bakelite is still in service as a material for switches in old electrical generation and substation equipment.

  • @abhinavdas3089
    @abhinavdas3089 Před 9 měsíci

    An art forger also used Bakelite to emulate the paintings of Vermeer.

  • @Lardverse
    @Lardverse Před 10 lety

    I need more chemist friends. I get to play with lasers and magnets from time to time (Physics undergraduate) but, watching chemicals being mixed looks pretty fun too.

    • @ExaltedDuck
      @ExaltedDuck Před 10 lety

      Assuming general chemistry classes were part of your lower curriculum, you might be able to enroll in organic chemistry. The associated lab classes are usually pretty fun assuming you can afford the time (it's not nearly as difficult a course as most outside the major make it out to be)

  • @1957mrbill
    @1957mrbill Před 4 lety +3

    If the chemical reaction occurs this quickly, how do they mold the stuff?

    • @PuFFerTV98368
      @PuFFerTV98368 Před 4 lety +1

      1957mrbill Hello professor said...they would warm it up to make it soft enough to go into an industrial molding machine. Also part of the process involves adding tree flour for strength. Not talked about in this video was also they would color it, if your interested Look up Art Deco combs & jewelry they made some cool stuff. ✌️

  • @rdhunkins
    @rdhunkins Před rokem

    It’s quite satisfying to see scientists grinning when things explode and splatter. I grin, too.

  • @CoolKoon
    @CoolKoon Před 8 lety +2

    There's one thing I don't understand: this bakelite had a different color than ANY of the industrially produced bakelites I've seen (they were mostly black, brownish or perhaps white, but never pinkish like that). How is that possible?

    • @BenjaminEsposti
      @BenjaminEsposti Před 8 lety

      Um... maybe they added some other chemicals to change the color? :P

    • @MisterTalkingMachine
      @MisterTalkingMachine Před 8 lety

      Industrally made bakelite for making objects was usually dyed as far as I know. Most of the time I have seen white, brown and black (in tube radio knobs, this is) as you say. I think I have seen green and red radio cases too.

  • @kych7506
    @kych7506 Před 4 lety

    Can we get an episode about cleaning up chemistry equipment? What do u guys use?

  • @MusicByNumbersUK
    @MusicByNumbersUK Před 10 lety

    As much as the science was great (as always.) For some reason I was mostly just captivated by the magnetic stirrer. That things a marvellous invention! :)

  • @patrichausammann
    @patrichausammann Před 4 lety +3

    😅 I still have an old functional bakelite phone.😉

  • @pneptun
    @pneptun Před 2 lety

    right, but how do you get the water out not to get a porous and puffy product? THAT's what Bakeland figured out. Even wiki says, that he was by far not the first one to experiment with phenol-formaldehyde reactions, but his invention was how to control the reaction and avoid bubbling. i'd really like to see THAT process explained in detail :)