Devil's Toothpaste Rocket Engine (3D Printed)
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- čas přidán 29. 09. 2021
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#rocket #engine #3dprinting - Věda a technologie
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Hello
first
I need a 3d printer cause its too costly for me
@@whereitallhappens784 bruh
Integza
it looks like you really like WW2 stuff, soooo , do you play warthunder?
Can I use this to quickly apply regular toothpaste to my toothbrush?
Lol
Your teeth would shine like the sun 🤣
@@integza XD as his gums get burned off
@@integza if they remain in place 😂😂😂
Can you make a steam powered rc car? or fire, like a flame licker engine? Or go for a personal record how far you could get it to go in a straight line
It's beautiful
Yes it is 😁
Nobody is here, just us 5 😉
Make that 4
@@chucknorris4768 yessir
Look! It's a man, speaking to another man. :)
(I am a fan of both... don't tell anyone)
Very cool mate!! Great to see that porous ceramic catalyst working as well as it did!
Sometimes the weird ideas work ahahah
@@integza frfr
@@integza I guess it's not that weird it's like the catalyst converters inside cars the way it's made is what is weird
Correct me if I'm wrong but without a stabiliser like EDTA or citric acid wouldn't the permanganate break down to manganese dioxide over an hour or so anyway? Like that would be the brown colour seen on the ceramic...
But then again those very same stabilisers generally prevent metal ions reacting to decompose hydrogen peroxide (that's... Kind of their point), so they would probably interfere with and slow down the reaction?
It's been ages since I did any related chemistry, I'm just here for Tom, that sexy sexy man.
@@etelmo yes, a stabilizer would slow the reaction down. But not to the point that it wouldn't work at all. It all really depends on what the stabilizer is and how much it affects the reaction. Manganese dioxide does work as a catalyst, but it's not as fast acting as the permanganate. So you get diminished performance, but not to an extent to where it's not useful. Also, I'm not sure if you're referring to the permanganate breaking down spontaneously over time, or while in the reaction? Yes, it does break down into the manganese dioxide upon reacting, but no it won't break down while sitting there waiting to react with the peroxide. As long as it doesn't come into contact with a fuel, it'll be fine. Those catalyst ceramic pieces could be soaked and dried and stored for long periods if they are kept in air tight bags. If left out, they may degrade slowly over the course of a few weeks..... Maybe.
"It might explode or it might work really well."
Spoken like a true rocket scientist.
True ksp player
Yep true rocket scientist
First law of rocketry: always assume that it will explode
It's exploding, but gently.
"This will either work F L A W L E S S L Y
Or it's gonna kill me."
-The Martian
I really didn’t think the devils toothpaste recipe would have been so simple, dang. Super cool video!
Yes
Thank you so much Louis 😁
@@Peowcatpeow no wonder
e
There are honestly a worrying number of really nasty reactions that are really easy to do. It's amazing things don't explode more often.
Video Idea: now that you have higher a working rocket of sorts, make a big one with multiple output nozzles, or a multi stage rocket!
Tomatoes are disgusting!! 🍅
multi stage rocket sounds dangerous, i want to see it!
I hope you get the 3d printer!
Probs doesn't have enough thrust to lift off
Multi stage rocket!!
( love that idea)
Good idea
This is WAY TOO FUN
Yeah kind of
Thank you Xyla 😁
@@integza Im your big fan please reply 🤗
Integza, Xyla Foxlin, and Smarter Every Day in one place on the internet, now this is something I didn't expect
Plazma Channel's here too
For a video idea, saturate your ceramic blocks with silver (colloidal silver?) instead. This is what is used in jetpacks. It flashes to steam and doesn't have the nastiness that elephant toothpaste does as it flashes to pure steam.
But did this Devil's toothpaste go down to Georgia, Tomato lord? Or shall I say Rocket Lord?
Melon Lord!
ah thats a good song
He was looking for a soul to steal
Attach it to a plane and you get "Lord of the flies"
i live in georgia :)
the porous ceramic part was such a genius idea.
Yeah I guess it's inspired by catalyst converters put in cars
@@markgeorge447 or catalysts used for chemical synthesis
Actually a poor idea, oxygen peroxide is a rocket fuel in itself (monopropellant) and has been used for decades by nasa as a way to propel small rockets & position satellites. All you need to convert H2O2 into supersonic steam is a silver mesh acting as a catalyst. This is also how the Bell jet pack was propelled.
