Is It Possible to Melt Wood in a Vacuum Chamber? The Wood Distillation Experiment

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  • čas přidán 15. 05. 2018
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    In this video I check if it is possible to melt wood! I have had this question asked to me several times, so I attempt to melt wood in the vacuum chamber.
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Komentáře • 6K

  • @WetAshess
    @WetAshess Před 6 lety +2759

    I tried melting wood with fire but it "woodent

  • @timeladsedits
    @timeladsedits Před 4 lety +2917

    I got a question : how tiny is the tiniest thing you can feel with human nerves?

    • @death3678
      @death3678 Před 4 lety +203

      Ooh good question did you ever find the answer

    • @Dildobagginses
      @Dildobagginses Před 3 lety +693

      Those little fucking bugs

    • @greatarnab
      @greatarnab Před 3 lety +156

      Your brain man, your brain 🤣🤣

    • @ftfyoungleon
      @ftfyoungleon Před 3 lety +220

      A needle. Anything that breaks the first layer of human tissue no matter how small can be felt except of course not subatomic particles that's impossible.

    • @Frog_Mario
      @Frog_Mario Před 3 lety +4

      @F Pack no one cares

  • @brokeMF949
    @brokeMF949 Před 3 lety +2891

    Next Episode: Melting Water

    • @stizaidtl2146
      @stizaidtl2146 Před 3 lety +471

      Water is already liquid,
      You can solidify water by lowering the Temperature then melt it
      *Don't woosh me you damn anti-nerds*

    • @mattatmoney9488
      @mattatmoney9488 Před 3 lety +245

      @@stizaidtl2146 Jezus, give this guy a Nobel`s price

    • @storyofindy
      @storyofindy Před 3 lety +137

      Vaccum a Vaccum

    • @bryankopkin6869
      @bryankopkin6869 Před 3 lety +104

      Burning water 😳

    • @Nirokksu
      @Nirokksu Před 3 lety +72

      @@stizaidtl2146 r/woooooooooosh

  • @LaurenElizabethYT
    @LaurenElizabethYT Před 3 lety +631

    I know the thumbnail is photoshopped, and I know it won’t, but part of me still hopes it really will melt like that 😭

    • @upseguest
      @upseguest Před 2 lety +5

      Stop Whining about stupid childish thoughts. You're in the real world now.

    • @notintheobservableuniverse2594
      @notintheobservableuniverse2594 Před 2 lety +96

      @@upseguest Stop ranting on people now, you are saying that in public.

    • @upseguest
      @upseguest Před 2 lety +1

      @@notintheobservableuniverse2594 You realize that its _my_ opinion right? You are judging _my opinion_ .

    • @kinga1925
      @kinga1925 Před 2 lety +92

      @@upseguest You realize that its _his_ opinion right? You are judging _his opinion ._

    • @notintheobservableuniverse2594
      @notintheobservableuniverse2594 Před 2 lety +23

      @@kinga1925 haha nice 😂

  • @alisthela5391
    @alisthela5391 Před 5 lety +2707

    I wish it wood just melt

  • @richardekotara167
    @richardekotara167 Před 5 lety +1792

    No wood does not melt. Case in point...When Dorothy killed the wicked witch, she melted but the broom stick stayed intact. Case closed.

  • @plasmaportl
    @plasmaportl Před rokem +397

    I think you would need to depolymerize the cellulose, possibly with an enzyme. That would result in sugar which could be melted.

    • @JohnSmith-id2st
      @JohnSmith-id2st Před rokem +26

      This would absolutely work and actually at least one person to my knowledge has turned cellulose into sugar for alcohol distillation... Although they used cellulose in the forn of tp.

    • @joshyoung1440
      @joshyoung1440 Před rokem +9

      Right, which, as defined here, still constitutes breaking down and therefore not melting simple wood.

    • @matthewjaj8835
      @matthewjaj8835 Před rokem +15

      Was it Nile purple

    • @JohnSmith-id2st
      @JohnSmith-id2st Před rokem +5

      @@matthewjaj8835 a fellow man of culture I see

    • @kalpolproductions8558
      @kalpolproductions8558 Před rokem +3

      shut, i dont know this language

  • @JWuli
    @JWuli Před 4 lety +2841

    You will never know why I got so many likes.
    Sike, i said that If it DID melt, it would be liqwood

    • @SwearJar1
      @SwearJar1 Před 4 lety +29

      dFuZe_Stryker YT hahaha stop whit The wood puns

    • @Aryan_Yadav57
      @Aryan_Yadav57 Před 4 lety +31

      And u gotta lick that "liq-wood"

    • @minh1b
      @minh1b Před 4 lety +8

      dFuZe_Stryker YT sans

    • @t12is_10
      @t12is_10 Před 4 lety +5

      Good Joke dFuZe_Stryker YT

    • @t12is_10
      @t12is_10 Před 4 lety +2

      Also A Wood Puns!

  • @Miro55Gaming
    @Miro55Gaming Před 6 lety +966

    If it was possible to melt wood it would be a lot easier to make furniture and stuff

    • @derektye05
      @derektye05 Před 6 lety +119

      While not possible to melt, it is possible to heat wood in water to make it bend. (Which is used in making ornate furniture and structures) Pretty cool stuff.

    • @gavinfoley9822
      @gavinfoley9822 Před 6 lety +37

      derektye05 this is also how they make guitars aswell as other insuments like chellos and violins.

