Making Graphene Foam From Table Sugar

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  • čas přidán 2. 02. 2020
  • Quite a few folks asked me to do this and so here it is a graphenic foam that has high conductivity for making super caps
  • Věda a technologie

Komentáře • 312

  • @robgad2271
    @robgad2271 Před rokem +7

    Hmmm! This may be a cheap method, but there are other options with a low temperature kiln. Your previous 10 gr of sugar and ammonium chloride, to this add 10 gr of graphite powder and 2 gr of fine aluminum powder. grind it in a blender with a small amount of water for 30 min on low speed. Prepare a flat pan with a piece of heavy duty aluminum foil and place the mixture in the middle and allow it to settle as a flat surface. This could be allowed to evaporate for a few days. The ideal time to place it in the kiln if after it becomes tacky and will not shift when you raise the edge of the pan. Place it in the kiln at 160°C for 30 minutes and remove and allow to cool completely. The mixture will be hard and stiff enough to peel off the aluminum foil from the back and place this in a flat bottom Pyrex glass dish and return it to the kiln for one hour at 300°C. this will allow the mixture to degases the toxic fumes and will melt the aluminum into the graphite as it turns the sugar into grapevine as a medium, the blend is very hard and conductive and can be cut with an abrasive high speed rotary cutter or diamond blade. I would prefer to use a tile cutter without water as a lubricant instead of a hand held angle grinder, because the mixture can be fractured like glass if its cut uneven or with excessive vibration.
    This makes better electrodes for rechargeable batteries, use a piece of regular felt in two or more layers and use an aquias solution of potassium chloride as the electrolyte and you have a graphite-aluminum rechargeable battery as good as any lithium battery and much more stable and longer life. Cheers.
    Yes, my first degree was in chemistry at 16, followed by my electrical engineering degree at 21, and I specialized in microprocessors in the early 1970's in what became known as Silicone Valley, California. I hope I didn't over explain it, but enough for the basic chemistry student to follow and have a workable technology for free off of the internet.

  • @Killianwsh
    @Killianwsh Před 4 lety +14

    Great video as always Rob! ...and THANK YOU VERY MUCH FOR MAKING, TEACHING, & INSPIRING!!!

  • @entropy1454
    @entropy1454 Před 4 lety +11

    I've been watching your videos for quite a while now(right around when I started working on my electric car design). You've single-handedly made me take an interest in chemistry. As a high school student, I'm obviously a bit limited in my capabilities but you've made so many videos about how to do these things at home with simple equipment and I appreciate it a lot :)

    • @ThinkingandTinkering
      @ThinkingandTinkering  Před 4 lety +5

      Thank you mate for taking the time to post and say so - cheers

    • @TheChzoronzon
      @TheChzoronzon Před rokem +3

      @@ThinkingandTinkering I agree wholeheartedly... finding this channel has been such a stroke of luck... now I watch a random vid almost every day
      You are exactly the teacher I'd have loved to have in my youth, man
      Greetings from Spain

  • @fireballxl-5748
    @fireballxl-5748 Před 2 lety +1

    I know this video is old but thank you very much. Your channel is one of my favourites.

  • @Guytron95
    @Guytron95 Před 3 lety +12

    I can picture forming this in a ceramic mold and graphenizing it in a microwave kiln. Easy to put an argon tap into a microwave oven shell for the inert atmosphere. Oh! that delightful feeling of mad science!

  • @Draakdarkmaster6
    @Draakdarkmaster6 Před 4 lety

    i've been looking for an in depth step by step for something like this for months, thank you

  • @rhoniandjeff7453
    @rhoniandjeff7453 Před 4 lety +2

    Great video and sound quality Rob. you have really upped your game sir!

  • @armstrongskyview2810
    @armstrongskyview2810 Před 2 lety

    This has to be one of the best videos you have ever done

  • @MrBademy
    @MrBademy Před 4 lety +13

    amazing channel, keep up the great work man !! you are inspiration to all scientists and future geniuses

    • @ThinkingandTinkering
      @ThinkingandTinkering  Před 4 lety +3

      cheers mate

    • @robertolivarez5742
      @robertolivarez5742 Před 3 lety

      If you created graphene foam in a vacuum chamber under vacuum will the surface area increase since it will expand so much more?

