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Going supercritical. 

NileBlue
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Ben's video: • A close look at superc...
For a while now, I've wanted to make aerogel, but for that, I needed to use supercritical CO2. I didn't really know what that was though, and I figured the best way to learn about it was to make it myself.
My first video on supercritical fluids: • supercritical fluids
My main channel NileRed: / nilered
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Nile talks about lab safety: • Chemistry is dangerous.

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23 янв 2020

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Комментарии : 6 тыс.   
@stoutlager6325
@stoutlager6325 4 года назад
2022 Nilered/blue: "I've been thinking a lot about fission bombs. The materials for that are really expensive but... I bought some."
@jamesmnguyen
@jamesmnguyen 4 года назад
That's for his other channel NileGreen
@violahero4life
@violahero4life 4 года назад
Lmaoo
@rusdanibudiwicaksono1879
@rusdanibudiwicaksono1879 4 года назад
The challenge basically looking for affordable neutron source, though.
@AVerySexuallyDeviantOrange
@AVerySexuallyDeviantOrange 4 года назад
“Thankfully, I had some spare aerogel and U-235 sitting around after one of my other experiments, so I just used that instead.”
@AVerySexuallyDeviantOrange
@AVerySexuallyDeviantOrange 4 года назад
Reno Simpson Mr Ü-boat loves you regardless
@genildomiranda1690
@genildomiranda1690 3 года назад
"and it didn't blow up and kill me so.." that's what I love about science.
@yasyasmarangoz3577
@yasyasmarangoz3577 3 года назад
lol
@alexandergaus493
@alexandergaus493 3 года назад
Kinda reminds me of chemics class in highschool ... The teacher was a genius but had kind of a short attention span+ a slow reaction time. First week he wanted to show us what rust is and how rusty metal could be cleaned with acid. Only problem: The metal pipe he used was to long for the container and while he was talking he stopped holding onto the pipe. "Here, boys, you see how the rust is completely consumed by the acid" the pipe and container falls flat onto the table " and how it's running along the table, with is save because of the barrier at it's sides - which are too flat for a liquid flowing with that speed - and now you all can see how my new leather bag reacts to the acid if you come over and look behind the table. Boy, my wife will bead. It was a birthday gift from her." Ok, Nile doesn't make mistakes like that, but how he explained things is very much like my teacher did. I hope, what I wrote made sense, especiay the sense I was among at, but my English is mostly self tought. So please go easy one, if something doesn't fully add up. 😂
@yasyasmarangoz3577
@yasyasmarangoz3577 3 года назад
@@alexandergaus493 😂That was what he said?
@alexandergaus493
@alexandergaus493 3 года назад
@@yasyasmarangoz3577 Exactly that or something to that effect. 😅 But very close. Was the very first class at that school after elementary, that's why I didn't forget it. He was my favourite teacher then and no other teacher came close to him. He also did teach biology and when he found out, I was very interested in building and maintaining complicated terrariums, he built one for the schoöl with me and a classmate from the scratch with a water part and a self-made filter system, real plants and so on for anolis sagrei and carolinensis , a turtle and a tortoise, small fish and much more. It was crazy. Well, my grades were not the best and I had to switch homes (lived in foster care and later in a home for 8 to 12 boys, 10 to 18yrs old) and so I had to change schools as well. But him I never forgot and he gave me that craving for knowledge about how things work.
@yasyasmarangoz3577
@yasyasmarangoz3577 3 года назад
@@alexandergaus493 That's so sad to hear 😭. I hope he lives a good life now :) So just to make sure: He did say those things WHILE they were happening 😂?
@owenwhitman6616
@owenwhitman6616 2 года назад
I love it when a scientist says "I have no idea what's going on." That's when REAL science happens.
@zachreyhelmberger894
@zachreyhelmberger894 2 года назад
Agreed! I have no idea what goes on with masks, viruses and vaccines.
@ct92404
@ct92404 2 года назад
@@zachreyhelmberger894 lol you're one of those anti-vaxxer/flat Earther conspiracy theorist nuts? 😂
@theEVILone0130
@theEVILone0130 2 года назад
I'm a anti mandate vaccine. I disagree agree with forcing anyone to take something against their will. And seeing as how the vaccine isn't a true vaccine since it can't prevent you catching it, it doesn't prevent you from transmitting to another, doesn't prevent second and third time infections, and definitely doesn't prevent those in ill heath from dying so I don't see being a anti vaccine in respect to covid family of viruses. They have been trying vaccines since the early days of vaccine's. And nobody's found an effective vaccine yet so anti vaccine are just guaranteed to have avoided any potential side effects further down the road from now. Second i doubt that after 100 years of trying to find a vaccine for cancer. Around 40 year's for a vaccine for AIDS. And your gullible enough to think they came up with a vaccine in less than a year and it's savings lives?
@abeq3392
@abeq3392 Год назад
5
@norbert.kiszka
@norbert.kiszka Год назад
​@@ct92404 are You believe in everything which politicians say to You? Yes, viruses are exists and still they can be used for political reasons. One year ago, most people opinion was war in Europe is not possible... Now they cant admit to this "mistake".
