This Liquid is the Heaviest Gas in the World!
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- Опубликовано: 9 июн 2024
- Hi! This is a continuation of the video about the heaviest gas in the world - tungsten hexafluoride (WF6). In this video, you will witness some chemical reactions involving it and also see what this gas looks like in a liquid state!
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0:00 Intro
0:33 I release the gas from the cylinder
1:02 Reaction of lead nitrate with hydrogen fluoride
1:47 Reaction of tungsten hexafluoride with water (WF6 + H2O)
2:28 The halide exchange reaction between tungsten hexafluoride and titanium tetrachloride (WF6 + TiCl4)
2:56 Tungsten blue formation
3:23 Alkali metal borohydrides and tungsten hexafluoride reactions
4:03 Sodium fluoride absorbs tungsten hexafluoride and forms double fluoride (2NaF + WF6 = Na2WF8)
4:50 Colored adducts formation between WF6 and organic substances
5:13 I aimed a stream of WF6 at the burning magnesium (WF6 + Mg)
5:32 Vigorous reaction with ammonia (WF6 + NH3)
6:57 Liquefied heaviest gas!
9:17 Liquid tungsten hexafluoride + Liquid ammonia
10:18 Liquid tungsten hexafluoride + Anhydrous Hydrazine
11:20 Reaction with borazane
12:00 Reaction with Lithium aluminum hydride
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The wikipedia article image for Tungsten hexafluoride was provided by ChemicalForce. What a legend
Checked it out and found it
He’s provided several other images as well for other chemicals like HSbF6
But there is a mistake in Wikipedia regarding the density of the liquid gas 😂
This guy makes HF so we don’t have to
Three of the most lethal chemicals from hell.
And yet it’s safer than keeping pet venomous reptiles.
so he sells it then? if not then I'm afraid I still gota
You can buy HF as drain cleaner, it has very low concentration but even that small amount can react violently with things, very dangerous I don't recommend having anything HF in your house
@@TheRealName7 i have a need for 90% plus purity for... things
The smoke at 11:00 is all the souls of the chemists who came before you being released. Seriously though, it is.
Haha
My uncle used to manage a chemical mixing house. While giving me a tour asked him what the scariest thing there was. He pointed at the 55 gallon drums of hydrogen fluoride above our heads. He said it was perfectly safe in the double lined plastic containers. But if it ever hit the ground, it would eat straight through the concrete and they would have to evacuate a large area.
Why would they store it on the ceiling, or was it just stacked high on shelves or something? (Actually, now I think about it, shelves sound more dangerous, since it implies they aren't permanently fastened there.)
@Mr.Nichan industrial 3 tiered Steel racking. They were on the second shelf so just overhead height. You would be amazed at what is considered safe storage.
Once in awhile he would end up with a gallon or so of 98% acetic acid, or super strong vinegar. I would thin it out and use it as organic weed killer.
HF Vapour💀
We need a video about his setup/ safety measures!
I'm gonna guess he is in a proper lab outfitted for these kinds of chemicals. Nothing he ever shows is jank. The containers are proper and he always has nice glassware. He is working in a fine hood for sure. I'm gonna guess though he must be in full head to toe ppe for some of this stuff.... Well for some of it he better be.
Hf vapor is bad, but some of the other stuff he's played with is possibly worse. Osmium tetroxide comes to mind.
We used HF at a CRT factory, the people there had to wear full suits with gas masks or SCUBA gear. It was used to clean the CRT surface by EATING a small layer of the glass! Really dangerous stuff. I heard it ate the concrete floor too.
@@anthonywilliams7052 yep it will react with concrete. The stuff is so bad because it's toxic and it likes to vaporize. HF is a savage toxin.
Yeah I can't imagine those fumes are able to be safely "vented outside" without some kind of filter, for instance.
I'm speachless. This.... is something ELSE. Unbeliavebly interesting video. I think that your channel deserves at least a million subs. Even NileRed doesn't do experiments with such exotic reagents. ( Aldough i'm not surprised, these are scaary). You got nerves from diamonds. Great work! Please keep it up!
Zajímavé pokusy já čtu komentáře a jako první narazím na vás
@@rufik8364 Jojo, fakt super kanál 🤣
Some 20 years ago I imported and sold tons and tons of WF6 to the European semiconductor industry. Even for me as a trained inorganic Fluorine chemist it was always a massive challenge to train the non-chemist process engineers about the dangers and reactivity of the process chemicals and gases they were dealing with on a daily basis.
Now, I would just show them this video - it would have made my life so much easier... 😂😂😂
Great job, well done!!
I would love to see a video about what PPE you use when handling reagents like WF6, OsO4 and anhydrous hydrazine.
A good pair of running shoes
Goggles, lab coat, extra-thick gloves, good running shoes, and titanium balls with a cobalt-based hardfacing layer.
