How To Make Sodium Metal

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  • Опубликовано: 20 авг 2024
  • This is one way sodium metal can be isolated using NaOH and Mg. Mg has a strong enough desire for oxygen to tear it from the NaOH, leaving ingots of elemental sodium behind.
    2Mg + 2NaOH = 2MgO + 2Na + H2
    Thanks to NurdRage for the equation.
    / nurdrage #NightHawkInLight
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Комментарии • 2 тыс.

  • @nothingnew69
    @nothingnew69 3 года назад +180

    I grew up loving chemistry but became a carpenter now that I'm old I'm falling in love with chemistry again. Spare time to create awesomeness. Thanks for sharing.

    • @zafeerahrifin2056
      @zafeerahrifin2056 3 года назад +2

      Have you watch Dr.Stone? There's a carpenter that love making chemistry apparatus for main character. :)

    • @nothingnew69
      @nothingnew69 3 года назад

      @@zafeerahrifin2056 thanks buddy

    • @zafeerahrifin2056
      @zafeerahrifin2056 3 года назад

      @@nothingnew69 you're welcome

    • @user-ig3pn8hq8k
      @user-ig3pn8hq8k 2 года назад

      Can you learn me chemistry

    • @phobos1963
      @phobos1963 2 года назад

      @@user-ig3pn8hq8k teach ?

  • @joshuathomson8925
    @joshuathomson8925 8 лет назад +611

    I'd say I like sodium hydroxide, but that would be a lye.

  • @Nighthawkinlight
    @Nighthawkinlight  11 лет назад +28

    Yes. The salt needs to be heated to it's melting point then a strong electric current is passed through it to split the sodium from the chlorine. It's quite dangerous.

    • @jerometruitt2731
      @jerometruitt2731 9 месяцев назад +1

      Can this be done with table salt?

    • @morscovium8881
      @morscovium8881 7 месяцев назад +1

      @@jerometruitt2731 don't do it. just don't. You would be working with such dangerous materials and at high heat which adds even more danger. did you know molten salt explodes when it touches water? I'm betting you didn't, and who knows how many other hidden dangers there are.

    • @clipsandtrailers304
      @clipsandtrailers304 6 месяцев назад +2

      @@jerometruitt2731 Yes sodium metal can be extracted from table salt but the melting point is about 801'C. Some calcium chloride is added to lower its melting point to about 600'C

  • @Nighthawkinlight
    @Nighthawkinlight  11 лет назад +45

    Potassium will become unstable in mineral oil eventually, but sodium has been safe to store indefinitely by my experience.

    • @ekeene11
      @ekeene11 Год назад +2

      What should potassium be stored in???

    • @Nighthawkinlight
      @Nighthawkinlight  Год назад +9

      @@ekeene11 A vacuum ampule

    • @The.RandomTube
      @The.RandomTube Год назад +12

      ​@@NighthawkinlightYou replied after 10 years😂😂

    • @0Arcoverde
      @0Arcoverde Год назад

      ​@@The.RandomTubeI got recommended today

    • @user-ic1kr7nf8e
      @user-ic1kr7nf8e Год назад

      ​@@ekeene11Liquid paraffin wax.

  • @Nighthawkinlight
    @Nighthawkinlight  13 лет назад +19

    @jeremiahswee Very true. This is not a typical displacement reaction. Rather than trading places with the sodium, the magnesium attacks the oxygen contained in the hydroxide group. This creates MgO, leaving Na and H on their own, unable to bond together. The Mg does not force the Na out because it is more reactive, but because it has a stronger desire for the oxygen than the hydroxide group does. If the hydroxide group is decomposed, any metal attached to it is freed, regardless of reactivity.

    • @user-in8bz3kd7d
      @user-in8bz3kd7d 5 месяцев назад +1

      Magnesium is so expensive, wouldn't it be better to use five-karat electrolytic sodium hydroxide?

  • @deaftodd
    @deaftodd 11 лет назад +18

    Loved the spoon reaction.

  • @matzo33333
    @matzo33333 11 лет назад +8

    Sodium hydroxide is a popular drain cleaner, and is often sold in solid form. Be sure to read the ingredients on the label, though. Magnesium can be found in firestarters, in the sporting goods section of your local supermarket. They're sold as solid blocks with a large flint glued to it, though, so you have to powder it yourself. You can also check online, though powdered magnesium is probably expensive to ship.

    • @yourworkshopmate372
      @yourworkshopmate372 3 месяца назад +1

      You can also find magnesium at a plumbing store for real cheap. It's used in boiler tanks. Ask for a magnesium rod.