  • @cayrex
    @cayrex Před 4 lety +5

    Interesting! Definitely it's a worth of try. Thank you!

  • @Machiuka
    @Machiuka Před 3 lety

    Very interesting video. It gives me new ideas. Thanks for sharing mate.

  • @lisakingscott7729
    @lisakingscott7729 Před 4 lety +5

    Just a thought. A while ago I made some very light weight carbon foam using a variation of the Naphtalene-Mediated Hydrothermal Sucrose Carbonization method. The article I took the method from suggested the foam would be "Ultralight Carbon Nanofoam". It was certainly very low density, but had very poor conductivity, so I didn't go any further. However the graphitization post process step you describe here sounds like something worth trying.

  • @karlm5022
    @karlm5022 Před 4 lety

    Simply Brilliant Rob!

  • @RWBHere
    @RWBHere Před 4 lety

    Chemistry and Physics dovetail beautifully as Sciences, but if you tie them together with Mathematics, that leads to Technology and Engineering. There you are; STEM in one sentence! If more youngsters (and older folk, but it's best to start when young) could grasp that, and be inspired by people like yourself, Robert, ever greater strides will be achieved. Thank-you for your continuous inspiration through this channel and through your Patreon-focussed output.

    • @ThinkingandTinkering
      @ThinkingandTinkering  Před 4 lety

      I think they are the two sides of the same coin mate and maths is the language to describe them. I personally think everyone should give it a go as at it's basics it really is simple stuff - though it does get complicated later for sure lol

  • @wibblywobblyidiotvision
    @wibblywobblyidiotvision Před 4 lety +1

    That's an interesting experiment. I've been toying with the idea of making some porous graphite, you've given me some ideas.

  • @annasedaghat3038
    @annasedaghat3038 Před rokem

    Thank you for this kind of great video

  • @gristlevonraben
    @gristlevonraben Před 4 lety +1

    Amazing, as always!

  • @jamesholland5475
    @jamesholland5475 Před 3 lety

    Has anyone ever said to you that you have a little bit of the mad scientist thing going on ? Lol I love it, I think it's great!!!

  • @dennisklomp2361
    @dennisklomp2361 Před 3 lety +2

    Hello Rob,
    I was wondering: do you know the thermal conductivity of this stuff?
    Working on a project that I want to use high thermal conductive graphene foam on.

  • @preciousplasticph
    @preciousplasticph Před 4 lety

    Awesome stuff Robert

  • @williamfraser
    @williamfraser Před 4 lety +2

    Could the carbon foam obtained from sugar and sulphuric acid also be used to make graphene?

  • @johngalt97
    @johngalt97 Před 4 lety +8

    I made some nice carbon sticks in my oven by cooking thick fries overnight. I bet they'd be pretty strong if soaked with thin cyanoacrylate.

  • @alt-swe5503
    @alt-swe5503 Před 4 lety

    Can that lump be used as some sort of filter media for perhaps desalination or separation of different gases?

  • @drsatan3231
    @drsatan3231 Před rokem

    This is amazing. Is there anything you could do to make it into wire or even long, thin circular bars?

  • @paterfamiles
    @paterfamiles Před 4 lety

    Thanks, you are the best

  • @clickbaitnumberone1403

    great one

  • @nil5221
    @nil5221 Před 3 lety

    Is this a 'better' carbon foam than those produced by the other methods, e.g sugar with baking soda as the 'blowing agent'? but grinding the reactants into fine powder first. As per the other video with 3 methods including the explosive one. Just asking from the point of view of very easily obtained materials versus the improvements gained by sourcing ammonium chloride. Does the sugar/bicarb foam graphetise ok in the kiln?

  • @jozefnovak7750
    @jozefnovak7750 Před rokem

    Thank you.

  • @conductiveinkalternative918

    I have to do this. Thanks.