    • @IrishLegacy93
      @IrishLegacy93 Před 6 lety +24

      Isn't funny that you need to soak the wood on a boat to shape it only to drive on water.

    • @Richez1
      @Richez1 Před 6 lety +5

      AllenMurphy93 never really thought about it that way lmao

    • @iPhaust
      @iPhaust Před 6 lety +3

      I'm sorry but you can't drive on water.
      You can sail tho.

  • @thepogster1312
    @thepogster1312 Před 3 lety +457

    What our mom and dad think we watch: *Fun silly videos*
    What we actually watch:

    • @someoneontheinternetuvenev6268
      @someoneontheinternetuvenev6268 Před 3 lety +22

      Fun silly videos

    • @CYXXYC
      @CYXXYC Před 3 lety +30

      Oh no our child is a nerd

    • @newdykung6775
      @newdykung6775 Před 3 lety +6

      Parent: You only use computer for playing games!
      Me silently watching these stuff: Whatever you said..

    • @Tykdhep
      @Tykdhep Před 2 lety +4

      stop using "our" start using "my" using our looks cringe lmao kid

    • @aguynamedbrian2698
      @aguynamedbrian2698 Před 2 lety +2

      @@Tykdhep Say that to communists

  • @danielcox3983
    @danielcox3983 Před rokem +199

    I think this experiment could be revisited. Pump the air out, but instead of a laser, get special high temp ducting and a tight valve to seal leading to a heated nitrogen feed. Nitrogen being inert means no oxygen for combustion, so you could heat it up high enough to melt the wood on contact.

    • @inthefade
      @inthefade Před rokem +17

      I think the oxygen in the hydrocarbons would allow it to ignite.

    • @Gajargon
      @Gajargon Před rokem +19

      @@inthefade YES - The giant organic polymer contains oxygen, so you would create different molecules with new breaks and bridges, and perhaps eventually the net change would be to a more oxidized state as Hydrogen is released as gas carboxylic acids are left. In a sense that's oxidation because the carbon molecules are losing more electrons to the oxygen, even though there is no new addition of oxygen to the molecules.

    • @RodrigoM3llo
      @RodrigoM3llo Před rokem +5

      As this conversation goes, it's just insane for me to think that heat does all that sh1t in the universe, no matter what is the chemical problem, apply heat, maintain heat, or reduce heat, and things interact way differently than they did in otherwise scenario.

    • @ViralC1
      @ViralC1 Před rokem +1

      @@RodrigoM3llo
      It's all just energy, fam.
      *WE'RE* all just energy. (Or more like... high functioning combustion engines, but the amount of cells we burn through and replace just on a daily basis is insane.)
      Really changes a perspective.

    • @antiheld7323
      @antiheld7323 Před rokem +2

      This is literally just what a pyrolysis plant is

  • @lucasbrelivet5238
    @lucasbrelivet5238 Před 3 lety +41

    Under low pressure you get sublimation, so you end up with gaz, but I wonder what would happen if you heated the wood under high pressure but without oxygen, for example in nitrogen. I also wonder what you'll get if you do the same experience with pure carbon.

    • @muddybasilisk7526
      @muddybasilisk7526 Před rokem +3

      Yeah it can’t ignite in a vacuum, so instead maybe surround it with carbon dioxide or nitrogen so it won’t combust

    • @samuelallanviolin752
      @samuelallanviolin752 Před rokem +5

      @muddybasilisk If heat couldn't be transferred in a vacuum we'd all be dead :D (because we wouldn't be heated by the sun)

    • @theangledsaxon6765
      @theangledsaxon6765 Před rokem +2

      @@muddybasilisk7526 radiant heat can be transmitted

    • @EricPalmer_DaddyOh
      @EricPalmer_DaddyOh Před rokem +1

      @@muddybasilisk7526 Heat can be transferred in a vacuum via radiation. It won't transfer via conduction except where it touches something. no convection in a vacuum.

    • @muddybasilisk7526
      @muddybasilisk7526 Před rokem

      @@EricPalmer_DaddyOh what I meant was that it won’t ignite my bad

  • @raysilver2b
    @raysilver2b Před 6 lety +410

    Although you removed the oxygen from the air, you didn't remove the oxygen from the wood its self. So you still had normal combustion. Maybe you should try leaving the wood under vacuum for some number of hours to remove that oxygen too.

    • @guythat779
      @guythat779 Před rokem +25

      thing is even though these stray oxygens will do something similar to combustion there isnt enough to burn all of it, what's mostly happening is the different carbon chains are breaking down into smaller compounds
      if you stare at a wood fire you'll see that the flame is not on the wood itslef but hovers above it, that's because of this process that makes smaller more easily burned volatile compounds
      that's also how we break down petroleum into the different fuels we use like diesel

    • @originallynot
      @originallynot Před rokem +31

      I don't think you can really get wood without oxygen, celulose is basically a chain of sugar molecules which have oxygen in their composition, at best you will always get a carbon foam like substance

    • @spiderdude2099
      @spiderdude2099 Před rokem +18

      You can get this result even with chemical grade purified cellulose. It still chars and pyrolyses. It’s not about any minute amount of trapped oxygen

    • @PrinciplesMatter
      @PrinciplesMatter Před rokem

      I wonder would if it burn a finely ground wood or sawdust. 🤔

    • @guythat779
      @guythat779 Před rokem +2

      @@PrinciplesMatter there's still no oxygen in the atmosphere
      What you'd get is different only in how the smoke evolves but chemically nothing changes
      Although I gotta say the question is really interesting outside of the scope but it ultimately depends on how the heat is applied
      With the laser I don't think we'd get much difference

  • @emilydagna6793
    @emilydagna6793 Před 6 lety +3404

    5:34 YOU'RE WELCOME

  • @ivarhakuse8572
    @ivarhakuse8572 Před rokem +42

    Wood is made of Glucose unit’s which contain oxygen plus there would also be free oxygen caught up in the fibrous tubular structures of the wood itself. Moreover the cellulose is such a giant branched molecule that it would be impossible to disentangle all the components. Substances with melting points are generally much smaller discrete molecules which involve other forms of intermolecular bonding allowing them to break away from each other given the right energy.