    • @KR72534
      @KR72534 6 дней назад

      Don’t do this. Any amateurish mistake can cause severe burns.

  • @SafetyLucas
    @SafetyLucas 10 лет назад +51

    Why not just heat the whole mixture under oil? Sodium melts at around 208F, and MgOH does not. The sodium could coalesce like on Nurdrage.

    • @CocoaThunda
      @CocoaThunda 7 лет назад +1

      Magneto! Go

    • @anytimeanywhere8870
      @anytimeanywhere8870 6 лет назад

      sodium isn't magnetic...

    • @OGJessie
      @OGJessie 5 лет назад +1

      Sodium does not contain iron and is not magnetic

    • @_skyywave9740
      @_skyywave9740 5 лет назад +5

      @@OGJessie why would it have to be magnetic? it coalesces because of the strong surface tension of molten sodium.

    • @anytimeanywhere8870
      @anytimeanywhere8870 5 лет назад

      @Cosmic I was talking to Fred

  • @Nighthawkinlight
    @Nighthawkinlight  12 лет назад +5

    Sodium was stuck to the surface of the block of steel. Scraping it with the spoon exposed fresh sodium to the air, which caused it to rapidly oxidize, releasing enough heat to catch fire.

  • @Nighthawkinlight
    @Nighthawkinlight  12 лет назад +5

    Maybe, it depends what it's to be used for. It is too soft and reactive to make a useful alloy for any structural purposes.

  • @paulcrisan3249
    @paulcrisan3249 8 лет назад +598

    I was gonna make a Sodium joke...
    But Na

  • @RodinTheOnlyOne
    @RodinTheOnlyOne 11 лет назад +8

    2NaOH + Mg → Mg(OH)2 + 2Na
    2Na + 2H2O → 2NaOH + H2

  • @Nighthawkinlight
    @Nighthawkinlight  13 лет назад +5

    @Khalastas Try not grinding the NaOH. If you leave it in prill form it will react more slowly and leave more sodium. If you use a thick piece of steel as a lid like I have much of the sodium will condense on it because it's so much cooler than the reaction vessel itself. It can then simply be scraped off.

  • @Nexus2Eden
    @Nexus2Eden 13 лет назад +9

    Super cool - though I wish you would explain the chemical reaction that is taking place with each step. It would help chemistry students understand what each elemental step contributes to the over all reaction process.
    However ...totally awesome!

  • @stoneywmorris7448
    @stoneywmorris7448 Год назад +1

    I'm new to this here. I've always been fascinated with things like this and I have been through so much in my life that caused me to never get my ambition started. I'm 54 years old now and if I don't start now I never will.

  • @loomynarty6548
    @loomynarty6548 9 лет назад +294

    aaaaaand im on the goverment watchlist

  • @ChrisLove2010
    @ChrisLove2010 10 лет назад +91

    Wouldnt the sodium react with the water making sodium hydroxide again?

    • @atourdeforce
      @atourdeforce 9 лет назад +74

      Chris Love Yes It does to some extent. This is a very wasteful process because of that very issue and because your going to loose a lot of sodium with the heat of this reaction. That's why he leaves the lid on. To keep as much air out as possible and to let the Na cool as much as possible, because the cooler it is the less reactive it is. But in a way this reaction is nice too because it produces oxides which stick to the lid and help seal it, But none the less Na is still wasted.
      Now he utilised several things here, he used the fact that Na floats, to his advantage, and that the heat formed will cause the Na prills to globulate into proper dense balls, and finally the fact that the slag is heavier than water.
      All of this means that once dropped in to the water layered with oil, the Na sinks through the oil because it has a lot of slag and impurities attached. It then hits the water layer and reacts heating up and making a larger solid glob of Na and releasing the slag from the sodium which falls to the bottom as its heavier.
      Now that the Na is pure it is now not weighted down by the slag And starts to float back up into the oil phase, Which upon arrival stops reacting.
      So Yes the sodium reacts with the water but only a certain amount of it as it is not reactive enough to fully react instantaneously, and it is simply not in the water phase long enough to react fully before floating into the neutrality of the oil phase.
      This I would like to add is a very ingenious method of separation for the home scientist. If NightHawkInLight came up with this part of the process I'm very impressed. As it requires an innate knowledge of how things work, how things behave and also Physics. But the most important thing here is to have the cerebral acuity to be able to come up with processes like this. there are just not that many people out there who understand the complexity but yet the shear staggeringly simple mechanics behind this. It is great to see.
      To ***** skofilmz It would not be possible to make anything other than sodium or Lithium utilizing this method, as anything else would be too reactive. In the case of K it reacts very quickly with water very often in an explosive instant. but because it would be contained between an oil layer and the water, it would most probably react instantly with little explosions and a big mess.
      As for the Cs Forget about it, it will react even more so. I don't know why people have a fascination with the lower end of the Alkali's they are nowhere near as powerful as they are in peoples minds. The power increase is not linear as you go down the table. Rb is not a whole lot more powerful than K . etc....
      Even if you could make Cs you be much better off trying sigma's website they will sell to the public. But even for a few grams like 2gr it would be very expensive maybe $60 in your money. You would have just as much fun with K and 3/4 of the bang.
      Robert Cece I disagree, the sodium he has at the end is very pure If he pulled that big globule out of the water at the very end, I.e just washed it once more there would be very little oxides or physical contaminants. I do think it is a very wasteful process, but it's wastefulness is off set by its practicality.
      On final point NightHawkInLight if you had of made a strong alkaline solution (some experimenting might need to be done to determine the optimum conc) instead of water I would Imagine you would get higher yields as the Na would not react to such an extent. I don't think In my opinion that simply leaving the sodium to turn the water basic is going to result in a strong enough solution to make much of a difference.
      That is why maybe try starting out with a strong basic solution instead of water might yield more favourable outcome. But I am only theorising here.

