Top Sensitive Explosives Ever
HTML-код
- Опубликовано: 9 июл 2024
- ► MY HAT mrslavs-hideout.creator-sprin...
► Discord / discord
0:00 - intro
0:13 - picric acid
0:59 - acetone peroxide
1:37 - armstrong mixture
2:15 - nitroglycerin
3:02 - mercury ll fulminate
3:50 - lead ll azide
4:20 - silver fulminate
4:54 - not spoiling more
--------------------------
Music:
The Dark Wizard - Christoffer Moe Ditlevsen
Microscope - Gridded
Keep Up This Time - Trevor Kowalski
Copyright Disclaimer Under Section 107 of the Copyright Act 1976, allowance is made for "fair use" for purposes such as criticism, comment, news reporting, TEACHING, scholarship, and research. Fair use is a use permitted by copyright statute that might otherwise be infringing. No copyright infringement intended. ALL RIGHTS BELONG TO THEIR RESPECTIVE OWNERS
For for business inquiries or copyright claim please contact on email: shoper.info |@| gmail.com
Stock footage by videezy.com Videezy.com
#mrslav #chemistry #comparison
The last one that could be triggered by a fart would be what we called 'Silent but Deadly'
Ok this is good 😂
Lol funni man
when your fart have more effect than your whole life on society
Reminds me of CnC references
@@FWORX711 omg proto
“Still not as sensitive as karens” 7:22
Its true that karens are definitely not a force to be reckoned with. An explosion from one can do quite some damage, especially in public places when things don’t go their way. This explosive is also a manager’s worse nightmare.
Whenever a karen explodes, every lifeform, everything in the world, existing or not, living or not, every single thing possible or not, smiles.
Not to mention, it moves on it's own.
And has a ultra sensitive snotty kid which can explode on its own
It is attracted to toys and gadget (Nintendo switch, iPhone and android)
However if you refuse to give what it wants, it will explode sending a signal to the Karen which explodes afterwards
With all those informative content that you create and with straight to the point video style, I'm surprised your channel still hasn't blown up(with subscribers that is).
Man if you removed that last sentence it could *blow up*
@@alpha-1commander775 HAHA
Im also surprised that his channel hasnt blown up (with subscribers)
Ur parents are proud of your punctuations.
wdym it has lmao
Fun fact: As a teenager I would make nitrogen triiodide "contact explosive" in very small batches. A filter paper was involved and after scraping off the bigger piece I would shake the small particles off around an ant nest. When the particles dried after a few minutes, they were ant landmines.
Zamn
I used newspaper sheets for my mixtures. After drying, they would randomly pop, which made my mother very angry, she hated unexpected explosions, including fireworks.
that's genius and also a little cruel, well, I guess its humane since it instantly kills them, no pain...
Leave them in batches with cheese cheese watch mice take a bite and get turned into deadmeat
@@a1marine105 Evilness
1:10
shows a guy named Richard "Wolffenstein"
shows a clip from a Wolfenstein game seconds later
MR SLAV always has super excellent science vids.
a
E
Ye
Wake up Mr. West
O
These scientists were really very brave 👏
I wonder who was the first chemist to discover fluorine that lived to tell about it! ;
Can't remember the details offhand, but in the early days of the US space program they tested a lot of very sensitive substances. My favourite is the test where they put tiny drops of two reagents on a watch glass near each other, and tilted the watch glass to mix them and start the reaction to produce a possible rocket fuel. The two drops reacted as planned, but the result detonated immediately and reduced the watch glass to powder. Bit too spicy for practical use, that one.
I'm guessing one of those reagents was chlorine trifluoride, what the Nazis called "N-Stoff". Pretty wild stuff, it will spontaneously ignite violently when in contact with pretty much anything. The Nazis gave up on it and never used it because it was just too volatile. NASA played around and used it as a "high performance oxidiser" in their rocket fuel for a bit, but found better (safer) alternatives. Oh, and it's also a deadly poison, so there's that. I love what Rocket Scientist John Drury Clark said about it:
"It is, of course, extremely toxic, but that's the least of the problem. It is hypergolic with every known fuel, and so rapidly hypergolic that no ignition delay has ever been measured. It is also hypergolic with such things as cloth, wood, and test engineers, not to mention asbestos, sand, and water-with which it reacts explosively. It can be kept in some of the ordinary structural metals-steel, copper, aluminum, etc.-because of the formation of a thin film of insoluble metal fluoride that protects the bulk of the metal, just as the invisible coat of oxide on aluminum keeps it from burning up in the atmosphere. If, however, this coat is melted or scrubbed off, and has no chance to reform, the operator is confronted with the problem of coping with a metal-fluorine fire. For dealing with this situation, I have always recommended a good pair of running shoes."
That last part is brilliant. You know you're in proper trouble when the rocket scientist is telling you to run.