@minorcomet282
@minorcomet282 2 года назад
NileRed: strict and is usually safe NileRed Shorts: has a little fun, and edges the line of dangerous NileBlue: "I've been thinking alot about Neutron Bombs, the materials for that are really expensive, but..."
@noctuabird
@noctuabird Год назад
NileGreen: CAFFIENECAFFIENEMUST EXTRACTPURECAFFIENEGOBOOM
@purememes844
@purememes844 11 месяцев назад
@@noctuabirdyou probably already know this, but NileGreen is owned by a different guy.
@fiusionmaster3241
@fiusionmaster3241 11 месяцев назад
Lol
@leeroyjenkins3474
@leeroyjenkins3474 10 месяцев назад
@@purememes844there is no nilegreen
@KrakkAddict
@KrakkAddict 10 месяцев назад
@@leeroyjenkins3474there is a nile green, it’s a guy who uses ai to replicate nile’s voice, and uses it to create havoc (eg. making a nuke)
@retnikt1666
@retnikt1666 4 года назад
"it didn't blow up and kill me, so huge thanks to Ben"
@agenttatsu
@agenttatsu 4 года назад
i scrolled past this comment right when he said it 🤣
@sawsaw123abc
@sawsaw123abc 4 года назад
Tanner FixIt same
@autonomousanonymous6310
@autonomousanonymous6310 4 года назад
Ben: "it's somewhat dangerous and might explode if you aren't careful" Nile: *shakes it around in his hand while it's pressurized*
@LARAUJO_0
@LARAUJO_0 4 года назад
It won't do anything as long as the pressure is spread evenly
@xlunaxlovex
@xlunaxlovex 4 года назад
He lives on the edge.. All day, every day.
@Fireheart318
@Fireheart318 4 года назад
I love your name!
@andrewmanzano4792
@andrewmanzano4792 4 года назад
@@LARAUJO_0 if 5 billion PSI is spread evenly in that chamber you think it wouldn't explode?
@icecoldnut5152
@icecoldnut5152 4 года назад
@@andrewmanzano4792 yes
@SnowTiger45
@SnowTiger45 2 года назад
The Beads suffered "Thermal Shock" which resulted in them shattering internally. Those iridescent looking bits are the surfaces of internal fracture plains refracting the light. You can often see this in natural crystals (eg: Quartz).
@matthewchandler7845
@matthewchandler7845 Год назад
Legit
@davejones9469
@davejones9469 Год назад
I figured it was that simple, but what about the colouration?
@valeriereneeharper
@valeriereneeharper Год назад
@Dave Jones he answered that.
@davejones9469
@davejones9469 Год назад
@@valeriereneeharper No, he explained the iridescent parts aka the rainbow of colours being refracted by the micro fissures, essentially. The yellowish discoloration of the pellets has nothing to do with that. Unless silica gel reacts specifically with heat in that way, which he didn't mention.
@unbearifiedbear1885
@unbearifiedbear1885 Год назад
Yes, you can use light to show damage in glass in the same way
@StarSwarm.
@StarSwarm. Год назад
That multicoloured opal-like feature in the silica crystals is called the Schiller Effect. It’s common in a lot of gemstones.
@DonnaChamberson
@DonnaChamberson Год назад
I am sensually attracted to gemstones. 😩
@fiusionmaster3241
@fiusionmaster3241 Год назад
Cool
@gen_edits
@gen_edits Год назад
@@alexyz9430 Gemophilia💀
@anhuman7022
@anhuman7022 Год назад
@@alexyz9430 sus
@SangreFriasBack
@SangreFriasBack Год назад
@@DonnaChamberson Hank Schrader?
@mariekebuiter5986
@mariekebuiter5986 3 года назад
NileBlue’s channel in a nutshell: “he warned me that in theory it was kind of like a bomb and it could explode at any time, but it should be safe”
@Jyukenmaster95
@Jyukenmaster95 3 года назад
NileRed: "I should take all the necessary safety precautions" NileBlue: -shakes the potential bomb- "it didn't kill me, so we're good"
@endermannull4420
@endermannull4420 2 года назад
How did I scroll to this comment at the exact time he said that?
@fiusionmaster3241
@fiusionmaster3241 Год назад
@@Jyukenmaster95 lol
@anhuman7022
@anhuman7022 Год назад
Lol
@BoomstickFTW
@BoomstickFTW Год назад
😂😂😂☠️☠️☠️
@TheMobBuilder
@TheMobBuilder 3 года назад
NileBlue: “I did a pressure thing and it didn’t explode so I shook it around. It still didn’t explode so I shook it harder. It was still fine so I came in with a hammer-“
@shy-watcher
@shy-watcher 3 года назад
And I didn't even know the pressure!
@renicecream8238
@renicecream8238 3 года назад
@Bluekib Nice profile pic
@WillowK.