  • @bestowicprimer8835
    @bestowicprimer8835 Před 4 lety +1

    Couldnt u just mechanical vibrate standing wave ultrasonic in a lowdensity confiment with charged surfaces?

  • @joecrisp9060
    @joecrisp9060 Před rokem +1

    Any chance this material could be used in theroelectrics? Perhaps with a copper oxide coating. Since the conductivity seems pretty good.

  • @Electronics61
    @Electronics61 Před 4 lety +1

    Great video Robert. Hope it make equally good super capacitor

  • @MrJamespcastle
    @MrJamespcastle Před 4 lety

    Robert, what is the difference between this "graphenic" substance and true 1 atom thick graphene? How are they different and how are they the same? When this is used in battery construction, what decrease/increase would be seen if using true graphene in contrast?

  • @heregulmithal7063
    @heregulmithal7063 Před 4 lety

    Very informative .

  • @content4502
    @content4502 Před 4 lety

    Excellent,
    Thanks ......

  • @sgalien6661
    @sgalien6661 Před 3 lety

    Hi Robert, are you doing a follow up to this soon?

  • @GenXSpiritWarrior
    @GenXSpiritWarrior Před 2 lety

    I was thinking of carbonizing spun sugar (cotton candy) in order to do something similar to this. Never thought of using a chemical foaming agent.

  • @TheIdeanator
    @TheIdeanator Před 4 lety +3

    Now thats something I can do with relative ease!

  • @gendaminoru3195
    @gendaminoru3195 Před 3 lety +1

    so do we know the difference between graphene and graphite / carbon?

  • @aga5897
    @aga5897 Před 4 lety

    Nice one !

  • @dr.froghopper6711
    @dr.froghopper6711 Před rokem +1

    Mate, i really would love to have access to your laboratory facilities! And I’d happily be a lab assistant because you chase my brand of Nerdery! It’s useful information!

  • @nitrousman8882
    @nitrousman8882 Před 3 lety

    Have you explored the furnace process for EC carbon black ie Ketjenblack?

  • @joe9349
    @joe9349 Před 3 lety

    A Robert, would this be anything like graphene aerogel? Or D3O?

  • @colleenforrest7936
    @colleenforrest7936 Před 3 lety

    Is the orange stuff under the brown sticky stuff graphene oxide?

  • @kellyhowcroft2510
    @kellyhowcroft2510 Před 2 lety

    Can this be used in ZnBr solutions as the graphite plate

  • @justinorwen1141
    @justinorwen1141 Před 3 lety

    How is it making graphene instead of graphite? If you crush the foam, do you have graphene powder?

  • @Halloween111
    @Halloween111 Před 4 lety

    You can do this with bread. Put the slice(s) in a square container with a small hole in top. You can add argon before closing it if you wish. Heat to around 800 to 1200 degrees until all of the volatiles have burned off through the hole. Cover the hole and let go for a half hour.--- Pre tapping the hole and using a small bolt works pretty well for sealing it up. Remove and cool. There you go. Carbon foam suitable for a refractory. or semiconductor.

  • @omaralyousfi1862
    @omaralyousfi1862 Před 3 lety

    Mr Robert what about flash grphene process?
    ist work or not?

  • @tamaseduard5145
    @tamaseduard5145 Před 4 lety +1

    Good job sir 👍🙏

  • @johnbarry8185
    @johnbarry8185 Před rokem

    Rob, is the shiny part on the outside the only part that is graphene, or is all of it graphene?

  • @rotem2116
    @rotem2116 Před 4 lety

    is it possible to make carbon 60 from grephene?

  • @arkoprovo1996
    @arkoprovo1996 Před 4 lety

    I can't help but wonder actually ... is there anyway to know if that is graphene and not just graphite?

  • @drfill9210
    @drfill9210 Před rokem

    Can you explain why the pressure is required? I'm beginning to suspect that opal Carvers have been synthesising graphene for over a century

  • @technosaurus3805
    @technosaurus3805 Před 4 lety +2

    Any time I need to mix dry components, I use powdered sugar. It seems to give a more even mix with less mixing than granulated sugar.
    BTW sulfuric acid + sugar is way more fun, but the reaction happens too quickly (without heat) if you use powdered sugar. Muriatic acid does require adding heat and the foam produced is much more dense.