  • @cliffmathew
    @cliffmathew Před 3 lety +3

    Thanks. Back in school about 40 years ago I asked what the flame of the candle is made of -- and I finally got a believable answer here today.

  • @snbeast9545
    @snbeast9545 Před 5 lety +161

    1:38
    "This is it, Luigi!
    Remember: Where there's smoke..."
    "There's fire!"

  • @lemonmania967
    @lemonmania967 Před 6 lety +309

    i’ve wondered this for YEARS “why do some things burn and some things melt” AND NO ONE WAS ABLE TO ANSWER IT UNTIL NOW

    • @eldafint
      @eldafint Před 6 lety +23

      lemonmania96 Bad teachers

    • @gnomge
      @gnomge Před 6 lety

      lemonmania96 yeah

    • @hadiisaboss5307
      @hadiisaboss5307 Před 6 lety +4

      I'm 12, and I knew why before this.
      It's be sure the wood doesn't melt its Ashes melt

    • @shivdini6277
      @shivdini6277 Před 6 lety +68

      Hi, I'm 6 years ol and i knew that they are like that before this.
      I, myself am an intellectual
      I can also deadlift 220 kg

    • @starexbom8365
      @starexbom8365 Před 6 lety +1

      Some things melt and some not, but everything can burn even metal but it have to be long over The melt tempeture but it still cant. And im 12 year and alredy know that.

  • @alphazuluz
    @alphazuluz Před 2 lety +66

    It’s so funny to me how you do a 3,2,1 countdown to start the vacuum as if it’s about to do something immediate.

  • @FloraSora
    @FloraSora Před 3 lety +3

    This was actually insanely informative. Thank you!

  • @n0va211
    @n0va211 Před 6 lety +69

    The best thing about you, you describe everything so Cleary. Keep up the good content and love your videos

  • @ProPlayer-wq3nu
    @ProPlayer-wq3nu Před 6 lety +59

    Lol the thumbnail... Nice editing skills 😂

    • @TheActionLab
      @TheActionLab  Před 6 lety +21

      What are you talking about? I also have a cool picture of Bigfoot and the Loch Ness monster if you want to see..

    • @ProPlayer-wq3nu
      @ProPlayer-wq3nu Před 6 lety +3

      The Action Lab
      I would like to see it

    • @freemind4346
      @freemind4346 Před 6 lety +2

      Clickbait😜

    • @coffee4193
      @coffee4193 Před 6 lety +1

      I see your comment like everywhere

    • @DrRiq
      @DrRiq Před 6 lety

      Pro Player 1⃣ I was hoping I wouldn't come across one of your asinine comments on this vid, but here we are

  • @lathurshithanvishnuvarthan9526

    1:05
    That cool dude-"Attempting to melt wood 3 2 1"
    (Indistinct fart sounds)😂😂😂

  • @MatthewBaileyBeAfraid
    @MatthewBaileyBeAfraid Před 4 lety +6

    No...
    Pyrolysis will result in the decomposition of the Wood, even if no “Combustion” occurs.
    The wood “breaks” down into the various components, and the long-chain polymers, like lignin, prevent the remaining materials from “Melting.”
    You MIGHT be able to get it to “Melt” if you could lower the melting point of Carbon substantially below the 3500°C it requires at standard pressure to “melt” Carbon, which would then be below the temperature of the “pyrolysis” which causes the constituent breakdown OF the wood.

    • @zac9933
      @zac9933 Před 3 lety

      Soo if I'm reading this correctly it is:
      "No..." the video isn't entirely accurate.
      If [the remainder of what you said] is achieved, then you could possibly cause the wood to melt?

    • @MatthewBaileyBeAfraid
      @MatthewBaileyBeAfraid Před 3 lety

      Zac
      “Possibly” being the key.

  • @metamorphicorder
    @metamorphicorder Před 6 lety +959

    This is similar to how some of the first light bulb filaments were made. They heated cotton thread up really high in a vacuum. It pyrolyzed and left almost pure carbon behind that they then used in lightbulbs.

    • @TheActionLab
      @TheActionLab  Před 6 lety +65

      I didn’t know that!

    • @metamorphicorder
      @metamorphicorder Před 6 lety +44

      Upon more recent reading it turns out that it was bamboo or paper used as the source of the carbon.

    • @harrysvensson2610
      @harrysvensson2610 Před 6 lety +4

      What about melting wood?