    • @Rahat-tw8vg
      @Rahat-tw8vg 6 лет назад +24

      atourdeforce and the longest comment award goes to...!

    • @ajpollard8096
      @ajpollard8096 6 лет назад +8

      Yes

    • @Rahat-tw8vg
      @Rahat-tw8vg 6 лет назад +12

      AJ Pollard and there's the shortest answer ^_^

    • @greenaum
      @greenaum 5 лет назад +1

      atourdeforce As far as your "strong basic solution", NaOH would surely be a good candidate, since you have that in the first place, and since that's what the sodium would otherwise be trying to form. Would a saturated solution mean more or less 100% of the sodium is freed?

  • @uncle_thulhu
    @uncle_thulhu 3 года назад +8

    Okay, so that was essentially a thermite reaction, right? But I thought the elemental metal had to be more reactive than the metal that starts as a salt. That's why Al+Fe2O3 works, isn't it? Mg is definitely not more reactive than Na.

    • @maeday8839
      @maeday8839 3 года назад +1

      I thought the same thing but chemistry likes to break itself apparently.

    • @photonthelatios7828
      @photonthelatios7828 2 года назад

      In a normal thermite reaction only the metal oxide is being reduced. Here both the sodium ions and hydroxide ions are being reduced, to sodium metal and hydrogen gas respectively. The reaction is enthalpically favorable by the heat of formation of MgO and entropically favored by the formation of hydrogen gas. It's favored but kinetically slow hence why high temperatures or an alcohol catalyst is needed. Long story short normally yes, sodium is more reactive than magnesium, but in chemistry there are always exceptions.

  • @pablopicasso6699
    @pablopicasso6699 9 лет назад +8

    Awesome experiment, we did this as an experiment at school, it was great :-)

    • @alblaschke
      @alblaschke 2 года назад +1

      How did it go? I’m a chemistry teacher thinking about trying this

  • @kyleherbig
    @kyleherbig 11 лет назад +1

    A big enough chunk of the metal can be used as an exposive that denonates when submerged in water.
    That, and maybe some experiments with other reactions, or with conduction.

  • @NurdRage
    @NurdRage 13 лет назад +5

    Nice work!
    Someday i'll get around to making a sodium video as well. i'll probably blatantly steal (with credit) a few of your techniques :)

  • @ethanblanke6873
    @ethanblanke6873 5 лет назад +8

    Okay someone explain to me why this reaction still works even though sodium is higher on the activity series and therefore shouldn’t let the single replacement reaction occur.
    Edit: never mind I figured it out

  • @HILUXCHAINSAW
    @HILUXCHAINSAW 9 лет назад +3

    The most interesting thing I've watched today.

  • @Nighthawkinlight
    @Nighthawkinlight  11 лет назад +11

    That's beyond my knowledge. Maybe someday.

  • @isaiahstephens3509
    @isaiahstephens3509 5 лет назад +22

    Making the sodium is almost as cool as the sodium.

  • @venosia
    @venosia 6 месяцев назад +1

    "Ferb, I know what we're gonna do today!"