@WillowK. 3 года назад
@@renicecream8238 and @Bluekib you two have the same pfp
@dragontuck966
@dragontuck966 3 года назад
@@obnoxiousthings 😭😭😭😭😭😭
@bobrich2234
@bobrich2234 2 года назад
hey the reason its so light but its size is bigger isbc theres basically no matter in it just like large space voids
@jonathandawson3091
@jonathandawson3091 Год назад
Watching Niles videos is like watching a suspense movie where you know the hero survived (because otherwise he wouldn't have been able to make and post the video).
@callumleask2907
@callumleask2907 Год назад
Hello excuse me good person. I have not seen a new video for the last 6 months 😕. You have the most recent comment in my feed or howsoever. My intention is satisfying a curiosity, where has this individual gone. He's doing some cool shit.
@austinmoreno8486
@austinmoreno8486 Год назад
@@callumleask2907 exactly
@rexperverziff
@rexperverziff Год назад
@@callumleask2907 watch nilered shorts
@ae_bae
@ae_bae Год назад
But there still always some very small level of maybe not (in superhero stuff it like maybe this is the end of the storie) or like he did get hurt and like this actually from a long time later and he healed
@PeterOekvist
@PeterOekvist Год назад
Died from the sideeffects...
@Brandon-vo1bw
@Brandon-vo1bw 2 года назад
The cracked silica beads would probably look pretty interesting under a polariscope. Also having one is useful for seeing stress in your glassware so it might prevent the need to smash all your beakers again in the future.
@joeyjoe303
@joeyjoe303 Год назад
Nilered really needs this advice😅
@cadinkdaves6844
@cadinkdaves6844 Год назад
in that vid he talked about how using a polariscope in the beaker case would have been impractical because even if he missed one tiny stress, it could’ve been deadly
@TheEmeraldMenOfficial
@TheEmeraldMenOfficial Год назад
@@cadinkdaves6844 We do it for planes all the time with microscopic precision, for both the windows and the metal skin… His point?
@internetbodhi1009
@internetbodhi1009 Год назад
@@TheEmeraldMenOfficial time vs cost vs effort, all with risk factored in. To be 100% certain, that'd take a lot of time to check every beaker over 100%. Then you have to trust yourself, so some double checks are needed. This would take such an incredibly large amount of time and effort for little payoff, especially considering he'd need to purchase the polariscope. In the end, 99% certainty and hours later vs 100% certainty, very little time and less money just to buy new ones.
@erinmac4750
@erinmac4750 6 месяцев назад
​@@TheEmeraldMenOfficialI always wondered how they did that. Thanks ✌️😎
@Pamphleteer
@Pamphleteer 4 года назад
Opal is literally what you describe, hydrated SiO2 put under geological pressures, so congrats on making synthetic opal
@fibonojomano5369
@fibonojomano5369 4 года назад
ohhhh, cool!
@easson4841
@easson4841 4 года назад
Oh shit
@LUNUSt
@LUNUSt 4 года назад
But there is no hydration here. Thats also not how opal is structured. Opal is made of microscopically small spheres of silica, which are what give it its opalescence
@Pamphleteer
@Pamphleteer 4 года назад
​@@LUNUSt Silica beads taking out of a drying packet don't have hydration (IE after they're been expended)? he got one of the packs without color indicators so you can't tell for sure, but because they reacted as such, i think it's fair to say that they were at least partly hydrated
@LUNUSt
@LUNUSt 4 года назад
@@Pamphleteer there wasnt any significant hydration involved. The tests didnt involve water, just CO2. And it doesnt solve the issue that structurally they still arent anything like opal In opal the water is not part of the chemical formula. In silica beads that have been hydrated, it is
@AppliedScience
@AppliedScience 4 года назад
Awesome!! I'm glad the chamber is serving you well. Your videography skills are outstanding, and have such a recognizable style. I'm also glad the chamber didn't explode on you :)
@captainktainer
@captainktainer 4 года назад
Thanks for your amazing gift - this was a really interesting video and it couldn't have happened without you.
@Arnogorter
@Arnogorter 4 года назад
Ben, you're a treasure
@ikli7710
@ikli7710 4 года назад
Applied Science Thans for the gift Ben🙏🏻
@88Timur88Bahmudov88
@88Timur88Bahmudov88 4 года назад
About rainbow colored cracks - you can find something similar in ice when it cracks after being removed from the fridge, try it
@ronniebrown5769
@ronniebrown5769 4 года назад
you’re a legend
@Meewee466
@Meewee466 Год назад
I love how he goes from being really cautious with the chamber to shaking it violently like 10 minutes later
@flyingthings5194
@flyingthings5194 2 года назад
i used to work in the compressed gas and cryogenic liquid industry. my manager told me of a story once where an entire semi-trailer load of liquid CO2 was lost because the driver left the pressure relief valve open, and it all turned into a block of dry ice. that sounded like fun times!
@fredk.2001
@fredk.2001 Год назад
Vent valve more likely left open. Also, it can takes weeks to thaw out a trailer like that.