    • @winddoggo9406
      @winddoggo9406 Před 6 lety +9

      metamorphicorder You are correct there were two people who try to make light bulbs Joseph Swan what's the one who technically used cardboard by using thick paper. But the first real patent light bulb was from Edison who use sewing thread so yeah you're correct about that

    • @metamorphicorder
      @metamorphicorder Před 6 lety +2

      Christopher Lefont i think it depends on what country's patents you are looking at and how you analyse those patents vs extant examples of the original prototypes or known exemplars of the device of known pedigree and date. There were according to my reading yesterday at least two patents outside the US for electric light bulbs that predate edisons. As well as the globar i believe. I couldn't find any mention of actual cotton thread or other textile based filaments of any note with a cursory search. I remember carbonized thread being mentioned specifically in a history or science text book in school years ago. Im sure it would work and was likely done but would likely be very short lived unless it was used as very low current and it would suffer from temperature induced output fluctuations if it was used in a vacuum bulb rather than a inert gas filled one which was a later development. By that time there were other filament options developed.

  • @deadsoul9292
    @deadsoul9292 Před 6 lety +174

    There are many science channels on youtube with over millions of subscriber. but none of them are like this, while other channels just depends on animation and imaginary concept, this channel does everything practically. Not saying they are bad ,in fact they all are great, but they all look amateur when comes to practicals. I'm glad i found this channel.

    • @TheActionLab
      @TheActionLab  Před 6 lety +13

      Thanks buddy:)

    • @fimas8583
      @fimas8583 Před 6 lety +3

      "manual do mundo" is a brazilian channel that works like this one

    • @jigzmalakas6253
      @jigzmalakas6253 Před 6 lety +2

      DEAD SOUL yeah great. Want me to name those channels? We're on same comment. Haha

    • @TheBenfm24
      @TheBenfm24 Před 6 lety +1

      DEAD SOUL you should check out Cody's Lab if you haven't already.

    • @Mirrori
      @Mirrori Před 6 lety +1

      I kinda think that Cody's Lab is for chemistry stuff and action lab is for physichs stuff. They both are pretty interesting and important things. I only think what woud happen if they join togheter like theory of relativity and quatum mechanics? Would it be impossible?

  • @TheMimony
    @TheMimony Před 8 měsíci +1

    Very interesting experiment! Theoretically, could you add the missing components to the substance you obtained and reconstruct something that resembles wood ?

  • @SlyPearTree
    @SlyPearTree Před 2 lety

    I got a chemistry set for Christmas in the 70s and one of the experiments was producing wood alcohol with a setup similar to yours. I've looked at modern chemistry set and I'm very glad I was born in the 60's.

  • @draygoes
    @draygoes Před 6 lety +22

    Melt wood? Man, you introduce us to more and more impressive concepts every video. So glad that I subbed.

  • @breakingaustin
    @breakingaustin Před 6 lety +853

    That thumbnail editing tho

  • @devinnicely8486
    @devinnicely8486 Před 3 lety +58

    Can you melt wood with a laser pointer?
    Proceeds to put wood into meth lab

  • @dodokgp
    @dodokgp Před rokem +6

    Being a giant molecule does not necessarily mean it cannot melt. In general, a lot of plastics melt without breaking down into simpler molecules. But indeed the case of wood/cellulose and rubber is very interesting!

    • @chandreshsingh6592
      @chandreshsingh6592 Před 4 měsíci

      plastic is a long polymer chain..on melting it actually breaks down to many monomers...

    • @kingmewto7148
      @kingmewto7148 Před 3 měsíci

      Yeah,but polystyrene (aka styrofoam)can melt and then reform.

  • @stevecollins2770
    @stevecollins2770 Před 6 lety +43

    If pyrolyzing wood is of interest, you may find the coking of coal to also be interesting. When coal is coked, it gives off many gasses that are similar to petroleum. These gasses are captured and processed through a refinery to produce many useful products. The foamy solid carbonaceous (98% C) material left behind is coke.
    The destructive distillation of pine tar produces turpentine and rosin.

    • @wcodelyoko
      @wcodelyoko Před 6 lety +5

      I thought that, in a blast furnace, with 1xCoal, you would produce 1xCoal coke and 500 mB of Creosote Oil, in about 3000 ticks

    • @brodyhelmer9083
      @brodyhelmer9083 Před 6 lety +6

      are we still speaking english?

    • @stevecollins2770
      @stevecollins2770 Před 6 lety +1

      Coal is destructively distilled in a coke oven where O2 is excluded. The coke is roughly (very roughly) 75% of the weight of the coal and the gasses are roughly 25% of the weight of the coal.
      The gasses go thru a refinery.
      The solid coke goes into a blast furnace along with iron ore and limestone. O in the iron ore combines with C in the coke to produce metallic iron and gaseous CO2. Limestone melts and floats away impurities in the iron ore.
      Wikipedia probably has good articles on this.

    • @wcodelyoko
      @wcodelyoko Před 6 lety +1

      Brody H No, I'm speaking minecraft XD

    • @wcodelyoko
      @wcodelyoko Před 6 lety +2

      I hoped someone would get the joke :(

  • @mazzaleenh8388
    @mazzaleenh8388 Před 6 lety +507

    please stop it with the misleading thumbnails
    otherwise, great video

    • @mazzaleenh8388
      @mazzaleenh8388 Před 6 lety +81

      yeah, thats the point.

    • @eeeeea
      @eeeeea Před 6 lety +20

      Howitzer 0 how stupid must someome be to believe the thumbnail is an actual not photoshoped photo?