    • @oregonhoney753
      @oregonhoney753 Před 4 lety +2

      Commercial powdered sugar can have corn starch in it, read the ingredients

    • @technosaurus3805
      @technosaurus3805 Před 4 lety +2

      @@oregonhoney753 good point - my store brand doesn't but its a good idea to look... although for this particular experiment corn starch could be useful as it heats up and becomes dextrose - science is full of accidental discovery.

    • @Barskor1
      @Barskor1 Před 4 lety +2

      Thanks for the information technosaurus

    • @cayrex
      @cayrex Před 4 lety +1

      Sugar and H2SO4 is highly exothermic reaction,... so, you get alot of heat (but you definitely mean,...extra applying of the heat). H2SO4 + sugar carbon you can also graphitize on high heat.

    • @ThinkingandTinkering
      @ThinkingandTinkering  Před 4 lety

      I did a few vids on the sugar snakes mate

  • @HergerTheJoyous
    @HergerTheJoyous Před 4 lety

    Nice video my friend!

  • @aomanchutube
    @aomanchutube Před 4 lety +1

    Could one of your foam recipes work to make N95 mask pucks????? Or basic filter material that one could easily apply to a piece of shirt to make an effective mask against the Corona virus????

  • @georgeabraham7256
    @georgeabraham7256 Před 4 lety

    I wonder if you can make graphene from gassifying plastic for petrol..

  • @yancahya2143
    @yancahya2143 Před 4 lety

    What is dr Patrick s formula for graphene ?

  • @CASHSEC
    @CASHSEC Před 3 lety

    You can make a sugar foam using Golden syrup and bi carbinate of sods(Honey comb). Would this work in the first stage.

  • @NinjaNige
    @NinjaNige Před 4 lety +1

    So What Your Saying Is You Have Made A conductive Pencil.. Thanks For Your Hard Work Rob.

    • @duminicad
      @duminicad Před 4 lety +2

      hehe, right!
      the idea is that the foam has high surface area in a relatively small space, it should be able to hold more energy than a capacitor with similar size, a pencil is very solid, whereas this foam can have molecules of water suspended into the foam pores, or some other chemical, your imagination is the limit...

    • @ThinkingandTinkering
      @ThinkingandTinkering  Před 4 lety +1

      lol - I guess it is a lot of effort to go to for a 'pencil' lol

    • @ThinkingandTinkering
      @ThinkingandTinkering  Před 4 lety +1

      I think he was joking mate - at least I took it as a joke

    • @Buzzhumma
      @Buzzhumma Před 4 lety +1

      Niges View On ThinGs thats british humour !😂

  • @jcpatrick4824
    @jcpatrick4824 Před 4 lety +1

    TY

  • @idea-shack
    @idea-shack Před 4 lety

    You should try doing this with chitosan (available in capsules as a fat blocker from the chemist), its amine groups would dope the material with nitrogen post graphitisation. I suggest you boil the ground material post graphitisation in nitric acid. This would charge the newly formed aromatic nitrogen to ar-NH+ which could help them de-laminate (increase surface area) and also the charge would greatly improve conductivity as the positive charge sits within the delocalised polyaromatic mess and so can conduct by hole migration (similar mechanism to conductivity of polyanaline salts).

  • @timfitzpatrick8773
    @timfitzpatrick8773 Před 2 lety

    In any part of this process would it be possible to cast this into some sort of shape for applications?

    • @timfitzpatrick8773
      @timfitzpatrick8773 Před 2 lety

      For example, what came to mind in a perfect world would be to have some sort of form you would put the sugar and ammonium chloride in and go about the whole process that way. Almost like casting it all into shape and only needing to adjust for temperature

  • @TheControlPhilosopher
    @TheControlPhilosopher Před 4 lety +1

    Sir, You could attempt carbonizing slices of bread by charring in inert-gas atmosphere.