Fume hood, fume bucket, glove box... Robot arms?
Thank you so much for showing chemistry nobody ever even dared to attempt.
Your passion for chemistry requires recognition.
Fume hood is working overtime
I’ll bet this bloke could mix some REALLY interesting cocktails at a party.
mmm... hydrofluoric acid🤤
Mmm what a tongue-melting drink! 😋 My lungs are spewing out cool colors as well!
Guarantee to burn all the way down 😂
why is my tongue blue?
also why is my tooth on fire?
As a rule avoid cocktails that dissolve the glass.
Easily the best channel on RUclips. Period.
Periodically proven!
Church
Water
Table
NileRed: **Exists**
This is far and away the most casually wild chemistry I have ever seen. I feel unsafe all the way behind this screen.
I think the reaction at 5:30 creates MgF2 and W metal
Anything making this thick of a smoke looks scary as hell
A real appreciation to both the person in video and the ventilator who worked so hard to provide this video.
This deserves an award in the chemistry community.. *would it ever be possible to see any of these reactions anywhere in nature, even in other places throughout space?
Tell me you have a deathwish, without telling me you have deathwish.
That is thrill from hell.
get lost. nobody owes you anything. who the hell are you to demand?
Just science. Human curiosity is not a deathwish...sometimes ignorant and unsafe but not a deathwish.
@@pawz007 I don't know how about you, but I did have to handle some... exotic chemicals, apart from other credentials.
Handling it VOLUNTARILY is a deathwish.
I screamed, "No!" when he said let's splash some Hydrazine into liquid Tungsten Hexaflouride. Then he pulled out the LiAH. I died from his death wish.
Imagine an atmosphere is composed of all these crazy substances on some random planet...
5:13 magnesium flouride, and just fine tungsten dust that's already hot that also reacts with the oxygen, I don't know for sure though, I stopped playing with chemicals as a teen after an unexpected chlorine reaction. I wanted manganese chloride, I had manganese dioxide from zinc carbon batteries and some HCl. Needless to say It didn't go well, so I left chemistry as a hobby to professionals a decade ago.
Your channel does so much for chemistry education. The amount of reference material you produce is amazing. God bless you and your work!
This container looks scary
When the container start looking like that you know it's gonna be spicy. 😅
Yup, those are used to transport an array of toxic and reactive chemicals, seen rubidium and. Et3Al, and UF6 in those. They have a couple fittings to heat the contents as well as one to pressurize with an inert gas if needed.
Beautiful videography. I hope you've got some exceedingly good scrubbers on your fume hood. If not I feel bad for anyone that lives anywhere near you.
Your videos are great and unique.
Thank you for providing us with such great content.
Beautiful examples of exotic reactions. Lovely.
you truly merge chemistry & art , it is lovely & informative ❤️ & your music too is mesmerizing ! thank you so much for your work
Literal nightmare fuel 😈⛽. Stay safe friend! Ty for the time and effort you put into your content.
Hi Felicks! I love your videos. Ty for making such excellent videos for us!
Beautiful reactions, thanks!
This is the most beauty I’ve ever seen in a chemistry video, great work, thanks!
Another great video from the best chemistry channel on this site! The ammonia reaction was my favorite
Cool vapors. Seems like a cool way to destroy a lot of glassware. I can’t imagine getting any of it clean again. Same with your fume hood 😊
Hood fume
I wouldn't even enter his lab without a hazmat suit, as for cleaning his glassware thats a job for a military robot 😅
@@SmithsMobile Hahaha, yeah, looks like a SuperFund site.
I'll bet he has some enthusiastic undergrads who are willing to clean up the aftermath. I have no way of knowing that for sure but it seems likely.
The hydrazine reaction was beautiful.
To quote the BlendTec guy, "don't breathe this!"
Simply fascinating!
LOVE your chemical intro with a music track.... KEEP IT PLEASE!
hell yea i love to hear your voice back on this... thankyou Chemical force
Awesome video brother!!!
An amazing video. I'll add tungsten hexafluoride to my list of "Nope!" substances.
The slow-mo footage at around 5:48 , BTW, is gorgeous!
It's great that you have the captions
No way he just poured hydrazine into an open top dish. He is putting so much faith into his fumehood. 💀
That was awesome!
Such a cool video
Amazing. One of my top 10, maybe even top 5 YT channels. Why not try the other side of chemistry, tough and unreactive things like Hafnium carbonitride? I would love to see what you can do with that? :D
This one was great!
Great video thanks for sharing
Stunning!
Damn, that's an angry molecule.
Super! T'hank you very much!
the videography is amazing! i have very little comprehension of the formulas, but they sure do look pretty and very very expensive. So that's good enough. thanks :)
What a high quality video 👏👏👏👏👏
I have worked in labs for many years and I must say there is some pretty cool chemistry going on here.-Thanks!