@henrycgs
@henrycgs 4 года назад
NileRed: this is basically a bomb also NileRed: *shakes it
@crocogile2352
@crocogile2352 4 года назад
HenryCGS bruv Nile red didn’t say that Nile Blue did
@VR_Miata
@VR_Miata 4 года назад
@@crocogile2352 YeAh NiLe BlUe DiD nOt NiLe ReD
@louis-philipsevigny9610
@louis-philipsevigny9610 4 года назад
😂😂😂😂😂😂😂
@Fish-Popsicle
@Fish-Popsicle 4 года назад
@@crocogile2352 NileBlue IS NileRed, just on diffrent channels.
@lolpop7799
@lolpop7799 4 года назад
@@Fish-Popsicle r/woooosh
@buffbeann
@buffbeann 4 года назад
“Let me pay for shipping” “no.” “But i-“ “no.” “Come on Ben.” “nope.”
@MsHojat
@MsHojat 4 года назад
Ben is an amazing guy.
@FunnyMemes-dr3se
@FunnyMemes-dr3se 4 года назад
👍
@stephen_l1474
@stephen_l1474 4 года назад
Thicc Fluffy and Bitter “Ben just let me pay or they are going to create conversation between us and make a comment about it” “Nope”
@Hyperlooper
@Hyperlooper 4 года назад
Toss a coin to your Witcher
@Rouverius
@Rouverius 4 года назад
"Look, I just want to...." "Ok. Byeeeeee."
@suomeaboo
@suomeaboo Год назад
Nice seeing this video featured in PBS Space Time! I've always wondered why supercritical fluids exist, and what they are like.
@bvbk8
@bvbk8 Год назад
It looks like the liquid slowly changes refraction index, until it becomes invisible to the eye. Stunning
@sympleton7439
@sympleton7439 3 года назад
"This thing is practically a live bomb" *starts violently shaking it*
@potatocheese9981
@potatocheese9981 2 года назад
Lol
@dd-bk7nd
@dd-bk7nd 2 года назад
✊𓂺
@ScienceForeverKnowYourSciences
@ScienceForeverKnowYourSciences 2 года назад
Lol
@joshuawilson7629
@joshuawilson7629 2 года назад
syense
@DrakeRiddle
@DrakeRiddle 4 года назад
The rainbows look really similar to the rainbows found in stress-fractured Quartz. The rainbows are probably caused by the cracks made by a very high pressure environment.
@thewaterfish4102
@thewaterfish4102 4 года назад
DrakeRiddle hmm I wonder why the silica beads would have the cracks, it’s not like it’s under a high pressure and environment
@IBustFatties
@IBustFatties 4 года назад
or its from thermal shock
@butterflygroundhog
@butterflygroundhog 4 года назад
@@thewaterfish4102 well, technically, the silica gel could trap CO2 in its liquid form, which will rapidly expand during the decompression phase. This can cause a lot of pressure to build and make microfractures. Now, I don't know why the beads wouldn't explode randomly, but this sounds like a reason to me.
@BeN0lf
@BeN0lf 4 года назад
Those rainbows are called iridescence btw. I think the colours seen are similar to opal, even though Nile ruled it out, see opal is also made of silica.
@mattmcmillan9245
@mattmcmillan9245 4 года назад
@@IBustFatties absolutely. When the CO2 is vented, the temperature of the fluid drops rapidly.
@aurelia8028
@aurelia8028 Год назад
8:10 This looks really cool. It's like you can still see the liquid but on the boundary it looks like it's both gassy and liquidy at the same time.
@crystaldragon471
@crystaldragon471 2 года назад
The rainbow iridescence is just light refraction between fine fractures. Light is passing through the fracture, but is split as it reflects off the conchoidial fractures (between the fractures). Opal has a similar iridescence, but opal is reflecting light through water trapped in its crystal lattice. There is quartz which is sold as jewelry and trinkets which have been stressed to a point of internally shattering. It is often referred to as "crackle quartz". That's pretty much what you have created :) Edit: as for the discoloration, would bet that it is carbon which is trapped in the microfractures. I wonder if the silica (silicon dioxide) could have decarbonated the carbon dioxide under those supercritical conditions and trapped some of the carbon as a precipitate inside the silica. Just a thought. The only other thing that changes silica brown (aside from impurities) would be irradiation (such as smoky quartz), but I don't know that supercritical CO2 is radioactive, or that it would have an irradiating effect of any kind.
@crystaldragon471
@crystaldragon471 2 года назад
Speaking of cool minerals with water in them, have you ever studied the Fourth state of water? Or looked into quantum tunneling in beryl crystals (emerald, aquamarine, red beryl, morganite, heliodor, maxixe, goeshenite)? Super interesting subject for anyone interested in quantum physics, or mineralogy.
@richardashendale922
@richardashendale922 Год назад
Here I was hoping he had mad some new type of opal that has liquid carbon instead of water trapped in the crystal lattice... ah well.
@ahorseofficial
@ahorseofficial Год назад
@@crystaldragon471 I appreciate you for mentioning this. That was a super interesting read! I read that observing the hydrogen atoms being in essentially a superposition in the hexagonal tunnels could only be observed at near absolute zero temperatures (otherwise they could just appear that way through classical physics). I want a way to confirm the tests were legitimately done at such a low temperature, however. Do you have a website that could procure the actual data?