  • @100musicplaylists3
    @100musicplaylists3 Před 2 lety

    Hi Robert. Do you know how i can make 100% glucose in laymans terms. Thanks

  • @jdiggs1985
    @jdiggs1985 Před 4 lety

    Can you do the same using h2so4 and table sugar? Also a hazardous reaction, but requires no cooking to produce the foam.

    • @Buzzhumma
      @Buzzhumma Před 4 lety

      Still have to graphitize and wont have same surface area most likely.

  • @ThomasAndersonbsf
    @ThomasAndersonbsf Před 4 lety +1

    interesting, I have been looking at the online processes discovered in an attempt to recreate starlite, and had thought that adding other things to it might allow me to make it semiconductive, now I may have to add this to that mix, and stop at the former step or not go quite as high since I dont want it to become extremely conductive, but rather semiconductive so the contaminants can alter it to make diode like components, who knows, I might be able to produce a far more efficient peltier device, something I am kinda hoping to be able to do, since none of the ones I have seen thus far are embedding the PN junction material in aerogel, it seems like a sensible option especially if I can make a more thermally insulative semiconduction joint than tellurium bismuth does.

    • @ThinkingandTinkering
      @ThinkingandTinkering  Před 4 lety +2

      I am just about to do a series on hard to form ceramics

    • @ThomasAndersonbsf
      @ThomasAndersonbsf Před 4 lety

      @@ThinkingandTinkering can't wait, most of the actual stuff beyond what I release from time to time here, I keep on Tox chat ever since I found a whole conversation about laser assisted vapor deposition I had with a friend, on skype (partially text partially voice call) pop up right after that on wikipedia as a removed group of pages, all of like 40,000 (I am not looking at the history now, so it might have been like 10,000 characters, not sure but I will come back and leave a reply with a link to their account page where their contributions are listed for reference) characters and 10 pages worth loaded on there, 8 new pages and 2 modifications of existing pages, word for word, and by a random user name made that day, all listing done in 36 minutes then logged off never to return in over 2 years now, even though everything they listed was removed with red text being the only trace you have to follow and see the revisions, and new pages they made. And the curious thing about all this? just to finish it off for the weirdness, is that everything I had conversations with him on tox for a completely different reason, included the needed aspects to make it properly work for 3D printing processes, were missing from the wiki info, only the stuff from skype was there. I can talk to you privately if you are wondering why we took it to tox but I still won't talk openly about that here due to the problems it could cause a whole lot of people, if I discussed this openly. at any rate, main reason most stuff is still on tox private is because I am not ready to release anything, but when ready everything will be open and public, concerning all my work for advancing 3D printing. and I will try to include as much footage as possible to hopefully allow full replication everywhere desiring to do so, :)

    • @ThomasAndersonbsf
      @ThomasAndersonbsf Před 4 lety

      en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Special:Contributions/Albchang22

  • @liangjianghong
    @liangjianghong Před rokem

    What's the density of this carbon foam?

  • @bradorman1051
    @bradorman1051 Před 4 lety +1

    I bought some expanded graphite and put it in an ultrasonic cleaner with a small amount of water. What I got was dark gray/blackish water with pearl-like sparkle to it. Also had a bright, shiny silver layer floating on top. Had a little solids on the bottom that didn't do anything. Does anyone know if I have a graphene suspension.....or just graphite water? Or possibly a mixture of both?

    • @ThinkingandTinkering
      @ThinkingandTinkering  Před 4 lety +1

      a mixture of both. mate

    • @bradorman1051
      @bradorman1051 Před 4 lety

      @@ThinkingandTinkering I ran the solution through several coffee filters (the finest filters I have at the moment) and got a nice liquid with no sediment. Stays in suspension nicely, even when sitting untouched for days. I also sonicated molybdenum. I'm working on adding them to Si02 to make a "ceramic" sealer/protectant for automotive clear coat. I'm also working on an acrylic resin version.