  • @prwexler
    @prwexler 11 лет назад +1

    I still have a ChemCraft chemistry set from 1969. It's been under one pile of stuff, or another, since about 1974. I won it, in '69, but being a kindergartener, my parents would not let me play with it for the longest time. I believe that there is a vile of sodium metal, in there, and one other element, both of which came covered in mineral oil. To get to it, now, would be a major pain. I have often wondered, however, what kind of time bomb I have in my house.

  • @davidlisa5344
    @davidlisa5344 10 лет назад +7

    why would someone dislike this video?

    • @tunakann7629
      @tunakann7629 5 лет назад

      Because someone got sodium pills in their allergi medicine on April fools day

    • @FelonyVideos
      @FelonyVideos 5 лет назад +2

      Some people are just naturally "salty".

    • @gametrue2229
      @gametrue2229 5 лет назад

      Felony Videos da dum crash...

    • @ismailabdelirada9531
      @ismailabdelirada9531 5 лет назад

      Not sure, but it seems to be a rule on RUclips that every video has to have at least some dislikes.

    • @thiggmayo117
      @thiggmayo117 4 года назад +1

      Because sodium Cant be created, it's an element hes just extracting it

  • @hj222222
    @hj222222 10 лет назад +5

    amazing, I love home chemistry

  • @TtotheG
    @TtotheG 11 лет назад

    Sealing it in an airtight container submersed in mineral oil be enough. You can store it in a jar like this for months. Unless where you live is extremely humid, even taking it out in open air likely won't cause ignition. As well, mineral oil has a density of about 0.8g/cm, making the sodium more dense and therefore will settle to the bottom over time, further decreasing exposure.

  • @doluseb
    @doluseb 11 лет назад

    As a matter of fact I'm a physicist so i've had many chemistry classes. And if I'm not mistaken the guy in the video gets his Na from NaOH...so If i can get NaOH from NaCL into water....I think you proved me right.

  • @jimmydrive
    @jimmydrive 8 лет назад +5

    Hmmm I just stumbled upon this video and I'm thinking if the U.S. government wasn't watching me before, they are now.

    • @marxman-wb2yt
      @marxman-wb2yt 8 лет назад +1

      That sounds like me entire life

    • @fatherthyme4587
      @fatherthyme4587 8 лет назад +4

      I always feel like somebody's watching me,
      and I have no privacy.

    • @ajrm007
      @ajrm007 8 лет назад

      you can buy sodium metal online anyway lol

    • @PaulBrown-uj5le
      @PaulBrown-uj5le 4 года назад

      @@fatherthyme4587 lol

  • @amosbackstrom5366
    @amosbackstrom5366 10 лет назад +9

    Would Al powder work at all? NaOH reacts with Al because it is amphoteric, but if you lit it quick enough could it work?

  • @stoneywmorris7448
    @stoneywmorris7448 Год назад

    I like the different types of metals that reacts with water in a violent manner like that.

  • @MrKeenius
    @MrKeenius 10 лет назад +1

    I expected the sodium to react more violently...
    Very nice video!

  • @masakaye
    @masakaye 9 лет назад +3

    Feel the wrath of the flaming spoon
    =-O

  • @lucaspunzengruber
    @lucaspunzengruber 10 лет назад +18

    thats how i feel when i stepped on a teemo shroom xD

  • @prwexler
    @prwexler 11 лет назад +2

    Thank you for the reply. I have always wondered, over the years, what aging might do to the various elements in that box. I don't think that chemistry sets are sold anymore, in the US, which is too bad. As a youngster, I was not interested in following recipes. So, the chemistry set sat around. It's mostly intact, but I did lose the spectroscope. Other young people who have patience no longer have easy access to beginner experiments. That's too bad.

  • @Nootson08
    @Nootson08 11 лет назад

    Yes, you do it any time you dissolve the salt in water. When salt dissolves it dissociates into it's respective Na+ and Cl- ions.

  • @waverz2
    @waverz2 7 лет назад +6

    just gotta put it in a pill capsule and flush it down my toilet

    • @atourdeforce
      @atourdeforce 5 лет назад

      It wouldn't flush, sodium floats.

  • @Thevol40k
    @Thevol40k 10 лет назад +6

    I wish i would studied Chemistry....

    • @bugs181
      @bugs181 10 лет назад +5

      Never too late to start. That's what I'm doing. Even if it is only as a hobby.

    • @bugs181
      @bugs181 9 лет назад +4

      ***** And outside. If you're really passionate about something, your interests usually leave the classroom.

    • @bugs181
      @bugs181 9 лет назад +5

      Never too late. Not much older than me.