@erinmac4750
@erinmac4750 6 месяцев назад
​@@ahorseofficialSomething I didn't realize interested me....I would be interested in that information, as well. ✌️😎
@Smittel
@Smittel 4 года назад
"I wanna make aerogel" \*makes 17 minute video of CO2 clouds\* Or in other words: how much i focus on my task every time i try to get shit done
@dennisgroxo2687
@dennisgroxo2687 4 года назад
PYXEL yeah I wanted to see him make aerogel too :(
@NileBlue
@NileBlue 4 года назад
Dont worry, aerogel will happen!
@PGMP2007
@PGMP2007 4 года назад
Very poor comment. Filled with envy.
@Smittel
@Smittel 4 года назад
@@PGMP2007 yea amazing attempt at analysis, Sigmund, but youre just a bit off.
@vincenttrigg4521
@vincenttrigg4521 4 года назад
@hentai is 4 pedophiles Now I want there to also be a Nile Purple where he just does stupid shit lol
@Aquavenn
@Aquavenn 4 года назад
Hey I’m a bit of a gem nerd, I know that there are other comments but I felt like giving you my opinion. Using silica and introducing it to high pressure and temperature is exactly how synthetic or man made gems can be made. Specifically I’m going to quote milky/greasy quartz first as it’s a silica that’s introduced to co2. “Milky Quartz is Trigonally structured gems are made of silicon dioxide, their full chemical compound being SiO2. Milky Quartz is a milky white translucent to opaque variety of crystalline quartz of somewhat greasy luster. It is the commonest variety found in pegmatites and hydrothermal veins. The color is generally caused by numerous bubbles of gas and liquid in the crystal. The milky color is caused by small cavities filled with numerous small fluids and CO2 in liquid condition. It is used as a gemstone, and also called greasy quartz.” Next this is how ‘titanium quartz’ / “aura quartz” is made. “...aura is created in a vacuum chamber from quartz crystals and gold vapour by vapour deposition. The quartz is heated to 871 °C (1600 °F) in a vacuum, and then gold vapor is added to the chamber. The gold atoms fuse to the crystal's surface, which gives the crystal an iridescent metallic sheen.” It seems the process is highly similar. Hope this helps.
@bearmauro2393
@bearmauro2393 4 года назад
This gentleman knows what he's talking about. Silica is essentially glass, pressurizing and fracturing it like that allows it to refract light in such a way as you observed.
@surajmath3527
@surajmath3527 4 года назад
@@bearmauro2393 i agree to that exactly
@IudiciumInfernalum
@IudiciumInfernalum 4 года назад
Noice.
@josephlieberman5324
@josephlieberman5324 4 года назад
highly recommend any books or papers authored by "Kurt Nassau" [Gems Made By Man], [Experimenting With Color], [[Gemstone Enhancement]
@johnkiss8804
@johnkiss8804 4 года назад
Wow right on, I mentioned above it reminded me of lapidary work I did in NC. Silver Topaz by the lb...
@Stuntman707
@Stuntman707 11 месяцев назад
This is actually really cool to see on RU-vid. Something that usually is done behind closed doors in a windowless chamber. It's all well and good studying graphs and reading text explanations, but it's so much better to see it changing state and going supercritical in person.
@Murat_Ustundag
@Murat_Ustundag Год назад
Thank you for showing and teaching us experiments that we can't see anywhere, thanks to your wonderful explanation and subject choices. I wish you safe work. Be careful
@kevinradtke3767
@kevinradtke3767 4 года назад
When I saw the title I thought: "Oh, hes making a nuclear bomb"
@hachikiina
@hachikiina 4 года назад
same honestly
@PunishedNegativeZer0
@PunishedNegativeZer0 4 года назад
If he was, would you honestly be surprised? At this rate he is going to create a human using only chemicals found within bananas.
@sawyersimpson7233
@sawyersimpson7233 4 года назад
i thought he was going to do something with plutonium
@FROSTBURG2
@FROSTBURG2 4 года назад
Well, there is something called FOGBANK, used in some thermonuclear weapons, that apparently is an aerogel.
@WowCoolHorse
@WowCoolHorse 4 года назад
Cody barely made a joke about acquiring a nuclear bomb and the fucking dept of energy raised his lab so Nile would probably do well to stay away from that stuff lol
@ExTess
@ExTess 4 года назад
This man put silicates into a pressure chamber and is suprised that he accidentally made artificial gemstones. Edit: The comments are a trainwreck and really aren't worth reading anymore, since the main antagonist who started it all has since left. Read at your own risk. Edit 2: 3 years later we find out he was banned lol. Have fun reading these
@lucaslucas191202
@lucaslucas191202 4 года назад
@Donald Kasper I mean, you'd have to argue for your opinion since there's a physicist saying it's a photonic crystal and another guy calling it a gem, both with arguments for their case. You just stated it with no proof
@lucaslucas191202
@lucaslucas191202 4 года назад
@Donald Kasper There's no reason for you to comment something and want people to believe you without proof. And now you think we want to pay you to hear *your* proof? Man, you just don't get it
@lucaslucas191202
@lucaslucas191202 4 года назад
@Donald Kasper Ay you get it now. Thanks!