  • @nigelwilliams7920
    @nigelwilliams7920 Před 4 lety

    Would spreading a layer of the sugar NH4Cl mix on a lead or copper plate and doing the 250C bake give you a usable negative electrode for an Ultra Battery? The back of the plate could be masked with a plastic paint or tape (?). Or do you have to do the 800 C step, then try and mechanically fix the resulting graphene foam to the plate?

    • @ThinkingandTinkering
      @ThinkingandTinkering  Před 4 lety

      the first stage just gives a carbon that is non conductive. It will function as an active material but I don't think you wouldn't be able to get a current from it

    • @nigelwilliams7920
      @nigelwilliams7920 Před 4 lety

      @@ThinkingandTinkering thanks. So one has to take the carbon thru the 800 C stage. Since that would melt any metallic substrate we cannot conveniently use the baking to sinter the graphene to the substrate. OK.
      I take it that you grind the resulting 800Cd carbon mass to a powder to create your graphene resource, which you then stick onto electrode surfaces.

    • @ThinkingandTinkering
      @ThinkingandTinkering  Před 4 lety +1

      @@nigelwilliams7920 it would preclude lead an aluminium for sure but copper would be fine as would nickel and stainless steel - it would have to be a non oxidising atmosphere - but you need that anyway.

    • @nigelwilliams7920
      @nigelwilliams7920 Před 4 lety

      @@ThinkingandTinkering thanks for that. Much appreciated.

  • @duminicad
    @duminicad Před 4 lety

    Rob, have you considered carbonising and graphitising [a slice of]bread?

  • @caveman-zd5yv
    @caveman-zd5yv Před 4 lety

    How much does it weigh? Can you compare with other material using a scale?

  • @alexanimationgoofy
    @alexanimationgoofy Před 2 lety

    thanks Anthony Hopkins!

  • @SiriusFuenmayor
    @SiriusFuenmayor Před 4 lety

    Robert great video again, it would be so nice if you could get and electron microscope to show the structure of the materials you made, I know that these are very expensive but it will be awesome

    • @ThinkingandTinkering
      @ThinkingandTinkering  Před 4 lety +1

      it would mate - a 'cheap one' costs 45,000 - the next time I have a spare 45k - I'll buy one. I am joking a bit - I was thinking about running a kickstarter just to raise money for that as it happens

    • @Buzzhumma
      @Buzzhumma Před 4 lety +1

      Sirius Fuenmayor yeah 45k is big money but is it fair to say the proof is in the capacitance ?

    • @SiriusFuenmayor
      @SiriusFuenmayor Před 4 lety +1

      @@Buzzhumma Sure! that is the ultimate proof that the material works for this purpose

    • @schlega2
      @schlega2 Před 4 lety

      @@ThinkingandTinkering I bet you could convince Ben over at the Applied Science channel to do it. He built his own SEM a few years ago.

    • @ThinkingandTinkering
      @ThinkingandTinkering  Před 4 lety

      @@schlega2 now there's an idea - cheers mate

  • @burnroe6611
    @burnroe6611 Před 4 lety

    Could there be a way to use a yeast. In place of amonium chloride then if experiment fails it may be semi edible 😆

  • @pixelpatter01
    @pixelpatter01 Před 4 lety

    Would this foam make a good furnace insulation? Imagine being able to pour a furnace like a cake. Perhaps bricks could be made and a furnace constructed of graphene foam bricks?

  • @Mattstiless
    @Mattstiless Před 4 lety +1

    Sooo can we get affordable superbatteries soon then?

  • @composing0
    @composing0 Před 2 měsíci

    Is carbon foam electrically conductive

  • @speciousexchange4283
    @speciousexchange4283 Před rokem

    At those resistive levels aren't they just similar to graphite and not graphene?

  • @MARILYNANDERSON88
    @MARILYNANDERSON88 Před 4 lety +1

    Another reason aliens will arrive to stock up on Earth's sugar, likely a rare product in space!

  • @vivdlyvague6627
    @vivdlyvague6627 Před 4 lety +6

    Hey Rob, What did you think of Rice Universities flash graphene from carbons?