    • @chaoticchem
      @chaoticchem 4 года назад

      @martin27 I'm 32 and just getting into chemistry and not going to college. One doesn't need college to get into something like this. Just a willingness to learn and a live of science.

  • @AudibleSweating
    @AudibleSweating 11 лет назад

    i recommended my chemistry teacher to you. we watch your videos every week now

  • @kingschuyler3890
    @kingschuyler3890 11 лет назад +2

    brick go BOOM! have to try this sometime!

  • @Anonymous71575
    @Anonymous71575 9 лет назад +8

    How to make Caesium metal?

    • @skofilmz
      @skofilmz 9 лет назад +1

      same process except caesium hydroxide. BUT IT IS EXPENSIVE AND IMPURE.

    • @skofilmz
      @skofilmz 9 лет назад +2

      Konstantinos Myrianthefs NO, its hard to find, but their maybe a few samples online such as in Sigma-Aldrich Chemicals you can buy it there.

    • @Anonymous71575
      @Anonymous71575 9 лет назад +1

      ***** Where to get caesium salt?

    • @skofilmz
      @skofilmz 9 лет назад

      ***** Search it online. You might find something.

    • @printffff
      @printffff 9 лет назад

      CuriouScienceDude That thing would be fluorine gas instead of Cs

  • @prwexler
    @prwexler 11 лет назад +3

    Hey, I have a request: can you demo how to make some of the most useful chemicals of the last 100 years, like nylon and Lucite? Things that blow up give me some ideas for vandalism, but I'm really interested in constructive stuff. (Though, flushing a chunk of sodium, coated in a slow-dissolve material, down the toilet in a hated business establishment could be fun!)

  • @Hambonillo
    @Hambonillo 10 лет назад

    Sodium hydroxide is hygroscopic (readily absorbs moisture from the air). So it's probably best to grind it up (and quickly) after the magnesium is ready, unless you can work in an environment with very low humidity. Just leaving sodium hydroxide exposed to the air for 15 minutes or so can achieve noticeable amounts of moisture.

  • @prwexler
    @prwexler 11 лет назад +1

    Hopefully, someday! I'm really interested in seeing real use of chemistry. Not even "Periodic Videos" shows anything more than stuff burning or blowing up. I'm outgrowing views of sudden color changes of flames, or gold dissolving into acid, or a cracked swimming pool, or a damaged driveway. Seeing one is seeing them all.

  • @nottheonlyone6055
    @nottheonlyone6055 9 лет назад +5

    Hey, when you placed the slag in the measuring cup, why didn't it react how it did in the end of the video?

    • @wildhobbits489
      @wildhobbits489 8 лет назад +6

      The mineral oil covered up the sodium before it could really begin to heavily react.

  • @Zenobiwan
    @Zenobiwan 10 лет назад +7

    where do you find sodium hydroxide and magnesium powder??

    • @CrystalDragon907
      @CrystalDragon907 6 лет назад

      Sodium hydroxide is lye. It's sold and used a drain cleaner. It can be bought at hardware stores and such. Good luck with the magnesium. I'm sure it can be easily made with a metal file if one can find a sorce of solid magnesium.

    • @bobhawkins875
      @bobhawkins875 5 лет назад

      You can get a magnesium rod out of a hot water heater or go to walmart or a hardware storeto buy one they cost around $7.50

    • @T_u_c_k
      @T_u_c_k 4 года назад

      dunno

    • @chaoticchem
      @chaoticchem 4 года назад

      You can easily buy pounds of magnesium powder on eBay.

    • @PaulBrown-uj5le
      @PaulBrown-uj5le 4 года назад

      @@chaoticchem what about Epsom salts?.

  • @SaraBearRawr0312
    @SaraBearRawr0312 11 лет назад +1

    You can also use electrolysis to extract it from saltwater (lots of salt in the water)

  • @Chenbergen
    @Chenbergen 11 лет назад

    sodium in its elemental form is a soft metal and it is highly reactive heavy metal. when exposed to air it can react and spontaneously combust. that is why you are using the mineral oil, it coats the sodium.

  • @Khalastas
    @Khalastas 13 лет назад +3

    Hey Nighthawk.
    I've tried this experiment three times, twice with magnesium and once with dark aluminium.
    The aluminium reacts significantly slower, similar to a burning candle. The magnesium burns similarly to yours. It leaves the large chunk of slag, and when I attempt to do the separation it all sinks and reacts away leaving no sodium ingots.
    I'd love to attempt it again but I mineral oil is quite expensive for me. Do you have any suggestions?
    Thankyou!

