Hydrogen Retrobright Experiment

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  • Опубликовано: 12 июн 2024
  • Testing if it's possible to retrobright plastic using hydrogen.
    Mr Gigabyte's "Retrobrite Gigsplained": • Retrobrite Gigsplained
    Jeff Birt's "The truth about Retr0brite": • The truth about Retr0b...
    After watching a video about retrobright (link above) I got the idea that maybe you could retrobright plastic using hydrogen gas. This is my attempt to test hydrogen gas (in water) as a method of retrobrighting plastic.
    Index:
    00:00 Intro
    00:50 Hydrogen water
    03:31 Magnesium
    04:19 Selecting key-caps
    05:04 Setting up
    08:20 Monitoring
    13:12 Results
    17:55 Conclusion
    I'm assuming that sun-brightening is responsible for the minimal lightening on the keys in plain water and hydrogen water. The polypropylene containers must be transparent to UV. The magnesium tablet solution probably blocked the UV so no sun-brightening happened there.
    Any number of other factors, including the keys themselves, may have made hydrogen peroxide reaction slower than I was expecting.
    Perifractic’s Video on Sun Brightening: • Retrobrighting with ju...
    Mr. Gigabytes' "13 month Speedeebrite Experiment": • The 13 month Speedeebr...
    My Blog: blog.hutchins1.net/
    My Twitter: / hutchca

Комментарии • 53

  • @Fahrenheit38
    @Fahrenheit38 2 года назад +1

    Thanks, always on the look out for the best way to do this.

  • @kingforaday8725
    @kingforaday8725 Год назад +3

    Just my recent quick and dirty experience (2-9-23). Keys from a Commodore 128 yellowed about like the ones in this video. Just dipped each key in 40 strength peroxide cream. Placed on a serving tray and covered with saran wrap. Sat the tray in the sun for about 8 hours each on 2 days. Temperatures were in the high 30's. Afterwords all yellowing was gone. For what ever its worth.

  • @Petertronic
    @Petertronic 2 года назад +2

    Fascinating tests. It's interesting that it looks like sunlight yellowed the keys originally, but sunlight is needed again to reverse the yellowing.

    • @Houshalter
      @Houshalter 2 года назад +1

      There's another video where someone uses just sunlight and no peroxide and it seems to work, just slower. It's apparently not sunlight causing the yellowing on it's own? I don't get it

    • @pityuszka100
      @pityuszka100 Год назад +2

      ​@@Houshalter It is the sunlight. UV component of the sunlight causes the molecules in the plastic to break apart. In case of ABS plastic (used widely in for consoles and electronics) the bromine (it is added as flame and fire retardant) and the rubber (added so the plastic is less brittle) boosts the yellowing. Deep chemistry: the UV breaks the bonds, create free radicals, unrolls organic rings in the butadiene copolymer etc, and creates some crazy conjugated compounds that absorb more bluish light of the spectrum, creating yellowish color. The process of retrobrighting (de-yellowing these plastics) uses hydrogen peroxide which restores the chemical bonds (removing the conjugated bonds) and gets rid of the behaviour of absorbing blue color (and causing yellow color).
      In nutshell.

  • @itgmaster098
    @itgmaster098 Год назад +1

    Great video and experiment

  • @ralfhartmann5050
    @ralfhartmann5050 Год назад +3

    The result is: Only the H2O2 works quickly ...

  • @NickNorton
    @NickNorton 2 года назад +3

    2:20 I don't know how you kept a straight face while opening the can of erm... *Water*

  • @Mr.BrownsBasement
    @Mr.BrownsBasement 2 года назад +2

    I watched Jeff's video. It's very good and worth watching. His thesis is that H202 is just bleaching the surface of the plastic. If he's right (and I suspect he is), then it's not surprising that not much happened with distilled water, H2 water and water with Mg; it was just bleaching from the sun's UV reduced by the filtering effect of the plastic container plus clouding of the water with the Mg tablets. It seems the way to go is with H202 and heat and/or UV and the H2 idea is little more than wishful thinking.

    • @HutchCA
      @HutchCA  Год назад +1

      Yes. I believe any lightening in the plain water was simply sun bleaching. Hydrogen had no effect as far as I can tell.

  • @Antonio_NetoH
    @Antonio_NetoH 5 месяцев назад

    Após usar realizar o processo de retrobright basta apenas utilizar spray de verniz incolor fosco com proteção UV, o amarelado não volta mais, é necessário realizar 3 aplicações para criar uma camada de verniz forte.

  • @az_tinkerer_gamer
    @az_tinkerer_gamer Год назад +2

    Saw an interesting experiment the other day. They used pedastals to hold the object above the h2o2 line and used the gases. Due to h2o2 causing plastics to become brittle.

    • @HutchCA
      @HutchCA  Год назад

      I figure since the plastic is waterproof and not porous, it can only affect the surface of the plastic. If it does cause plastic to become brittle, it would only be the thin surface layer, not all the way through.

    • @az_tinkerer_gamer
      @az_tinkerer_gamer 10 месяцев назад

      @@HutchCA i did have a bowl sit out in the sun too long w/ h2o2, was noticeably more weak/brittle. But ya may have been exascerbated by the sun as well.

    • @HutchCA
      @HutchCA  10 месяцев назад

      @@az_tinkerer_gamer I suppose if there are cracks in the plastic, even microcracks, the solution could seep in there and make the crack worse.