    • @Buzzhumma
      @Buzzhumma Před 4 lety +1

      Jesse Hughes i hope one of us is smart enough to replicate it in our garage . I think it uses high vacuum and 5000 v capacitive discharge !

    • @ThinkingandTinkering
      @ThinkingandTinkering  Před 4 lety +2

      I like it mate and thought of doing a replication but the caps are £100 each and you need 12 I think - a bit expensive - but I am thinking about it and how to get around that

    • @earlyriser438
      @earlyriser438 Před 4 lety +2

      @Robert Murray-Smith The King of Random (RIP TKOR, you beautiful fool) made an arc forge from an old lantern battery, a scrap microwave and a refractory brick...
      czcams.com/video/VTzKIs19eZE/video.html
      I smell your next video.
      My idea for a vacuum forge is a capped section of steel water main pipe lined with starlite and refractory brick with a thick borosilicate quartz viewing port on the lid.
      I will eventually build one so I can make my own synthetic ruby abrasive grit from aluminum oxide and chromium oxide.

    • @Buzzhumma
      @Buzzhumma Před 4 lety +1

      Robert Murray-Smith leyden jars?

    • @Buzzhumma
      @Buzzhumma Před 4 lety

      Robert Murray-Smith leyden jars and microwave oven transformer ?

  • @ranman58635
    @ranman58635 Před 4 lety

    A subject that at the moment is not in my range of understanding. I do however understand that graphine is being used now in batteries.

  • @easyfund
    @easyfund Před 4 lety

    How much time and $$ is needed to mass produce this please... we will build it just tell us how this can set us free?

  • @lisakingscott7729
    @lisakingscott7729 Před 3 lety

    I've seen some papers stating that nickel catalyst enhances cellulose graphitisation. Maybe it could help here.

  • @brettmoore3194
    @brettmoore3194 Před 4 lety +1

    Maybe do a large batch in a loaf pan. Once it has risen and been turned into graphite cake.

  • @michaelvaughn2287
    @michaelvaughn2287 Před 4 lety

    I have been following your channel off and on for about a year now I'm vary mechanically inclined not so much with the sparky things though . I'm trying to build a solar generator but I dont want to use batteries, supercaps are supposed to be cheaper and charge faster but I cant find anything that will explain the work comparince of a battery to a supercap in a way I can understand it . I know this isn't what you like to do you try to get people out there to experiment for them selves but unfortunately I am knee deep in a million things and dont have the time or frankly the knowledge so I'm begging you to give some kind of explanation of how many 2.7v 3000f capacitors would I need to run a 120v 15a circular saw for 15 min or if it even could . Thank you for your time I hope to hear from you .

    • @ThinkingandTinkering
      @ThinkingandTinkering  Před 4 lety

      I don't know what to say mate as I don't know how you need to understand - that is I am not sure what your learning style is so it's kind of hard to advise on what to look at that might help - all I can suggest is you keep plowing through the material there is until you find one that suits - we do have lessons and texts on the site - but equally they may not help

  • @pinballrobbie
    @pinballrobbie Před 4 lety +1

    When I clicked on this I thought he was a young Bill Owen from Last of the summer wine.

  • @davidsirmons
    @davidsirmons Před 3 měsíci

    Non-conductive thermally to some level?

  • @victoryfirst2878
    @victoryfirst2878 Před 4 lety

    Hello Robert, I am really surprised how you made the graphenic material. Not being a real chemistry fella, you really go something going here, so simple. Was thinking if you tried making capacitors, you should make the square instead of round. You would have a lot more capacity because of a lot less space would be wasted when you stack them tighter. Maybe you could try making some and showing us all on CZcams. Thanks for keeping us all informed. At least someone is trying to us all informed. Good day too.

  • @jasonwitt8619
    @jasonwitt8619 Před 4 lety

    Hey Rob, how to make Graphene USB stick for PC, from scratch ? Would make a great video on showing the whole flash as well.