@@woopimagpie I suspect you've read some of the same books I have. :-)
Can't really have been ClF3 in this specific case though, because it would have reacted with the watch glass before it could even be combined with the other liquid.
Offhand I think neither liquid was an oxidiser - I think the test reaction was to produce a tiny amount of a candidate fuel, and the fuel compound itself (just in regular atmosphere) immediately detonated. Super-oxidisers like Cl3 and FOOF will make things burn violently, but I don't think they're much good for proper detonations.
Never knew explosives had feelings.
Turns out they have _explosive_ personalities.
help.
No
No
No
No
No
Glad you didn't just put C2N14 right at the top. NCl3 also probably would have been a good mention
🤓
it was, the professor at the end was talking about a NCL3 detonating during production (its does that a lot tbh)
certified e&f viewer
@@rvnx1564 You're not wrong
@@rvnx1564 my man
I agree
Karen’s are more sensitive and prone to extreme explosions at the smallest of provocation
Fr
Who else discovered MR SLAV and started watching his videos ever since?
it's been years
@@Cl-2048 same bro
I wish he would make the videos with his voice or even with a text to speech program.
I don't watch lots of his videos because I am lazy and rather have a video that I can just hear and watch occasionally while its playing, while i'm doing chores or playing.
2.5 years
@@Axelux99 he actually did.He have 3 channels.
One of his video with his voice
ruclips.net/video/UuUb2IDEkCc/видео.html
when I was a child I made about 50g of that last one.. when it started to dry small sand sized grains started to self detonate causing the heavy steel plate I had it on to bounce and scared the living §hi1 out of me, so I immediately washed it down the drain.
There were pops and bangs in the sewer system all night long that Disturbed the whole block! I just played dumb as my Dad tried to snake the drain and purple vapors were coming out.
Thank you so much MR SLAV for giving us continuous entertainment and teaching us facts every week. Day after tomorrow, we have Eid-ul-Fitr festival in our country. Wishing you and your family a very happy Eid Mubarak!! Take care!! Love from Bangladesh. ❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️
I am from Bangladesh as well. Happy Bengali new year!
@@warpdrive9229 Well, Bengali New Year was on 14th April and tomorrow is Eid-ul-Fitr. Wishing a happy Eid Mubarak to you and your family.
@@FaheemProductions Yeah Poila Boishak!
@@warpdrive9229 Yeah!! Eid Mubarak to you and your familly. Have a happy Eid day!! Enjoy. ❤️❤️
There's something interesting about explosive salts: Sodium and potassium are often not explosive, but silver, lead, and copper are, but only one of the two copper ions are.
I've searched the internet for an explanation and found none! However, my best guess is that the heavier metals form a more covalent bond, and that makes them more sensitive to physical impact.
Think in terms of stability of the material vs the products of decomposition. If the material is composed of weak bonds and the product of strong bonds, there will be a greater tendency to decompose. Sodium and potassium form strong ionic bonds, wheres silver etc form weaker bonds. Sensitivity is, I presume, related inversely to activation energy. E.g. Low activation energy implies high sensitivity.
I was just typing "MR Slav" in the search bar. This was convenient!
most interesting and informative channel that I could find on RUclips.💯🤙 Keep it up man !👍👍💪Also, I think you need to add more of the scary background musics quite often as it looks more interesting than the normal one.
I'm impressed that I don't have something so sensitive that it explodes from the touch of a single particle of air, or does it even exist?
if its that sensitive then how would you make it in the first place?
Antimatter.
@@verticalshrink antimatter is a different case, it doesn’t explode due to contact or friction, it explodes when it merges with normal matter to make pure energy. If you hit anti matter with anti matter, depending what the anti-substance is it likely won’t do anything
Well, there are compounds that react explosively with air itself, but that's a chemical interaction, not a physical one.
Honestly, nitrogen triiodide (touch powder) detonating from alpha radiation is arguably pretty close, as an alpha particle is essentially just the nucleus of a helium atom.
I know one
*karens*
I really like your content , been a sub for 3-4 years already. Sadly you upload rarely but your videos take time and quite the accurate information, thanks for the informative content. Keep up the good work!
Nitrogen Triiodide is actually pretty easy to make, my AP chemistry teacher made some one day and sprinkled it by the door for us to pop on the way out. One of the coolest moments I had in chemistry, I loved the little purple explosions it made. Just left an orange stain on your shoes for a few hours but that's all.
I feel that if you somehow made a lot of it it would do more than stain your shoes. Also acetone peroxide sounds like it would be easy to make and it’s probably pretty dangerous in large quantities I don’t think making explosives in general is a good idea
@@lavaboatcubesupportsukrain7539 Perhaps if you made a large amount, but explosives are only really dangerous when contained. When in the open air all the expanding gas and energy goes into the surroundings and is harmless in small amounts.