@@TM-529 it's not a poor idea it's different
@@LetsDrawDragons Different..yes - Genius as the OP stated....far IMHO
Please do a linear aerospike rocket engine
Boa sorte, Raffael. Admiro muito sua capacidade e empenho!
Boa sorte. Deus abençoe que tudo dê certo pra você essa jornada
Tu é foda maninho. Tu consegue.
Boa sorte! Estou torcendo 😊
Vai que é tua Raffael!!!
This is essentially how the classic jetpack works. They use a high concentration hydrogen peroxide with a silver or platinum mesh screen as a catalyst to instantly vaporize the H2O2 into steam.
My jetpack runs on hopes and dreams
@@L39T so it is ruined?
Love this project! 😎
Thank you Adrian 😁
Why is integza the only one to reply to this comment
Love your videos
Video idea: attach something like an afterburner to the back of the nozzle so that you can use the oxygen from the reaction to boost some type of combustion, maybe even add alcohol in the acid to ignite it in the first chamber.
That sludge at the end can be used to line the edges of the reaction chamber, just like a sugar rocket.
Leaving a hole through the center going straight to the nozzle from the peroxide injector.
_The nozzle is honestly optional with the sheer pressure coming out; bigger exit, less explosion, more retrys._
Mark Rober is literally a rocket engineer. He would have absolutely no problem getting his hands on PURE peroxide, as this is in fact a rocket fuel type still in use today. A very FUN fuel type in fact.
With your CNC skills improving, you should revisit some of your Tesla projects using more and more metal parts! It would be cool to see the turbines last longer.
@Jonah lopes cardozo lol same to you! A bit of a rarity
@Jonah lopes cardozo Lol you too dude! It is a rare name to see
one thing I love is that, the more Integza progresses, the less his engines look like modded water bottle, as they take a much more legit and pro look.
They’re at the laser cannon stage rn
Why have I never seen you channel before!? Time to go watch as many of your videos as I feasibly can.
As someone who knew very little about rocketry when I started watching your channel, it's exciting to see the progression of your rocket designs! Can't wait to see the next iteration of your devil's toothpaste rocket, or DTR, which given the initials I think you should henceforth refer to as Dietrich.
Please brush your teeth with this!
Is that a dare ?
@@integza
oh boi
Make a front well drive bicycle
Wow. That first successful test really surprised me! I expected a reaction, but to see the skateboard actually take off was very satisfying. Proof of concept is a nice fuzzy feeling.
Great video as always!!! I'm wondering, with all that oxygen in the exhaust, could it be used directly to power a hybrid rocket like you made in other videos? Or maybe an afterburner?
The day Integza made his own pressure fed monopropellant rocket engine. Beautifully done! Next step: internship at JPL.
P.S.: I hope you develop this into a bipropellant engine, Integza. Peroxide and alcohol is a well established combination.
"We literally made a rocket ship"
Integza: *It's free real-estate*
When you pushed the syringe out with compressed air it was such a satisfying POP sound ^^
Love how you make your invention’s explode.
7:05 “and to that i have to say: bedankt!” That was weird to hear, never expected him to thank us in dutch haha
@koenvn2 je bedoelt alsjeblieft!
Ja dat was zeker raar toen ik dat hoorde
@koenvn2 oh man, wanneer houd dit kansloze ‘gekoloniseerd’ nou eens op..
Idea:You should make a liquid cooled engine. like they do in real rockets.
real rocket engines pump the superchilled fuels through the nozzle to cool them, its pretty clever.
@@i-muts ye ik, thats why i suggested, i find it cool too
or ablative cooling, basically have the engine burn away *on purpose*
@@BlackBird-nn2yc he has done that already lol
@@i-muts yup, with the added benefit of getting the fuel warmed up before combustion.
Interesting rocket design utilizing a novel reaction. Always cool to watch your projects!