    • @Fu2Sir
      @Fu2Sir Před 6 lety +37

      how stupid do you have to be to watch a video of a guy attempting to melt wood for 7 minutes

    • @lezhaosicne6387
      @lezhaosicne6387 Před 6 lety +16

      Bearzy hmm true but your here too

    • @Fu2Sir
      @Fu2Sir Před 6 lety +9

      Z X touché

  • @satriyodibyos1930
    @satriyodibyos1930 Před 4 lety +4

    there are view correction from this video that i want to point out,
    1. You need to seal the rubber lit with parafilm so the smoke won't came out
    2. Lignin tends to converted into "char" rather than becoming liquid wood/liquid smoke
    3. There's difference between combustion and pyrolysis, and since the lit is not completely sealed, your system is very vunerable towards combustion reaction (creating fire, just lacking the ignition)

  • @Frank183847572828
    @Frank183847572828 Před 2 lety +6

    Sound like liquid smoke, the smokey food additive you can buy at the groceries, super nice in marinades.

    • @Kaiveran
      @Kaiveran Před 2 lety

      Pyroligneous acid is indeed used in smoke flavoring.

  • @bored.in.california2111
    @bored.in.california2111 Před 6 lety +879

    Can you melt wood in vacuum?
    5:34 No you can't.
    Aaaalrighty then. Next video!

    • @Dr4gonDestroyer
      @Dr4gonDestroyer Před 5 lety +27

      Because who cares why right? ...

    • @Anonymous-ci3fz
      @Anonymous-ci3fz Před 5 lety +9

      thank you

    • @Wowzieez
      @Wowzieez Před 5 lety +5

      RageWolf Yeah

    • @Real8114
      @Real8114 Před 5 lety +3

      thanks

    • @kellyy2399
      @kellyy2399 Před 5 lety +7

      Bored.In.California righttt I was like oh ok u can’t... sooo he just wasted 5:34 if my time next video👉🏽👉🏽😭😂

  • @elanasilverman4468
    @elanasilverman4468 Před 6 lety +83

    I have wondered about this since I was a kid (ie. do all things melt? That seems to be the general idea of the 3 states of matter... but some things like wood or cloth just don't seem, melt-ey?) Everything about the vid is well explained, competently done AND mercifully free of idiot sound effects. Thanks for creating this!

    • @faikerdogan2802
      @faikerdogan2802 Před rokem

      OMG same

    • @ekothesilent9456
      @ekothesilent9456 Před rokem +16

      @dejuren all of which are capable of melting. It seems that you weren’t a bright kid. Nor a friendly one. A combination surely to lead you to an unfulfilled life.

    • @justisweinmann4423
      @justisweinmann4423 Před 4 měsíci +1

      Cloth melts while burning

    • @elanasilverman4468
      @elanasilverman4468 Před 4 měsíci

      @@justisweinmann4423Synthetics I can certainly believe - do you happem to know if it's true for natural fibers?
      Hope this is not something you had to learn as an EMT or medical professional, It would be terrible to suffer or to treat.

  • @maclee5381
    @maclee5381 Před 3 měsíci

    I read about destructive distillation of coal when I was in elementary school and I wondered the same thing about wood. I did some experiments with burning wood/other combustable materials (I was literally playing with fire as a kid unsupervised lol) - I made a little tube out of foil and piped the flammable gas of a flame away to make another flame at the end of the pipe. It was quite eye-opening as a child to see that the brightest part of the flame wasn't from oxygen reacting with the solid itself but from its reaction with the gaseous products that are produced when the solid/liquid fuel decomposes/vaporizes.
    Speaking of wood gas, apparently North Korea uses it as an automotive fuel in some rural parts of the country. That was also a fairly common fuel for vehicles in parts of Europe and China during WWII.

  • @mohamedmostafa28
    @mohamedmostafa28 Před 4 lety +2

    This is very informative and interesting really.
    Thanks man and keep it up

  • @OverlyHonestGaming
    @OverlyHonestGaming Před 6 lety +216

    If you turn the volume all the way down at 5:35 it looks like he's casting a magical enchantment on the block of wood :P

  • @thewinspear7325
    @thewinspear7325 Před 5 lety +431

    You can't because the Thumbnail is fake.

    • @jyrolys6
      @jyrolys6 Před 5 lety +34

      @@gunnsnow9057 The only reason to make a fake melted wood thumbnail is if he didn't have real melted wood to show.

    • @timothyfisher570
      @timothyfisher570 Před 5 lety +46

      The thumbnail is fake because you can't melt wood.... but the reason you can't melt wood is not because the thumbnail is fake

    • @jenc3147
      @jenc3147 Před 5 lety +9

      That was a joke, dood.

    • @ycart_tech6726
      @ycart_tech6726 Před 4 lety

      Somebody's on the right track...

    • @kiffy00
      @kiffy00 Před 4 lety +3

      or to make suspense

  • @gamingzillajinnu2863
    @gamingzillajinnu2863 Před 4 lety +25

    My tution teacher told me that wood melts in vacuum. There is no oxygen in vacuum.That is why wood melts instead of burning.

    • @WLxMusic
      @WLxMusic Před 3 lety +7

      theoretically, yes, but that would be molten carbon, not wood

    • @SimalatusEstriaSongs
      @SimalatusEstriaSongs Před 2 lety +2

      @@WLxMusic Carbon can't melt. It sublimates instead. Especially in a vacuum.

  • @sasquish
    @sasquish Před 3 lety

    Man, what an informative piece of media. I don't know what I need this information for, but thanks!

  • @ThisDragon141
    @ThisDragon141 Před 5 lety +73

    4:15
    That’s one way to smoke some tree.