In high school, my chemistry teacher showed us how to make touch powder. Dissolve iodine in alcohol, pour that into cloudy ammonia, then filter the resulting precipitate. Keep it in paste form & apply it to wherever you want. A tiny amount of it on a filter paper blew a hole through it. A few of us put some under toilet seats.
In high school our science teacher was teaching us about some of the hazards of chemistry. He opened a small jar of potassium tri-iodide (spelling?) which was a pasty looking white material stored under a liquid. In that state it was safe. He took a little out and painted a section of the lab table with it and let it dry for about 10 minutes, then tossed a paperclip onto it. It exploded loud and sharply with much energy and shattered the formica covering on the table spraying it over half the classroom. That was all the demonstration we needed. Now that is the way to teach, get their attention first. I did quite well in chemistry due to fear being my prime motivator, but at the end of that semester I decided I'd rather take my chances in an electronics based career. :)
The end had me dying 🤣 🤣🤣🤣🤣☠
Thank you
Everybody is saying: "how big is the explosion". Instead of: "how is the explosion doing?"
Nobody ever takes just one second to consider the explosion's feelings. Would it kill you to ask one time if the explosion needs anything?
Where is nitrogen trichloride? It is literally an explosive that detonates on sunlight.
In a similar class to tri iodide.
I love how after immediately showing a scientist with the last name Wolffenstein you show a cutscene from Wolfenstein
What about antimatter-matter thing? It is said they would make huge explosion if just touch each other
well, that's a misconception ig, but they are not a sensitive explosive because they need to collide each other, and anti-matter don't explode with another particle of anti-matter, i'm not very good on explaining that, but i guess you can understand. (maybe i'm wrong)
@@bl00dknight26 if antimatter particle comes in contact with a regular matter particle , they annihilate each other with 100 % matter to energy efficiency
@@abhatt releasing deviating amount of energy probably about 2*10^10 mev but they are prepared by positron and antiproton in a particle collider so it's impossible
@@gravitationalman4365 i can't understand your point man
plz explain me😆😆
@@abhatt bruh it's not that simple google if you actually want to understand and not just "Oh CoOl sCiEnCe"
Great to see another incredible upload brother!
I love these videos. Keep em coming
"Armstrong's Mixture"
Sounds like mixture of nanomachines and some explosive compound
You know I was actually expecting the Group 1 Metals to be here or even mention considering they're quite known to be explosive when contact with oxygen and water.
I know someone who frigging made Azidoazide azide at home (amazing feat of backyard chemistry!) and he claims that the sensitivity is absolutely overstated simply because the original researchers had no interest in making more of it and measuring it, as their research was something else and it was useless to them. If I recall correctly, he compared it more with nitroglycerine, rather than the explosives you featured in the last third. (Yes, he made most of them at home!).
This guy had a RUclips channel, but his videos got deleted as they were seen as a breach of TOS.
Explosions&Fire has a brilliant video where he made it as well!
NileRed: *WRITE THAT DOWN, WRITE THAT DOWN*
"Never make more material than you're willing to have an accident with."
Mad respect for sliding in a cutscene from Return to Castle Wolfenstein!!!
“It can be destroyed with only a small tap” *smashes a hammer into it* 💀
Silver acetylhyde (silver carbide), C2Ag2, created by bubbling acetylene gas through a silver nitrate solution. When desiccated, extremely sensitive to touch.
As a teen I once made a toy rocket out of aluminum foil with a perchlorate-based propellant. The payload was a marble-sized clump of dried C2Ag2. After the rocket reached an altitude of about 150 feet (around 5 meters), the payload was ignited and exploded, showering the ground with a snowstorm of aluminum flakes!
nice
1:38
Standing here, I realize you were
Just like me trying to make history.
cultured
BENEATH THE BLOOD STAINED SAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAND
Since Armstrong is an American senate the replication of any gun it just fits perfectly
My chemistry teacher in high school had NI3 in the classroom, it detonated just from vibrations caused by people walking by the laboratory
Always cool to see clips from friend's channels in one of your videos. I'm glad that you credit people when you do that.
A temper tantrum when a kid wants a lego set
thanks for this video. Ive been thinking about which type of explosive i should get and i couldnt decided, however this video helped me decided exactly what i should get.
I have a very old wooden box that once contained dynamite. I've since heard (but don't know if it's true) that such containers can be dangerous, because, over time, nitroglycerin can leach out of the dynamite and be absorbed into the box.
then you get a ....BOOMbox 🥁
@@nolesy34 And it won't even need batteries
Woah, already?! You usually upload vids once a month. But you uploaded this in 8 days. Nice vid
“Hey there”
*huge explosion*
Me before MR SLAV : 35 iq
Me after MR SLAV : 170 iq
"Picric acid can be used as to clean wounds." Sure, if you want cancer in that spot - sure it can.
most sensetive explosive i know is a xenon oxide, it explodes when weight of crystal more than 20 picograms
"Or just fart on it"made me laugh lol
You should have used Joules of kinetic energy for impact to detonate the explosive and Newtons for friction force
This helps many know like how truly sensitive it is
Lead azide was used in some pathology lab reagents as a preservative.