Seeing a video comparing the weight of different rocket engines before and after thrust would be cool. Show how much mass is released in the exhaust of the rocket and factor how that changes the thrust as it gets lighter.
you could try suspending the MnO2 or KMnO4 with the 3d printed ceramic part to particle impregnate the part, and then calcine/anneal the catalyst to the support (around 600C ish). it should prevent the manganese losses and prevent the blockages/high back pressures. the flow through the support should increase the surface contact with the heterogeneous catalyst improving the mass transfer making the reaction go boom boom faster
The problem is that would yield Mno2, which way less reactive
Nice end comment abut the boom boom
I'd love to see you revisit some of the older rockets you've made using the hot tips given by people in the comments. There's almost always at least one person with an easy fix that'd make your insane machines work even better and I'd love to see it.
Pretty wild dude! Thanks for sharing this with us.
Definitely looking forward to one day seeing you attempt a variable thrust engine and mounting it to a model airplane or something
As fun as it is to see the reaction as it happens, I recommend that you dedicate a video to experimenting with different materials for an ignition chamber. (Aluminum tubing, thicker PVC, carbon fiber, etc.)
Video idea: You should try to weight your next rocket before and after testing it. So you can estimate how much thrust force you should have, velocity at the nozzle... Things like that.
if you know the weight of the fuel, you could figure out the isp of the rocket engine, which is the measurement of the efficacy of a rocket nozzle. I don't imagine it would be that high, around 60 to 70, but it could be over 200, which is standard for atmospheric rockets.
OMG you are a genius.
Great idea! And I'm not saying it cuz you payed me
@@logicbuilder1204 HTP monopropellant tops out in the mid 100's. The efficiency losses with his current experimental assembly probably have it around 20-40. For reference nitrogen cold gas using a modern nozzle design is 90.
@@Yaivenov makes sense. Nice to see a fellow ksp player.
This is so awesome. You should totallu try making a radial engine using similar ingredients as your turbo jet engine. I want to attempt to make my own jet engine in the future. Your videos have been a great resource!
i gotta say this is one of the most successful sketchy integza experiments yet, i can't believe it worked on the first test! and the cause of it breaking was an easy fix!
This was actually a so much more impressive than your past engines! It actually worked better then you expected for once! Now you just need it to be a little more repeatable and it will be great!
Video idea:
Try making a turbo pump for your liquid fueled monoprop engine.
That would replace the syringes and could give you (in theory) a much higher chamber pressure and therefore more thrust.
Don't know if the current design can handle this kind of loads though and you might need a larger nozzle due to increased expansion of the exhaust gas
In the news, next week:
"Local inventor sends tomato into low earth orbit."
I though about that too, turbines should manage the pressure much better
In other words, look up the ME163 Komet engine.
So unnecessary and over complicated, a pressure fed monoprop engine like this can make sooo much more thrust than he's currently making, his design is good, just needs to work on the materials a bit more so it stops blowing up and leaking
@@lairdcummings9092 inventor said “fuck the tomatoes, hope they freeze dried well. Whoops I mean by to say freeze died
Instead of using a secondary source to compress the plunger, you could use a small tube to take some of the pressure generated by the reaction. This way it will make the reaction self-sustained once initiated.
Well done, such a cool engine
I've always wanted to see someone build a solar-oven, solar water heater, or solar panel that tracks the sun automatically. I have a few ideas for how to make it work, but I currently lack the resources or space to test my ideas. I would be very interested to see how YOU would approach the challenge, and what solutions you would come up with.
I remember seeing something that used simply four light sensors controlling two motors driving an altazimuth mount, and a shade that will just barely shield those if it is pointing straight at the sun. If it is pointing slightly off, one or two of the sensors will receive sunlight, and thus cause the motors to turn the contraption until it is pointed directly at the sun.
@@zuthalsoraniz6764 That's a clever idea. It's similar in concept to one of my own imagined possible solutions, and seems like it's relatively cheap and simple. Thanks for sharing the idea! One of my ideas was for a more "passive" solution, like calculating (using math that's currently beyond **me**, personally) whether or not there is an "optimal" shape for a parabolic mirror that can be aligned with the "arc" the sun describes as it moves through the sky, so that *less* effort is needed to keep it in the optimal position.
as long as you place the device in a completely clear area, you can create a simple bit of control software where the logic goes something like this... For initial startup, rotate entire assembly for the full range of motion, at a 45 degree elevation. The angle where you get the highest voltage out of your cells is the sun position. Rotate assembly to that and sweep through elevation from 0 to 90 degrees, record the highest voltage, rotate to that. Done, you're facing the sun. Following that, every 5 minutes, sweep the device left to right by a small amount (like +/- 10 degrees) and record the highest voltage, lock to that, then adjust elevation.