  • @rack2646
    @rack2646 Před 6 lety +712

    5:34 Thank me later

  • @obieldenook1142
    @obieldenook1142 Před rokem

    I've always wondered this since elementary school so thanks a ton for elaborating on this where my teachers could/did not. Maybe they didn't know or maybe I just couldn't understand those words at the time.

  • @chubbyadler3276
    @chubbyadler3276 Před 3 lety +5

    I believe that's how charcoal is made, isn't it? The energy winds up liberating certain elements from the atomic structure of the wood, changing its composition well before it changes phases.

  • @-zod-4882
    @-zod-4882 Před 6 lety +4

    I love your videos because I'm learning a lot. Keep up the good work.

  • @charlesprest2203
    @charlesprest2203 Před 6 lety +125

    This is my favorite channel. Really cool and interesting topics and so diverse. Good educator and I really enjoy it

  • @BleedGibson
    @BleedGibson Před 4 lety

    Awesome Video! just found your channel a few weeks ago and I can't stop watching

  • @ronwitek4539
    @ronwitek4539 Před 3 lety

    Video really made me want to get back into distillation and shows how simple it really can be

  • @WarriorsPhoto
    @WarriorsPhoto Před 5 lety +4

    Great scientific finds here. I used to wonder about this myself. Did not think to try though.

  • @sourjyadiptadatta9716
    @sourjyadiptadatta9716 Před 5 lety +113

    5:37 could have said earlier at the start of the video

  • @Ifortgor
    @Ifortgor Před 5 měsíci

    I’ve had this question for years! THANK YOU SO MUCH 🙏

  • @AsaelTheBeast
    @AsaelTheBeast Před 2 lety +3

    I was literally thinking when you introducing the experiment "Isn't removing the oxygen from burning wood how you make charcoal?".
    in medieval times, they'd cook the wood in buried chambers so that oxygen couldn't get to it.
    These days, you can do it with a couple steel drums. it's dirt cheap too.

    • @Xanitrit_Zeo
      @Xanitrit_Zeo Před 2 lety

      Charcoal is made so that the water and other useless oils in the wood is removed. You take out the oxygen part so that the wood itself does not burn, only the water is boiled off per se. This leave a somewhat purer form of fuel that can be oxidised more readily and produce stronger heat.

  • @mickesmanymovies
    @mickesmanymovies Před 6 lety +173

    That "liquid wood" is actually a thing you can buy, sort of.
    It's a flavouring thing used in cooking, called Liquid Smoke, which consists only of the liquified residues of the burning of a certain type of wood.
    It's quite efficiant, in its limited range of possible usage.

    • @zombie-process7025
      @zombie-process7025 Před 6 lety +6

      It's EXCELLENT for ribs. Add about 3 drops into a bowl of whatever else you're slathering on them before stuffing them in the fridge to marinate.

    • @sreelol7376
      @sreelol7376 Před 6 lety

      Mikael Karlsson I

    • @bulletbill1104
      @bulletbill1104 Před 6 lety +3

      Mikael Karlsson Homer Simpson used that shit in his moon waffles

    • @chickenbob562
      @chickenbob562 Před 6 lety +1

      its good for ribs, beef jerky and pulled pork

    • @DjSabzi
      @DjSabzi Před 6 lety

      Mikael Karlsson

  • @SUZUKIMIKE105
    @SUZUKIMIKE105 Před 6 lety +259

    5:36 for answer

  • @pogtonium5084
    @pogtonium5084 Před 3 lety +10

    ah yes its time for me to drink some good old wood.

  • @t1world767
    @t1world767 Před rokem

    Thankyou Bro.
    Thankyou for giving the different of Informations of chemical reactions.
    Thankyou you for your greate efforts

  • @yogeshkumar9311
    @yogeshkumar9311 Před 5 lety +21

    - Thanks for sponsoring the Video
    - directly skips 30 secs.
    - comes back.

  • @forgotn42
    @forgotn42 Před 6 lety +15

    Is that experiment with the beaker and the gasses the basic premise of a gasifier? From what I remember of gasifiers, they seem pretty similar. Very cool seeing the science behind all of this.

  • @sindhum6624
    @sindhum6624 Před 3 lety

    Thank you bro .We love your videos,cause it contains some cool science stuff

  • @luceatlux7087
    @luceatlux7087 Před 3 lety +8

    wow what a great job. i thought there was no way i would find someone doing this exact experiment that i searched for... this guy has amazed me before too. i remember his face. what a great mind :D

  • @vesselsel
    @vesselsel Před 6 lety +4

    Your videos are the best! So informative!

  • @MammaOVlogs
    @MammaOVlogs Před 6 lety +179

    How fun and interesting is that! l loved it and now l will look at wood burning differently! l never noticed that the flame isn't burning the wood, way cool and thanks so much and l will check out the great courses!

    • @youexpectedausernamebutitw4578
      @youexpectedausernamebutitw4578 Před 6 lety

      Momma O don't you look familiar

    • @dogge7493
      @dogge7493 Před 6 lety

      Momma O p

    • @SawManga
      @SawManga Před 6 lety

      then you probably never extinguish candles flame with fingers... that's why it does not burn your skin. the only heat you feel is same as you tip your finger on that melted tallow. well whatever.

    • @RoleplayHost
      @RoleplayHost Před 6 lety +1

      Momma O I highly appreciate your optimistic attitude in this comment.