@monarchatto6095
@monarchatto6095 4 года назад
Donald Kasper we just wanted you to show links as proof? bruh
@monarchatto6095
@monarchatto6095 4 года назад
Donald Kasper ok?
@XxShOoTnDiExX
@XxShOoTnDiExX 2 месяца назад
I've been watching the videos on this channel for last couple weeks and I didn't realize this was the second channel! Excited to catch some cool videos on nile red
@fappas2
@fappas2 3 месяца назад
Great video! it is so cool to wartch the transition to and from supercritical fluid. Thanks for this!
@emeka62
@emeka62 4 года назад
" It should be safe... buthesnotresponsible." LMAO.
@matrixarsmusicworkshop561
@matrixarsmusicworkshop561 4 года назад
It's* ..
@kashaf7880
@kashaf7880 4 года назад
It's* ..
@giigzin
@giigzin 4 года назад
@@kashaf7880 no?? Wtf 😂
@kashaf7880
@kashaf7880 4 года назад
@@giigzin Yes*
@emeka62
@emeka62 4 года назад
1AngryCheese no?? Wtf 😂
@sarahmanier6782
@sarahmanier6782 3 года назад
“It didn’t blow up and kill me, so a huge thanks goes out to Ben.” Agreed.
@ga5712
@ga5712 Год назад
It would be interesting to see a laser beam going through the fluids and looking at the refraction
@juancorrearuiz5366
@juancorrearuiz5366 5 месяцев назад
Hi Nile, thank you so much for showing this. I have been working with supercritical CO2 lately to foam polymers. I agree with you about the microcracks forming when rapid depressurizing your chamber. When doing so, the fluid expands so quickly that the silica cracks. I think the coloring comes from birefringence. This is very cool to see. Looking forward to seeing more of your videos!
@BlackGryph0n
@BlackGryph0n 3 года назад
15:05 Considering that opal is fractured, water-impregnated silica, the effect might actually be very similar to opal! The cracks are thin enough to refract light and scatter its wavelengths, causing iridescence (like in hummingbird feathers or certain beetle wings)!
@harrietramos8691
@harrietramos8691 3 года назад
It's so beautiful! At 13:40 you can see a perfect example of Rayleigh scattering. First you can see a flash of blue haze (particles less than 1/10th of a micron = Rayleigh scattering) which quickly turns into 'white clouds' (particles larger than 0.5 microns) which is in the Mie scattering domain. You should try to shine a white light through it from behind whilst going through the Rayleigh scattering phase - the light should turn orange (just like during the sunset). It's like you have a sky in a jar.
@maxboskeljon6440
@maxboskeljon6440 3 года назад
oh wow hey Black Gryph0n
@BillAnt
@BillAnt 3 года назад
He made synthetic diamonds... and don't even know it. jk ;D
@waterdrinker4839
@waterdrinker4839 3 года назад
@@harrietramos8691 did you just completely copy and paste someone else’s comment
@johnsonman6261
@johnsonman6261 3 года назад
It's so beautiful! At 13:40 you can see a perfect example of Rayleigh scattering. First you can see a flash of blue haze (particles less than 1/10th of a micron = Rayleigh scattering) which quickly turns into 'white clouds' (particles larger than 0.5 microns) which is in the Mie scattering domain. You should try to shine a white light through it from behind whilst going through the Rayleigh scattering phase - the light should turn orange (just like during the sunset).
@jan-seli
@jan-seli 4 года назад
"in theory it's kind of like a bomb and could explode at any time, but it should be safe!"
@wesleymays1931
@wesleymays1931 4 года назад
"Buuut he's not responsible."
@vincenttrigg4521
@vincenttrigg4521 4 года назад
☢️💥🙂
@checksum00
@checksum00 4 года назад
Well there's a relief valve if you remarked. Always put a relief valve on your shit under pressure.
@waltersobchak7275
@waltersobchak7275 4 года назад
Not the proper use of the word theory
@pineapple7024
@pineapple7024 4 года назад
Walter Sobchak Kinda is, though.
@DontMockMySmock
@DontMockMySmock Год назад
Around 10-11 minutes, i find it really interesting how you can see the index of refraction changing and eventually equalizing with the gas
@mendezticker4043
@mendezticker4043 Год назад
This is so f-ing cool. Please never stop making content!!!
@clemensruis
@clemensruis 4 года назад
It's so beautiful! At 13:40 you can see a perfect example of Rayleigh scattering. First you can see a flash of blue haze (particles less than 1/10th of a micron = Rayleigh scattering) which quickly turns into 'white clouds' (particles larger than 0.5 microns) which is in the Mie scattering domain. You should try to shine a white light through it from behind whilst going through the Rayleigh scattering phase - the light should turn orange (just like during the sunset). It's like you have a sky in a jar.