Sleep for 8 hours if voltage drops below a certain threshold or unless the threshold is tripped again - that's your night mode. Once night mode ends, revert to initial startup.
You can make this logic work with a cheap Arduino. You'll also need a car battery, two motors and two motor controllers, some solar panels and a bunch of metal to build the rotating frame out of. Keep all the electronics (including battery) as part of the mobile assembly, Run a long extension cord. Use a free-rotation extension cord if you can.
Good luck, the project is pretty easy but will require some bumbling around with the code and the welding.
(The reason you do a full sweep at wakeup/startup is to avoid accidentally tracking local maxima such as a reflection from a window or someone's driveway light. With algorithms, sometimes dumber is better.)
You should have millions of viewers. You always release awesome content, and always, on a consistent basis, I genuinely laugh out loud during the duration of the videos. Every video. Thank you, sir, for always making my day better when I watch your videos. In the future, I know that you will have a huge audience. Millions. People who do not subscribe eat raw tomato sandwiches. Eww
just a matter of time.
@Meisya Denia why do you think that works on anyone but post middle-aged men?
@@kingmasterlord haha doesn't work on us either... Doesn't matter the age...just the IQ..
@@tonyhussey3610 just cuz you one of the real ones doesn't mean they're in a high proportion of jackasses in your age group. the jackasses in mine fall for different shit than this is what I'm saying.
@@kingmasterlord just cuz you know your age group well , does this imply you know my age group well too 🤣🤣🤣🤣
Great assembly! simple and creative! Worthy of a genius! Congratulations!!!!
A coilgun shooting a rocket would be lit
I'd be super interested in seeing a video to explore what other kinds of things you can do with those porus ceramic parts. They worked so well in providing a lot of dry contact area for the permanganate.
Fire Fighting Nozzle
Since you play with fire so much I think a fire fighting nozzle would be cool. Something that mixes water and soap together to make a foam for putting out fires.
Integza you're very good at 3d modeling I passionately love you projects
A monopropellant is when the fuel and oxidizer are pre-mixed, but an external source of ignition is still required.
Hypergolic mixtures are what self-ignite.
i would love to see this project revisited with the use of epoxy and maybe even carbon fiber for the structural support you need
I like this idea
i like metal pipes better, no offence
@@Nobe_Oddy I would just take a steel tube and done not translucent but
That was really cool! Super fun seeing someone make a monopropellant rocket engine, not every day you see catalyst beds 🚀
Use the decomposed oxygen from the reaction to power an after burner
Use high pressure water pipes with standard fittings and stop use glue everywhere! These will withstand much more pressure ᕦ(✰ω✰)ᕤ
#suggestion for new videos
P.S.
You are making amazing progress!
Stuff blowing up is a big part of the fun making/watching these videos. :-)
We’re here for explosions, I don’t think he has a test field so metal parts moving at high speed aren’t exactly… great for you neighborhood bomb maker
Siri, how to build a 'pipe bomb':
^^^^^^^^^^^^^
He just needs a bigger nozzle. So that the pressure can get out instead of building up
Yeah if you want to make bombs
AH yes, accidentally making pipebombs, my favorite youtube series
With the catalyst on those highly porous blocks, it almost feels like a hybrid engine. I'd love to see this made into an actual rocket now.
There was an early jet pack that used damn near the same method
@@Sniperboy5551do you know what he does to make the potassium permanganate a liquid
This dude builds everyhing except regular rocket engines
Video Idea: Now strap it to a Rocket (but reinforce the dang thing to withstand those pressures) , who cares if NASA wasn't built in 2 days, Integza Space Program was.
Built in 2 days... of 3D printing!
What if you used the oxygen created in this case to fuel a hybrid rocket? You could create another gas generator that makes something like hydrogen or acetylene, mix the flammable gas with the oxygen in a combustion chamber, and ignite the mix. If you tuned it right, it might not explode, lol...like if want to see this tried! I might do it on my own channel if Integza doesn't try it first!