    • @elanasilverman4468
      @elanasilverman4468 Před 6 lety

      I'm not sure that's the character flaw you think it is...

  • @Kualinar
    @Kualinar Před rokem

    Many substances will decompose before melting.
    I remember doing that same experiment in my Introduction to physical sciences way back in secondary 3. It was called wood distillation. In a test tube heated with an alcohol lamp. We had one warm collecting flask for the heavy tar like fraction, then, a second one in an ice bath that collected some clear fluid like wood alcohol, and, a water filled one collecting the gas part.

  • @felicityc
    @felicityc Před rokem +1

    you could make some really cool art with that technique

  • @silentwolf9430
    @silentwolf9430 Před 6 lety +9

    I am 100% sure that he was the best in his class when he was younger

  • @JesterAzazel
    @JesterAzazel Před 6 lety +4

    I never realized how bad I needed to know this.
    And I'm glad I tend to check the comments first, there's always someone being a hero when it's some long winded video with like 1 or 2 minutes of interesting content.

  • @anthonylepore516
    @anthonylepore516 Před rokem

    You have the BEST vacuum chamber experiments!!!

  • @alexlexo59
    @alexlexo59 Před 3 lety +8

    After the processes does the liquid catches fire?

    • @vesa7069
      @vesa7069 Před 2 lety

      Yes, tars are very much flammable.

  • @TechsScience
    @TechsScience Před 6 lety +4

    I have seen you growing keep going man

  • @jaxnean2663
    @jaxnean2663 Před 6 lety +3

    You're one amazing teacher 👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻

  • @ChaosMagnet
    @ChaosMagnet Před 3 lety

    In WWII, people used to do this to run petrol-burning vehicles when petrol was unavailable or restricted due to shortages. The gaseous parts of wood were introduced into the engine to get it to run.

  • @THE-CHAMPION-HAS-A-NAME
    @THE-CHAMPION-HAS-A-NAME Před 2 lety +3

    I saw somebody comment on another one of his videos that he should make a book called "A guy and his vaccum chamber" and its probably the truest comment ive ever seen 😂😂

  • @sideralc13
    @sideralc13 Před 6 lety +342

    Btw, congrats on 1 million subscribers
    I've been here for a while, love your videos.

  • @omarrp14
    @omarrp14 Před 6 lety +8

    I'm glad I'm not the only one that asked thier chemistry teacher this back in 10th grade

  • @drdoom1786
    @drdoom1786 Před 3 lety

    I swear this guy videos always pop up whenever I decided to sleep, and his title alone enough to attract me to watch the video lol

  • @TheAJKid
    @TheAJKid Před 4 měsíci

    These video's never cease to amaze me

  • @paparoysworkshop
    @paparoysworkshop Před 6 lety +6

    When heating the wood in the beaker, the first sign of moisture at the top would be water. No matter how dry you think the wood is, it still contains moisture. After the water evaporates, then you get the heavier molecules. And what these chemicals are, depends greatly on the species.

    • @Term-0
      @Term-0 Před 8 měsíci

      i'd say that most of the water is probably contained in the cytoplasm of the cells

  • @crockpot5194
    @crockpot5194 Před 6 lety +3

    The Action Lab. Y'all should get a contract with (PBS) Public Broadcast Station. Y'all could really teach alot of people about alot of things.

  • @taylorelliott4727
    @taylorelliott4727 Před rokem

    Very interesting! Never thought I’d be watching wood combust on CZcams in the middle of the night LOL

  • @thatonearanara
    @thatonearanara Před rokem +3

    I asked my friends about this and they called me crazy

  • @tumblevveed3586
    @tumblevveed3586 Před 5 lety +8

    This seems similar to the concept of a “wood gas generator”.
    Thanks for the video.

  • @greasyfingerprints
    @greasyfingerprints Před 5 lety +7

    I asked my primary school teacher this question over 40 years ago. She didn't know the answer, which was ok coz it taught me how to research, but it's great to finally get an answer. I had these thoughts of melting huge logs into furniture moulds ... I guess not 😞

  • @ender1151
    @ender1151 Před 2 měsíci

    My buddy and I actually tried this in Highschool. It was pretty cool.

  • @MrOk-yw6ly
    @MrOk-yw6ly Před 3 lety +4

    action lab: trying to melt wood with laser
    laser: but i want to melt the glass

  • @bartvh07
    @bartvh07 Před 6 lety +35

    Not everything melts! Melting is simply a phase change from solid to liquid, without changing chemical composition. It's a scientific word, with a definition. Even substances that can melt, only do so under particular conditions. On Mars for example, the pressure is too low for water to exist in liquid form, so heating solid ice sublimates it into vapor. Look at a phase diagram. The video is correct in stating that melting can also be prohibited by combustion or chemical changes, if these occur at lower temperatures. However, the language used in these videos is not educational, instead more like a cooking show. Don't say that 'every single substance has a melting point' if you then proceed to demonstrate that some things don't melt. Don't call burning something by heating 'spontaneous combustion'. Fire does not "burn air": the hot air (plasma) emits light. "Red charcoal patches" do not burn wood: they are burning wood. I may be nitpicking, but you may be misleading those without a science background, and bad language does not teach anyone science.
    Most ideas and explanations in this video are valid, but they serve little purpose to them who don't have a good understanding already. There is no justification of how you perform the experiment, your thinking that went into it, what 'super bright laser' actually means, or even the kind of wood that you used! Like other videos on this channel, this just seems like Googling and a first try experiment, with interpretations that are technically correct (if you look past the language) but sloppy and misleading. On CZcams, look at Applied Science to see how it is done. Or read a book.