The reagents were used in lab automation and were in the waste that went don't the drain after going through the instruments.
There were cases where lead azide dried in the drains under certain conditions and then exploded ,damaging the plumbing.
2 fingers lost hold on guys while i apply my prostectic robot limbs
"US military looking for compound to stabilize Karens for use in the next generation of military explosives. Top general says 'too unstable for practical use at this point.'"
What a way to make a time sensitive booby trap. When evacuating an area ahead of enemy forces, just leave shallow containers of liquid stable explosives, and wait for evaporation and an accidental bump to do its job. Watch the disarray as explosives go off randomly without the risk of obvious detonators.
"MOM, MR. SLAV IS MAKING A VIDEO ABOUT ME!"
That last explosive IS the KAREN
The last sentence, I love the humour lol
That Wolfenstein reference was just 👌🏻👌🏻
“Ouch”
Steve Irwin voice…
“Here is the most dangerous animal in the entire world, the KAREN! It’s almost impossible to escape it, and they lurk EVERYWHERE! I’m going to poke it with this stick! Auuuugh! It’s angry, it’s angry!”
I literally love this channel since 2018
6:49 waiiit, isn't it a multimeter?
top sensitive explosions : fart u been holding for years
wow i needed this ..!
the music is very nice lol it reminds me of a kdrama for some reason
we need more of your outro comments
06:36 From this day, I will never fart when I am surrounded by weird substances...🤣🤣🤣
The explosive after getting brushed by a bird feather" "Yamete kudasai, KYAA!"
There's another just as reactive as that one that nilered has shown alredy. It's called manganese heptoxide
The fact that there is no low sensitivity category makes it a lot more exciting
"Still not as sensitive as Karens"
That isn't even a joke, it's reality.
You come even slightly close to them and they'll explode
The one thing I remember from highschool chemistry class. Trinitrogen iodide. Dr Jenkins although he wasn’t a Dr, we just called him that. Cool dude. Late 80’s so pretty much everything was allowed.
That last bit reminds me of a chemistry lesson 40 something years ago wherw my teacher demonstrated making nitrkgen tri-iodide, and mentioned that the firstanalogue discovered was the oil (tri chloride), the guy who first synthesised it shook the testube and lost a few fingers and an eye when he observed it exlloding
I was expecting “Clitoris” but nah this is actually a great video.
One of these must be in the Breaking Bad episode where Heisenberg confronts Tuco."This is not Meth" and slams it on the floor blowing out the building's windows.
Creeper aww men
so way back in the mine
@@justinqueso9644 got our pickaxe swinging from side to side
@@77zx7 Side side to side!
@@77zx7 side side to side
that ending tho lol
Cool video!
thx for helping jamal solve his problem
TNT crates in angry birds are the most sensitive explodives
Great #FAN from INDIA 🇮🇳 LOVE YOUR VIDEOS THAT ARE EXTRAORDINARILY KNOWLEDGEABLE
Actually, Nitrogen Trichloride is very, very sensitive too, and detonates in contact with Sun's UV light
#2:09
Its more like " To make it not explode on your face, oil can be seasoned".
Well, looks like I am on some kind of list now
A good chemist can make even more sensitive stuffs.
My gf dad : challend accepted
Lognest serving leaders
that one kid with anger issues be like:
6:23 "How to tickle a creeper"
"Still not as sensitive as Karens!" 🤣🤣🤣
What about antimatter? It explodes just within a contact with some other solid particle, so it is impossible to store
Are any of these able to be homemade for diy percussion caps?
Oh, i accidentaly dropped those on the streets earlier.
Periodic and the Professor! Nice
Video idea: Top legendary photos ever taken
I don't get scientists
"yo this thing is sensitive and will explode with ease.... let's make a more sensitive one"
damn great video to start a month
Loved the Wolfenstein reference :)
Imagine the people that discover it 💀
Trust me bro I don't need any explosives to make my fart lethal
You don’t need to be a chemist to make things volatile explosives:my first wife used to react violently from random interactions with me and completely explode if I talked to any other woman😂
The last one needs to be stored in a special body. Some of us might call it a manager.
Thanks for teaching me how to make a bomb without searching it up 🤣🤣🤣
“Still not as sensitive as karens” 🤣
In world war two, the germans made a highly combustible liquid fuel for the ME 163. If it touched organic matter, it blew up.