YESSS! DO IT INTEGZAAAA!!
hydrogen peroxide has been used as an oxidizer in hyperbolic rockets (aka the propellant ignites itself when combined). but normally they use Liquid oxygen because you get a higher specific impulse (basically gas milage for rockets)
Love that explosions and fire was involved in this
Nice one! :)
Those pavers are rough and provided some resistance to the skateboard wheels, on a smooth surface it would really rip along!
My suggestion is…a “Best of Integza” video, featuring those “learning” moments. I’m sure there is enough to create a number of “learning” moments!!!
I love how when he figures out to use the old syringes and that pirates of the Caribbean esc music starts playing, the syringe popping out is a near perfect octave Above the key of the piece making it a perfect last note to the phrase.
This is one of your first ever rockets that actually worked pretty well
You really are brilliant! The idea for impregnating the ceramic was a great idea. I was thinking of using the inside of a car's catalytic converter. The platinum film they coat the converter part with will work with the H2O2, and it will never wear out.
Imagine a pyromaniac with a heavy Portuguese accent who hates tomatoes and loves Nicolas Tesla…
And I love it
Video idea: what if you take this reaction and use it to turn a turbine for some car or other vehicle
👍👍👍👍
Or instead of a turbine use an engine design
awesome project
Video idea: attach 6 of these in parallel like the Atlas HLV rocket, have the tip contain a CO2 cartridge (this would distribute the pressure by all 6, should be about 9 bar pressure to each and use a vent valve to control output pressure, you dont need all co2 contents, so it doesnt have to be efficient but its lower weight and size, plus the vent will create lots of smoke which is cool for video!). Use a membrane (like the ketchup bottles) to separate the water from the fuel or a burst cap (plastic film?) if its not water proof enough, this should make it all a single component with no need for glue or any other weak points. Bigger == better! That should make an awesome video!
This would be *incredibly* inefficient _but_ it would be interesting to see how much electricity you can generate when using that reaction to shoot the gases into a closed mill that's hooked up to a small motor. Or something similar.
@Meisya Denia Get out of here
tesla devil turbine
@@zangryomani1257 That's a good name lol
@@archie4521 thanks, but if he makes this, he should employ built in disk spacers, but there on the outer perimeter, and they deflect the moving fluid toward the center, similar to the second version of his tesla turbine, but there on the outside. this would also give it more tourqe, and should be used to try and make a steam engine
I highly recommend changing out the plastic for metal parts to deal with the pressure, as is we've seen enough of the combustion, its time you made something for long term repeated use.
....or use transparent aluminum!
(not sure about its chemical resistance tho)
@@Nworthholf If not for the fact that its yet to become a mass produced item, that would work to some degree; so to expansive at this time, so hopefully in a few decades then.
Great, that You get footage when cylinders blow up.. 👍 These was an epic moments!
Ohhh man that was awsome
never give up on your experiments
At this rate, I'm thinking you will have a running rocket suit prototype by next year this time 😉
Love your dedication.
Keep up the good work.
On i feel like making this out of steel for the “combustion chamber” would work quite well and you may be able to seal it better with threaded ends. That one way valve would be able to thread in and it wouldnt be able to jump off
Mark Rober: the recipe is too dangerous
Integza: N O
Finnaly, after such a long time, you managed to make a decent amount of thrust in unussual way :D
At this point you're into plumbing, which can be tricky. Thankfully CZcams has a fantastic certified plumber who can probably help. And he also has a bit of a thing for rockets, which might be helpful.
What I'm trying to say is that you should definitely look into doing a collaboration with Colin Furze about the next step :D
i support this idea
Wow. Great idea using the ceramic as a substrate for the catalist. Also, Jackie Chan is awesome, and tomatoes are delicious.
Ok the impregnated ceramic idea was genius tbh
I just watched couple videos and I loved them so much.
Love the videos integza.
Have you thought about using the devils toothpaste engine to power a turbine to pump fuel into a rocket engine and use the devils toothpaste exhaust as the oxidiser (a dirty oxidiser due to the water content). This could bring together all your previous projects into one, and strike fear into the cold hearts of tomatoes across the world!
This reminds me of "water bottle rockets" that simply push water out using compressed air.
Maybe try pressurising the air and peroxide in the same bottle before pushing it through the catalyst, removing the need for the syringe entirely.