  • @tiburondollar8385
    @tiburondollar8385 7 лет назад +5

    Mexico is #1 on chemistry for drugs

  • @Cerbamofo
    @Cerbamofo 11 лет назад

    sodium has a low melting point so when it hit the water it melted itself and formed a ball it held together like that because as soon as part of the ball hits the water it burns pushing the ball from all sides

  • @armandovicente2682
    @armandovicente2682 11 лет назад

    im pretty sure the coating of oil will protect it from that. its just like a greasy plate. when you rinse it with pure water, it is somewhat "water" proof

  • @Kyhek
    @Kyhek 10 лет назад +6

    ALCHEMY!

  • @fpvboss500
    @fpvboss500 9 лет назад +4

    fucking where we going to get Sodium Hudroxide and Magnesium

    • @shurt-cut8365
      @shurt-cut8365 9 лет назад +1

      Sodium hydroxide is a drain opener just check at your local hardware, make sure it's 100% NaOH.

    • @nottheonlyone6055
      @nottheonlyone6055 9 лет назад +1

      You can buy also Sodium Hydroxide from a Hardware store. But I'm not sure where you can buy Magnesium powder, I get my Magnesium powder by grinding a piece of magnesium into a powder form. The piece of magnesium I use is a fire starter kit that you can get at Walmart or at Dollar General.

    • @waltersobchak7275
      @waltersobchak7275 9 лет назад

      +Mason Poindexter I was thinking the same thing as I got 50 or so lying around. Say, what's your method of powdering the mag? I was using a sharp knife and scraping back and forth I did it for hour and then weighed my products turned out to be .3 man there has got to be better way

  • @jonathannintendonerd
    @jonathannintendonerd 11 лет назад

    actually in the original VW bugs magnesium was used for the engine block and gear box. Around 20 kilos of magnesium was used in each car. In merica you can buy magnesium sticks they have flint on the side and you can use them to start camp fires.

  • @atrumblood
    @atrumblood 11 лет назад

    Think about it. When the sodium metal contacts the water hydrogen gas is produced in an exothermic reaction. Therefore the sodium metal is floating on a cushion of hydrogen causing it to glide along the surface in a very low friction way allowing it to bounce from edge to edge of the container.

  • @Badplum25
    @Badplum25 8 лет назад +4

    Im a bit confused with the extraction. When the sodium passes through the mineral oil layer and reacts with the water why doesnt it produce NaOH?

    • @Nighthawkinlight
      @Nighthawkinlight  8 лет назад +1

      +Badplum25 It does

    • @Badplum25
      @Badplum25 8 лет назад +1

      NightHawkInLight Then how did you create Sodium?

    • @michaelschollhorn1811
      @michaelschollhorn1811 8 лет назад +1

      sodium metal is less dense than water and mineral oil... so it floats to the surface of the oil and doesn't react fully with the water :D

    • @Badplum25
      @Badplum25 8 лет назад

      Michael Schöllhorn oooo okay thanks that makes sense I was rlly confused :)

    • @shantanuthakur6081
      @shantanuthakur6081 8 лет назад +2

      Some of the sodium is wasted and some keeps floating!! u can collect the floating part!

  • @WarOfTed
    @WarOfTed 10 лет назад +3

    SO THIS IS HOW YOU MAKE METH.

  • @callumjackson5089
    @callumjackson5089 11 лет назад +1

    yes, group one metals are very reactive with water.

  • @frog654456
    @frog654456 11 лет назад

    tip firework (flash) powder = magnesium powder, for sodium hydroxide make very concentrated salt water and run an electric current through it for a few hours then let the rest evaporate

  • @jimmyzea8760
    @jimmyzea8760 11 лет назад +1

    you are a genius man....
    I love chemistry and never though of magnesium to reduce sodium
    (y)

  • @CephaloG0D
    @CephaloG0D 11 лет назад

    A kid my old teacher knew stole a brick of sodium from the science lab.(not knowing it was a highly unstable substance) The kid decided to get rid of it by throwing it into a local pond. I was told it was an impressive reaction.

  • @RYNOCIRATOR_V5
    @RYNOCIRATOR_V5 11 лет назад

    No, the sodium does not react with heat and oxygen, but with oxygen only. Sodium is a very reactive alkaline earth metal, so when it reacts with oxygen; lots of energy is released (reaction is exothermic) in the form of heat (fire), this produces NaO (sodium oxide).
    In water, sodium reacts with H2O (water) and in doing so displaces a hydrogen; (re)forming NaOH. This reaction is also exothermic, which is why the sodium is both; on fire (heat energy) and moving around quickly (kinetic energy).