@spartanwar1185
@spartanwar1185 4 года назад
That may very likely explain why in his "making aerogel" video, at some point involving supercritical CO2, the chamber looked like it was lit with some kind of orange light, while on the other side from the camera there was a large white flashlight
@clemensruis
@clemensruis 4 года назад
@@spartanwar1185 Yes, exactly. I also explained that on the other video.
@nahfid2003
@nahfid2003 4 года назад
Hmmm
@luiysia
@luiysia 4 года назад
omg awesome 😍
@alexanderdickerson5836
@alexanderdickerson5836 3 года назад
I dont know why I love Raleigh scattering so much. It's the coolest thing we see literally every day that approximately 0% of educated people have ever even heard of
@blubery.
@blubery. 3 года назад
Nilered: *strict* Nilered shorts: let’s do fun stuff but also be safe! Nileblue: M E m E s
@AsterSkotos24
@AsterSkotos24 2 года назад
NileGreen: CHAOS!
@LetsGo_SVT
@LetsGo_SVT 2 года назад
@@AsterSkotos24 omg you watch it too 😂🤣
@matthewdick3591
@matthewdick3591 2 года назад
@@AsterSkotos24 lmao i was about to comment something on that as well
@ADIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII
@ADIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII 2 года назад
its the opposite
@blubery.
@blubery. 2 года назад
@@AsterSkotos24 and then theres nilegreen nilegreen: what the fuck im i doing
@michaelsorensen7567
@michaelsorensen7567 Год назад
The light bending shifted as it went super critical around 10:40. That was interesting to watch. You can see the distortion on the back nut starts with a hard crease, which softens, rounds out, then disappears
@John-of5ud
@John-of5ud 2 года назад
My favorite experiment you've done so far!
@CasabaHowitzer
@CasabaHowitzer 4 года назад
"It could explode at any time and it's kind of like a bomb but... it should be safe."
@historyatwar6230
@historyatwar6230 3 года назад
Yeah its safe I thi...... BOOOOM!!!
@jackmills5071
@jackmills5071 4 года назад
Get a torque wrench for the bolts, one of the most handy tools to have.
@FridgidIdgit
@FridgidIdgit 4 года назад
And a bench vise
@enjoyingthecrisis5931
@enjoyingthecrisis5931 4 года назад
@@FridgidIdgit And a sheet of seaboard so you can cut and drill it into some cheap HDPE vice jaws to not mar everything you put in there without fiddling with wrapping it in neoprene sheet stolen from free tradeshow mouse pads or sheets of 1/2 felt. Advice from your friendly neighborhood armorer.
@Kenionatus
@Kenionatus 4 года назад
He'd still need to figure out how much to tighten it. The wrench doesn't tell you how many Nm you need to set it to.
@jackmills5071
@jackmills5071 4 года назад
@@Kenionatus make a mock-up of the same materials, wench it until the threads fail, subtract 20 foot pounds off of that, then you have a reference. At the very least, it would allow all of the bolts to be set at the same torque to prevent warping.
@SeanBZA
@SeanBZA 4 года назад
@@Kenionatus With the size of the bolts you just tighten them to the manufacturers recommended torque setting, from the datasheet for that diameter capscrew. Simplest method without torque measuring is to simply add a Belleville washer to the head side, so that when it is just flat you have a very well determined tension on the bolt. Probably a parallel stack of 3 washers with 10mm hole will work best there per bolt, giving a replicable tightening torque. This is common on things that need a set torque, but which are used in the field where you might not have torque wrenches available. Most common use I see is on electric cable joints, where you need a minimum contact pressure to prevent heating, and the washer also provides a small amount of compliance for material creep as well.
@isodoubIet
@isodoubIet 2 года назад
Some of the initial cloudiness that appears when you vent the chamber, depending on the exact temperature and pressure, might be critical opalescence. At the critical point correlation lengths go to infinity, so density fluctuations happen at all scales, so you get a whole bunch of Rayleigh scattering -- the same phenomenon that makes the sky blue. Probably also the reason for the cloudy layer between the soon-to-disappear liquid and gas phases.
@adnandada7458
@adnandada7458 Год назад
Love your work man. As for the beads at the end, that's structure created by chemistry. It seems to me that the pressure made the co2 sneek in and interaction with soluble silicates created this crystal lattice. Imagine polishing it and peering in it like a gemstone. I hope you make such a video. Cya;
@tzisorey
@tzisorey 4 года назад
"It's kinda like a bomb, and could explode at any time" I was gonna say that you're gonna be on a list, now - but lets be brutally honest... You've been on that list for YEARS. ;)
@tzisorey
@tzisorey 4 года назад
@Kyle Collins Definitely
@hauntedhunter8377
@hauntedhunter8377 4 года назад
@Kyle Collins sorta hard to avoid these days. I was streamin' some classical the other night. There came a knockin' at my door. I answered it. It was two Men In Black. One said, "We are required to inform you: we are aware of your recent activity." The other one said, "Especially tonight." They turned to leave. "Wait," I said. "What do you mean?" As they went out the first one said, " You were listening to classical music." I said, "So?" "So," he said, "We have you on a Liszt."