Bearing in mind the system is gravity fed if you plan on using a horizontal test bed.
I want to see your motors make something fly!
This would work. It is done in real rockets too where there is no bladder/liner inside the propellant tank to keep pressurant separated from propellant. It just adds the requirement for ullaging to settle the propellant in the tanks. Apollo did this using the smaller rcs engines to apply a little forward thrust, the bipropellants for the AJ10-137 thus settled to the bottom of the tank.
So yeah, omitting the syringe and pressurizing the perozide container directly should work just fine.
Not a bad idea. Even just having a water section after the hydrogen peroxide/steam nozzle that the pressure built up forces the water out. Having the heavier mass be thrusted backwards will give a much higher impulse.
@@CharlieSolis that would be less efficient. You want your exhaust gasses/reaction medium coming out the nozzle to be as low mass and high velocity as possible.
Nice - you basically built a H2O2 based monopropellant rocket engine! Though your thrust in this design is capped by your maximum chamber pressure, which is limited by your maximum injection pressure which in this case is 4 bar due to your "fuel pump" design - which if i recall correctly has been used in the past by I think soviet rockets. (top of the tank as a piston head to pressurize the fuel above using pressurized gas as a driving force). A very simple and elegant solution.
With your Ethanol / H2O2 / Permanganate experiments you by the way almost had a replica of a WW2 German V2 Rocket engine. Using H2O2 via Permanganate catalyst to drive a turbo pump that feeds an Ethanol / Water mixture and Liquid Oxygen into the chamber of the engine (water was added to reduce exhaust temperature because of problems with nozzle disintegration)
A larger check valve seems obvious I guess but im super glad you put in a direction change like that mid video! Totally made me what to follow allong more.
Video idea💡: You should make some project's related to Arduino.
Arduino ➕Rockets🚀=🤯🤯
And yeah: Tomatoes are disgusting 🤢🤢
Good one 👍
With the skills you are learning using pressure vessels, I would love to see your approach to a steam locomotive.
If you go bigger you could potentially tap off of the gas from the reaction to push the plunger. Then you'd only need a big enough air source to get the reaction started. Like a combustion tap-off cycle rocket engine.
Integza I would love to see a video on the magnus effect because its a really cool topic :)
Integza your rocket it producing lots of O2, add fuel and a 3D printed nozzle and BOOM a rocket or possibly a large explosion. Either way it will be cool.
I was just thinking about that, the problem though is that most of this O2 is saturated with water vapor, so igniting it would be really hard, maybe if he could dry out the exhausted vapors it could turn into a legit combustion rocket engine
@@Mr.Paulo. that’s the thing gasses do not care about moister. Just look at when a propane vessel is on fire. No amount of water will put it out.
@@justinmolina4557 never thought about that, so he can just mix the engine's oxygen output with some propane and make basically a flamethrower? That's some freaking cool idea to try out
@@Mr.Paulo. my thought is that it would be a really high pressure exhaust. If he can contain the force it would be a a serious rocket.
*VIDEO IDEA FROM IKIA*
Connect a mini canon to your turbo boosted jet with a Seal in between when there is enough pressure of exhaust the seal will break yeeting the load 👍
Video idea: workshop tour including the types of machines and 3d printers you use. Anyway love your videos and keep up the great content.
Wow, this really shows how powerful Devil's toothpaste is, even at such a small level. Lots of respect to both of you!
Idea: HOVERBOARD -Two output nozzles thrusting upwards with controlled pressure to make skateboard Hover.
Leakage Solution: Use insulating sheet of fiber in inner portion of engines so the chemical won't come out of joints.
What about the thrust to weight ratio problem?
@@tannersiebel thrusters will be applied at two ends in replacement of wheel to balance thrust to weight ratio
@@Nikhil-dz1cl thrust to weight ratio is about whether or not you have enough thrust to lift off the ground.
@@tannersiebel yes, we will have enough thrust to lift off and the thrust depends on how much pressure we are applying so, if we increase the pressure and if able to maintain it the board can hover
I have to be honest, I didnt even know what the video was about but when I saw that Integza uploaded I knew it was going to be good and I immediately clicked
That idea with the porous storage for the catalyst is genius
I know the correct ratios and ingredients to make a violently reactive substance, thanks integza!