  • @Kywdo1
    @Kywdo1 10 лет назад

    With results, even if raw ( no complete chemical reactions written formulas, also for the collateral chemical reactions ).
    Congratulations for this window to Chemistry-Universe !

  • @RSJayakumar
    @RSJayakumar 2 года назад +2

    Dude my son loves chemistry and my son is around 9 and he's quite interested to learn about compounds that contain sodium and sodium metal itself thanks for posting this video you can include more videos about sodium if you can or you can't do better.

    • @Nighthawkinlight
      @Nighthawkinlight  2 года назад +3

      I have a few more videos you'll find if you look for my alkali metal series. It's a dangerous project though, I wouldn't recommend sodium metal as a first project with your son.

  • @TheHalothane
    @TheHalothane 11 лет назад

    I would think so. I think electronegativity would come into play, but Mg should still be able to wrest K from K+.

  • @billb3658
    @billb3658 10 лет назад

    I worked for DuPont for 32 years in niagara falls the only sodium producer in N America They made rail cars of the stuff 24/7 365 Threw a 10 lb chunk in the river took off like a hydroplane. So much smoke it stopped traffic 1/4 mile away for quite a while

  • @snowflakemelter1172
    @snowflakemelter1172 11 лет назад

    you can get it from street lamp bulbs too ( sodium vapour ones ) i blew up one of the toilet pans at school in the 80's with it.........happy days !

  • @Maclman1
    @Maclman1 11 лет назад

    moisture in the air/on the spoon can react with sodium, there must have been some on the spoon. the mineral oil prevents moisture from getting to it

  • @flamedrag18
    @flamedrag18 11 лет назад

    you can do many things, like drop it in water to make a entertaining explosion. it can also be the precursor to many chemicals and alloys.

  • @sanjeen2503
    @sanjeen2503 6 лет назад

    Hey, you should have explained the bit about how sodium separates from the slag in between the layers of oil and water, by sacrificing some amount of itself.

  • @midwestchem368
    @midwestchem368 3 года назад

    Hey thats cool as soon as you dropped the flat crumbling piece of sodium into the water it basically immediately formed a sphere.

  • @DnBastard
    @DnBastard 11 лет назад

    because it hadn't all reacted and the spoon scraping on the brick caused just enough friction heat to react what was left

  • @fatfox6706
    @fatfox6706 9 лет назад +1

    When I saw that fuse it took me back 50 yrs ago to when my best friend and I built all sorts off homemade rockets! Didn't think you could still get it. Kids today don't realize how much fun today's society is not letting them! P.S.still have all my fingers and toes, lol.

  • @ZBridgeridoo
    @ZBridgeridoo 11 лет назад +1

    This video is really cool, but what are some practical uses to making sodium metal?

  • @welovemarbles7191
    @welovemarbles7191 2 года назад

    My wife asked me what I wanted to do this weekend. I told her I dont know. Now I know

  • @MyCommentsRMaturelol
    @MyCommentsRMaturelol 3 года назад

    After 10 years I'm still coming back to your beautiful videos. Why doesn't the sodium fully burn up when you're separating it in the water?

    • @Nighthawkinlight
      @Nighthawkinlight  3 года назад +1

      The sodium floats on top of water so as soon as it starts reacting it floats to the top and gets coated in oil. That protects it from the water.

    • @MyCommentsRMaturelol
      @MyCommentsRMaturelol 3 года назад

      @@Nighthawkinlight That is straight up genius, and I just gushed to my partner about getting a response from a childhood hero :3333

    • @Nighthawkinlight
      @Nighthawkinlight  3 года назад

      @@MyCommentsRMaturelol No hero here, just a punk kid that grew up with a camera. Ha!

  • @Iamrocky5687
    @Iamrocky5687 11 лет назад

    When he set the fuse, I KNEW something was gonna blow up.

  • @RobertMSimpson01
    @RobertMSimpson01 11 лет назад

    If you wrap the sodium in something that will insulate it from the water momentarily, and allow it to sink, the reaction of the sodium submerged reacting with the water can be spectacular. And dangerous.

  • @DavidDerish1
    @DavidDerish1 11 лет назад +2

    1:17
    Look ma! Looook! I'm making Sodium METAL! *WHOOOOSH*
    SH****!

    • @bean7351
      @bean7351 4 года назад

      That is literally going to happen in a few days.

  • @eunaekim9216
    @eunaekim9216 6 лет назад +2

    I had always wondered how in the world that sort of thing was made. Now I am wondering about potassium!