    • @ThinkingandTinkering
      @ThinkingandTinkering  Před 4 lety

      do you have link to what you mean mate - I don't really understand what a graphene USB stick is

    • @jasonwitt8619
      @jasonwitt8619 Před 4 lety

      There is a lot more links that I can add, the talk on this is giant

  • @lostinthemoonlight
    @lostinthemoonlight Před 4 lety +3

    Can I use cotton candy?

  • @boblewis5558
    @boblewis5558 Před 4 lety

    Hmm reminiscences of grinding sodium chlorate and icing sugar spring to mind ... SEPARATELY of course!! 😜🤔😄😄😄

  • @realflow100
    @realflow100 Před 9 měsíci

    Can you make some by just wrapping some sugar in a small aluminum capsule or aluminum foil container to contain it. then wrapping several layers around that to trap the carbon dioxide and prevent it from oxidizing. then cook it until its ready?
    Seems like it'd be really simple to make.
    Not looking for a PERFECT result. just enough that it'll do something when you make a sandwich out of it and some copper electrodes or something.

  • @asmotaku
    @asmotaku Před 4 lety

    I wonder how many viewers will blow their heads off with this recipe.

    • @ThinkingandTinkering
      @ThinkingandTinkering  Před 4 lety +1

      probably non. The folks here are basically split into 4 camps - people who like to know what's going on and keep in touch even though they will never do the experiment, people who will experiment but are beginners and will be careful as it is new to them, seasoned old hands who know exactly what they are doing and finally folks who just like to moan about everything but never do anything.

    • @asmotaku
      @asmotaku Před 4 lety

      @@ThinkingandTinkering - I register in the first category, but can't keep from worrying about the second.
      I do know chemistry is daughter of safety, but Isn't the ammonium chloride / sugar mix pretty reactive and potentially explosive near open flames and high temperature ?
      Hence my deadpan comment. I'm sorry the format didn't convey my feeling.

  • @jamesredfield7548
    @jamesredfield7548 Před 4 lety

    Could you make graphene paint please instead of graphene ink? Would that be a better option for people?

    • @ThinkingandTinkering
      @ThinkingandTinkering  Před 4 lety

      the main difference between ink and paint is the application as opposed to the formulation mate

  • @Eng-ArabicTurkishGermanyFrench

    Can we use microwave instead of oven and sodium bicarbonate instead of ammonium chloride?

    • @ThinkingandTinkering
      @ThinkingandTinkering  Před 4 lety

      you can - but you won't get the same material

    • @flashlit123
      @flashlit123 Před 4 lety

      I have been using baking soda (sodium bicarbonate) as an activating agent for different carbon materials with pretty good results using a homemade propane kiln. I suspect I am just getting activated carbon and not graphetized carbon but cheap, readily available, and relatively safe. Check out my recent videos.
      My theory is the baking soda is converted to sodium carbonate producing carbon dioxide gas and possibly sodium oxide at higher temperatures. The CO2 gas causes the sugar to foam up a lot to the point of expanding out of the crucible if you use very much at a time. Rob has a video in the members area on making the sugar carbon more conductive that is different than this sugar foam but still conductive.

    • @ThinkingandTinkering
      @ThinkingandTinkering  Před 4 lety

      @@flashlit123 that's exactly what's happening mate - there is a sugar snake version based on this too

  • @climatebabes
    @climatebabes Před 4 lety

    How much does it weigh?

  • @raymunger928
    @raymunger928 Před 4 lety

    phrases of the day, " smugly pleased "!

  • @samosdolphins123
    @samosdolphins123 Před 2 lety

    nice. isnt 46 ohms high resistance? shouldnt it be much lower if it is condcutive?

    • @SinsBird
      @SinsBird Před 2 lety

      I remember when I crushed up some wood charcoal, mixed with glue and got like 40k-150k ohm resistance.

    • @samosdolphins123
      @samosdolphins123 Před rokem

      @@SinsBird ok, thanks . is this graphene that the professor made or is it graphite?

    • @SinsBird
      @SinsBird Před rokem +1

      @@samosdolphins123 both, really. In general it's graphite, but graphite is made of many layers of graphene.

  • @Buzzhumma
    @Buzzhumma Před 4 lety

    Mass production of that would be a sinch !