  • @orbsphere-
    @orbsphere- Год назад +3

    What I noticed is the keys were just chucked into a container and liquid sloshed in and containers capped but no attempt was made to control whether keys were right side up or upside down. The right side up keys would have been exposed to more gas than others with their tops being submerged in liquid. Not very good controlled environments. FWIW I just had cataract surgery on both eyes and believed I could see a bit of difference in lightening affect between all keys. I have a toilet seat and lid that I was just looking at yesterday thru new eyes and the items look grossly yellowish and needs to be retrobrightened which I'll give this a shot at.

  • @falksweden
    @falksweden 2 года назад +6

    I always use hydrogen peroxide and heat when retrobrighting. About 50°C/120°F in the oven for 4-5 hours does the trick every time. No need for sunlight or complicated UV setups, that probably don't penetrate the liquid that much anyway. My guess is thatif you'd cool the solution when using UV-lights basically nothing will happen.
    Just put it in the oven, folks :)

    • @falksweden
      @falksweden 2 года назад +2

      @@HutchCA I'm living in Sweden and we seldom have that kind of temperatures in the sun, that's why I tried the oven out :)

    • @bloodieown
      @bloodieown 2 года назад

      I'm planning on doing this to some keycaps, but im wondering how long the retrobright effect lasts on the keycaps? Do you have any indication on how long I can use the caps before they look yellow-ish again? Or is it durable enough?

    • @falksweden
      @falksweden 2 года назад

      @@bloodieown I don't know. None of my machines that I've retrobrighted years ago has gone yellow again.

    • @bloodieown
      @bloodieown 2 года назад

      @@falksweden That's good to hear, I guess ill give this a go then. When you put the plastic bin in the oven, do you seal it at all or do you leave the top open?

    • @falksweden
      @falksweden 2 года назад

      @@bloodieown I try to seal it as good as possible to avoid that the cream dries out, and about every 30 minutes I "massage" it.

  • @devMashcom
    @devMashcom Год назад +1

    Hey Hutch, what about Calcium Carbide? I have a toy cannon that holds water in a chamber and when you add calcium carbide it reacts to create acetylene. (A small flint striker causes it to go bang.) - I'm no chemist but isn't acetylene mostly hydrogen?

    • @zachz96
      @zachz96 Год назад +2

      No. Acetylene is C2H2

  • @rabsrealm
    @rabsrealm 15 дней назад

    I use 12% Hydrogen Peroxide but I don't dilute it. It works well within a few hours.

  • @dennisp.2147
    @dennisp.2147 2 года назад +1

    Science!

  • @davethebulb
    @davethebulb 2 года назад +1

    Do the keycaps not need to be fully submerged in hydrogen peroxide?

    • @HutchCA
      @HutchCA  Год назад +3

      Not in my experience. I've never bothered with trying to keep anything submerged and using a sealed container helps with the solar heating.
      I could be wrong but as long as they are sealed mostly air tight, I believe it's the gasses that do the job. Specifically the Oxygen released from the Hydrogen Peroxide.

  • @Arturo.H.M
    @Arturo.H.M 8 месяцев назад

    Un apunte. Los recipientes de plastico suelen hacerse con aditivos que actuan como filtros ultravioleta. Ponerlos al sol para que la luz ultravioleta actue, puede no tener los resultados esperados y requerir exposiciones mucho mas prolongadas.

    • @HutchCA
      @HutchCA  8 месяцев назад +1

      I believe it's mainly the heat that causes the reaction.

  • @AvivOz
    @AvivOz Год назад +1

    is it possible to reuse hydrogen peroxide for another cleaning project?

    • @HutchCA
      @HutchCA  Год назад +2

      Yes. It will lose some potency over time but I save it to re-use. Best to store in a cool dark place.

    • @AvivOz
      @AvivOz Год назад +1

      @@HutchCA thank you

  • @DennisMathias
    @DennisMathias 9 месяцев назад

    Does your plain water have chlorine in it?

    • @HutchCA
      @HutchCA  9 месяцев назад

      No, we're on well water, which has a lot of iron and manganese.

    • @HutchCA
      @HutchCA  9 месяцев назад

      Actually, IIRC, I used bottled distilled water in this experiment.

  • @cbmeeks
    @cbmeeks 2 года назад +2

    Wait...I was never a chemistry wiz in school...but isn't water H2O? As in, water ALREADY has hydrogen infused? ;-)

    • @GamesFromSpace
      @GamesFromSpace 2 года назад +1

      Water is extremely stable, it takes a lot of energy to break apart the bonds between the hydrogen and oxygen. So for our purposes (as meat based lifeforms), there's no available hydrogen or oxygen except what is added to the pure water.
      It's still BS, of course. If we needed molecular hydrogen for some reason in biology, it's present in ordinary air at 0.6 ppm

    • @cbmeeks
      @cbmeeks 2 года назад +4

      @@GamesFromSpace yep. My original comment was a poor attempt at being funny.

  • @DanT10
    @DanT10 10 месяцев назад

    Is not water by definition "hydrogen infused"? It is the H in H2O. Just saying.

    • @HutchCA
      @HutchCA  10 месяцев назад

      In theory, this is supposed to have additional atomic hydrogen dissolved in it, but I don't think water can absorb much hydrogen.