    • @Julian-tf8nj
      @Julian-tf8nj Před 5 lety +4

      You articulated a lot of my thoughts on this - thank you!

    • @ng1n369
      @ng1n369 Před 5 lety +2

      Well I read a book now.
      In this comment.

    • @7N8173
      @7N8173 Před 5 lety

      Are u giving us a science lecture lol 😂😂😂😂😂I was just😴😴😴😴😴 sleeping last night while reading this comment and today I am replying

    • @Pablovru
      @Pablovru Před 5 lety +1

      Damn He mad

    • @stefanox8908
      @stefanox8908 Před 5 lety +2

      @@7N8173 u re not funny

  • @itsyaboigoozman3732
    @itsyaboigoozman3732 Před 5 lety +40

    The coolest way to kill an ant

  • @binay413963
    @binay413963 Před 3 lety +14

    1:03 3,2,1 excuse me.

    • @Demon_toxin
      @Demon_toxin Před 3 lety +2

      It took me a few seconds to get it but when I did I chuckled a bit

  • @lovor01
    @lovor01 Před rokem

    I did not know that. Thanks for the insight.

  • @kylehooper2981
    @kylehooper2981 Před 5 lety +13

    Absolutely perfect job at explaining this! A+++ Good job! Thank you!

  • @MarlasanLovesCake
    @MarlasanLovesCake Před 6 lety +317

    Ok the only reason why I watched this video, was because I was already quite sure that it is impossible to melt wood. I'll save you the time. It is.

    • @rajanda
      @rajanda Před 6 lety +3

      its not...states of matter etc..just need the right temperature.

    • @irtheLeGiOn
      @irtheLeGiOn Před 5 lety +3

      As stated in the video, it's impossible being that long before it hits the right temperature to melt it's own molecules will break down and combust.

    • @kaylareid6160
      @kaylareid6160 Před 5 lety +6

      irtheLeGiOn Well with that attitude it won’t be possible! Cheer up buddy, maybe soon we’ll melt some wood!

    • @dinohunter6450
      @dinohunter6450 Před 5 lety

      Punchlemur you need more learning

    • @XerazoX
      @XerazoX Před 5 lety

      wood is not metal, that is why it cant melt

  • @davidluchsinger7377
    @davidluchsinger7377 Před 2 lety

    Bring back Mythbusters. Make this guy Grant’s substitute. Another 20 years of great educational entertainment.

  • @kurenai5000
    @kurenai5000 Před 3 lety

    Very interesting to see dry distilling in a vacuum chamber.

  • @theLuigiFan0007Productions
    @theLuigiFan0007Productions Před 6 lety +78

    The wood will just char. - - - EDIT: Yup, it just chars as I expected. I knew that pyrolysis is what happened at atmospheric pressure, so I assumed the same thing would happen. As a side note, it's very possible to make tar, oil and gasoline from wood with a fractional distillation like condenser setup. The leftover gases like hydrogen, methane and carbon monoxide can be burnt to help heat the wood further, essentially making it a mostly self sustaining process.

    • @Askar1
      @Askar1 Před 6 lety +3

      theLuigiFan0007 thanks for the spoiler. BUD

    • @emilyduhjedi
      @emilyduhjedi Před 6 lety +2

      theLuigiFan0007
      He he..
      METHane

    • @theLuigiFan0007Productions
      @theLuigiFan0007Productions Před 6 lety +6

      +Ash the Snowman Well, he said to leave my predictions in the comments... I always edit after and share my thoughts on why I made that guess and why I was right or why I was wrong. I recommend not reading the comments before watching videos that you don't want to prematurely know the answer to. That's why I do. And sorry if I seem a bit harsh in my reply, I'm very concerned about something right now and not in a good mood (buggy page for assignment f***ing up).

    • @MammaOVlogs
      @MammaOVlogs Před 6 lety +1

      wow

    • @snowraw2479
      @snowraw2479 Před 6 lety

      theLuigiFan0007 know it all

  • @harrr5703
    @harrr5703 Před 6 lety +47

    my prediction is it'll be like pyrolysis

    • @-danR
      @-danR Před 6 lety +3

      My prediction was it would be like broken-down misinformation.
      5:26 "This literally _is_ the wood..."
      This is why the channel is (strategically) classified as *Entertainment* , not Education. You can get away with semantic murder and YT won't call it out.

    • @castoru3398
      @castoru3398 Před 6 lety +2

      Now you are aware of your own blinking.

    • @DANGJOS
      @DANGJOS Před 6 lety +1

      +tubeist- dan
      Well, in a sense, it is literally the wood, as it is literally comes from the wood. Besides, he explains *in the video* that the compounds are broken down in to smaller ones, so I don't know what the problem is.

    • @kongming6327
      @kongming6327 Před 6 lety +1

      This comment is cursed. Anyone who reads it will focus on their own breathing.

  • @TheFLOMAN76
    @TheFLOMAN76 Před rokem

    Can't forget Wood magnets attached to upside down suction cups whilst using a left-handed screwdriver to install onto your AirShadowslicer 9000! Lol...
    Seriously though.
    I love this channel!
    Good stuff as always!

  • @InDreamsYourMine
    @InDreamsYourMine Před 2 lety +7

    Anyone else disappointed he didn't light the tiny bit of liquid wood?