  • @yourworkshopmate372
    @yourworkshopmate372 5 месяцев назад

    I had always done poorly at science and physics due to the lack of interest. But watching people like yourself would've got me top marks as I would've been interested. Pity youtube wasn't around at school In my days.

    • @Useruserusername790
      @Useruserusername790 3 месяца назад +1

      Ikr we just had school to teach us Science. I wonder how people looked stuff up before Google? All we had were Encyclopedias. I can't believe you really just said that.

    • @yourworkshopmate372
      @yourworkshopmate372 3 месяца назад

      ​@@Useruserusername790I guess I learn better by watching entertaining videos.

    • @Useruserusername790
      @Useruserusername790 3 месяца назад

      @@yourworkshopmate372 there used to be whole TV shows about science. Where were you? You must've been waiting for GenZ culture to pop up before you crawled out of your cave.

    • @yourworkshopmate372
      @yourworkshopmate372 3 месяца назад

      ​​@@Useruserusername790I 0:42 didnt have a tv. You seem angry. Shame you seem upset. Hope your day gets better.

    • @Useruserusername790
      @Useruserusername790 3 месяца назад

      @@yourworkshopmate372 mofo you've seen Bill Nye stop bullshitting

  • @Andrewlohbihler
    @Andrewlohbihler 10 лет назад +2

    The sodium looked like a lump of clay before you dropped it in the water. Why does it appear white and form a sphere on the top of the water? Was it hot or molten?

    •  6 лет назад

      Because that's not all sodium. We're calling it sodium, just like you're calling a rusty piece of steel "metal". The oxides react with the water, forming NaOH. This dissolves in the water, exposing the pure sodium metal underneath, which hasn't reacted with the atmosphere yet.

  • @timothylegg
    @timothylegg 3 года назад +1

    1:18 was the moment that I decided that maybe I don't want to do this after all.

  • @Lucinat0r
    @Lucinat0r 7 лет назад

    you can also use molten salt and electrolysis it, this is a lot cheaper, and since you hopefully are venting your furnace anyway the chlorine gas wont be a issue (still better than sodium hydroxide).

  • @krisztianszirtes5414
    @krisztianszirtes5414 11 лет назад

    Mix it with CaCl2. As I know it will lower the melting point of the mixture, however, it will be impure...

  • @caseyjohnson4428
    @caseyjohnson4428 10 лет назад

    My chemistry teacher told me I could react sodium metal with whatever I want if I could find a displacement reaction to form it, as we're not allowed to buy it. Thanks!

  • @gibbyace5077
    @gibbyace5077 10 лет назад

    THIS SOUDIUM IS ON FIRE !!!

  • @MatthewSpurgin-sc3yx
    @MatthewSpurgin-sc3yx 5 месяцев назад +1

    I google searched "what is it" and instead i get a video on how to make it

  • @vfgzhejdtfyguhj
    @vfgzhejdtfyguhj 11 лет назад +1

    Aside from a Chemistry classroom, what is the value of this Sodium metal? What can I use it for? I love your videos by the way, and I am subscribed.

  • @krakatoas92
    @krakatoas92 11 лет назад

    Anyone noticed the 'chemical version' of the leidenfrost effect ? The rapid hydrogen production prevents the quick reaction of the piece of metal with the water :D

  • @tudormontescu6275
    @tudormontescu6275 4 года назад

    How to make sodium: start with magnesium... LOL

  • @prwexler
    @prwexler 11 лет назад

    I could imagine that something, like that, if it sinks to the bottom of the pool (which maybe it wouldn't), but if it did, you could very well crack the pool. That would be a really expensive reaction.

  • @amashakishani6693
    @amashakishani6693 5 лет назад +2

    This is useful and helpful video for me.
    Thanks dear
    I like your videos

  • @Ag3ntL3mon
    @Ag3ntL3mon 11 лет назад

    No, I replied to your comment, not theirs.
    You asked 'Seriously' that apparently makes you care.
    I pointed out that fact that you shouldn't care what people do and don't do on the internet unless it affects you or is illegal.

  • @ArvindSingh-mk4ex
    @ArvindSingh-mk4ex 4 года назад +1

    But in the metal reactivity series
    Na>Mg
    Then how magnesium displaces sodium from its compound.

  • @RandomExperiments
    @RandomExperiments 11 лет назад

    Yes, by melting it and doing electrolysis. Look at my channel, where I showed a way to separate lithium from lithium chloride. Sodium is similar, but temperatures are way higher.