Without exaggeration, Nolan should've consulted you for the pyrotechnic shots for Oppenheimer.
👏👏👏👏👏👏👏 👏👏👏👏👏👏 Very Cool, Excellent Work as always!!!
Great videos , I am no chemist , and my knowledge is weak , but these are awesome . With the bonus that he sounds like the perfect mad chemist ( no insult )
the music in the first 5 mins in the video really made it feel like i just saw some top secret villian documents on a super weapon xD
its crazy how he manages to source all these different chemicals no matter the price or how difficult they are to get. Amazing content
I think when he added Tungsten Hexafluoride to Hydrazine the black smoke might be Tungsten Nitride
would be my guess too, no carbon there so what else should it be.
@@petermorph0se Tungsten metal as a nano scale powder might also appear black, no?
Very good bro
When the gas hit the ammonia borane, those colours just (★ ω ★)
@ChemicalForce adoraria ver você realizar o incrível experimento do triiodeto de nitrogênio explodindo ao toque de qualquer coisa😊
If you carefully pour isopentane liquid on top of a beeker of hf6 gas will it float?
That's absolutely terrifying, i would absolutely refuse to ever work with that 😱😅😅
I wonder if some of the chemicals sucked by your fume hood would react with the chemicals already trapped by the filters
So cool
The Black smoke reminds me of the TV series Lost.
💡10:20 This reaction looks like the opening of a tiny portal into hell.👹🔥
One of the scariest videos of yours. Please, stay safe.
Jesus man You got balls of steel to mess with that shit.
WF6 + 3Mg = 3MgF2 + W I hope it's balanced, although I was unsure if I needed to account for the air it was burning in, was still worth a try.
Time to make some popcorn, ChemicalForce just dropped a new video!!!
The black smoke is the literal Avatar of Cancer being manifested :P
I would like to be a fly on the lab wall when you’re doing these experiments. One thing for certain, I wouldn’t want to be a fly on the wall of your fume hood. :)😊
i applaud your confidence in working with dangerous gases. this scares the shit out of me lmao. i wouldnt touch anything HF related outside a glove box
Very nice slomo shots
Now make the forbidden icecream with solid tungsten hexaflouride
Please, show dissolving substances in supercritical liquids: co2, nh3 and others
Hey! Can you do a video about AgF2? I like to do some stuff with it in the laboratory, but i would like to know how it´s true oxidative behaviour is. Thanks!
gosh when I saw the liquid part of the video, I deeply wanted to see how it would look when done in a vacuum
Can you do some stuff with rare/ precious metals? For instance which metal is best for high temperatures, acids, what's the least reactive (platinum I think) and things like that? I would love to see that though I'm probably the only one.
You are a nice person bro
😊😊❤❤
Not sure what wuder is, but I respect it 👍
By the end of the video I just couldn't help but think about how difficult the cleanup was gonna be after all of this.
Is it possible to do some chemical reactions with liquid silane?
Collab with the slowmoguys would be awesome to see these and other reactions in super slowmo
Hi, Any chemical vapour or any gas can burn matchstick in air from some distance of chemical or gas.
Can you make a video about Palladium hydrogen adsobtion ?
Google just wont tell me how I get he Hydrogen in the Palladium :/
i love how gas is always seems to flow _down_ (due to weight)
Does Isopentane (least dense liquid at room temperature and air pressure) sink in the presence of Tungsten Hexafluoride (most dense gas at room temperature and air pressure) ?
It is possible that the black smoke when reacting with hydrazine is either tungsten itself or tungsten nitride.
10:32 if that ever happened in a lab I'm in i would absolutely PANIC AND FREAK TF OUT.
Are any of these blue colors from solvated Electrons?
WF6 combined with anhydrous hydrazine is probably the most dangerous two chemicals I can think of
Naw, that's liquid ozone and liquid hydrazine :p
@@mduckernz oh yeah liquid ozone is also incredibly terrifying
Wow! You have outdone yourself!‼👍👍👍
Can you do a QnA soon?
6:11 - I reckon I can smell that from here!
WF6 + N2H4 → W + 6 HF + N2
2 WF6 + 3 Mg → 2 W + 3 MgF2
5:30 - maybe magnesium fluoride and tungsten are formed? Or some kind of magnesium fluorotungstate.
Thank you. Amazing experiences 😮 Where else can you see such miracles...
One gets the impression that this substance is a strong oxidizing agent. And therefore it would be interesting to know - how strong? Will it oxidize chemically inert compounds such as silicon carbide or boron nitride?
With your question about the burning Mg, what it will form with WF6 - no idea, but I'll take a guess:
2WF6 + 3Mg ---> 2WF3 + 3MgF2
I wonder how many watch lists this man is on 😂