@TheFuryal2
@TheFuryal2 4 года назад
@@hauntedhunter8377 i needed to read that 2 times to get it. lol
@michaelzheng5250
@michaelzheng5250 4 года назад
Michael Austin *Ba-dum tsssss*
@hauntedhunter8377
@hauntedhunter8377 4 года назад
@Michael Zheng --- Thank you, thank you, & good night. Donations appreciated! Except for Donations of Constantine -- unless John Constantine. No original Magna Chartas, either. The Brits would Hunt. Me. Down. To the End of Space & Time. & then do excessive things to my mind, body & soul. I quail at the thought. Gamble's Quail, in fact, plus the odd bobwhite. No dove, though, or partridge.
@RapierNeedleCrime
@RapierNeedleCrime 4 года назад
I love how nonchalantly you mention that it could just explode in your face
@josephbrownlee43
@josephbrownlee43 4 года назад
I believe that is because he records the narration separate from the video. It's easy to be casual if the thing you're talking about doesn't directly affect you.
@sas3dx
@sas3dx 4 года назад
Take a look at steam trains explosions images
@KooblyK
@KooblyK 4 года назад
Chemists cannot feel fear
@johncrowerdoe5527
@johncrowerdoe5527 4 года назад
@@josephbrownlee43 Grew up hearing stories of steely eyed engineers casually talking about the death toll (thousands) if the thing next to them explodes, and steely eyed craftsmen talking about near death falling on construction sites. Most of those family members lived into their 80s or more. Knowing and talking about the exact dangers you face helps you to deal with it and come out alive.
@smass8586
@smass8586 Год назад
Try slowly venting it to avoid cracks to see if film interface or crystalline structure
@CookedMeat
@CookedMeat Год назад
These are some really precious footage. I kinda feel impressed that science is no longer exclusive to scientists locked behind lab doors of cooperation or institutions. Instead people could conduct different scales of experiment, catalogue their observations and contribute to our species' understanding of this universe. And more amazingly, these results can be easily accessed via internet. Great video!
@FrostFire2002
@FrostFire2002 3 года назад
I love science cause anytime that the phrase “it didn’t blow up and kill me” is applicable means there’s som cool shit going on
@thedescendedangel
@thedescendedangel 2 года назад
If I poke with a stick will it explode- scientist guy I gueass
@awareqwx
@awareqwx Год назад
@@thedescendedangel Azidoazide azide will blow up if you look at it funny
@lochnessamonster1912
@lochnessamonster1912 4 года назад
When you’re tightening bolts on something like this, do one and then the bolt directly across from it. Repeat until all are tight. That’s the safest way with high pressure applications.
@crf80fdarkdays
@crf80fdarkdays 4 года назад
Torquing them would also be a good idea
@FastForwardPlans
@FastForwardPlans 4 года назад
That is generally how you should do any bolt tightening, including your tires for your car.
@thysonsacclaim
@thysonsacclaim 3 года назад
You should do them in that criss crossing, but not all at once. You tighten one a bit, then the one across a bit. Problem he has is doing it fast enough.
@tylerwright6006
@tylerwright6006 3 года назад
I feel like this man knows how to change his car tires :p lol.
@Zawmbbeh
@Zawmbbeh 3 года назад
same with drum heads!!
@user-mn5im7vb8k
@user-mn5im7vb8k 2 месяца назад
This is very interesting and helpful for me! Working in Refrigeration with Co2 as refrigerant since last April.
@joshrich507
@joshrich507 2 года назад
Real talk, you get my like, cause that was a dope outro piece of music.
@raffaeledivora9517
@raffaeledivora9517 4 года назад
As a physicist I can tell you you made a "photonic crystal" out of those beads (that's the theoretical name of this particular object). What's happening is that the micro-cracks induced in the spheres by the stresses have a very fine and ordered (quasi-periodical) structure; as a result some wavelenghts cannot propagate through that structure and get reflected (the real underlying mechanism has to do with the regular structure creating a bandgap in the phonon dispersion structure of the material if I'm not mistaken, but I'm not an expert). It is through that mechanism that all iridescent butterflies get their colour, and indeed an opal is another sample of natural photonic crystal. Btw, photonic crystals are widely used in modern technology due to their very peculiar properties.
@josephlieberman5324
@josephlieberman5324 4 года назад
highly recommend any books or papers authored by "Kurt Nassau" [Gems Made By Man], [Experimenting With Color], [[Gemstone Enhancement]
@Aphelia.
@Aphelia. 4 года назад
"I'm not an expert" *explains everything so beautifully*
@shabonsong
@shabonsong 4 года назад
fantastic comment!
@clayw9905
@clayw9905 4 года назад
Could the properties be due to birefringence.
@nothingisreal6816
@nothingisreal6816 4 года назад
Donald Kasper Shut up, you're ruining the fun :(
@TomKappeln
@TomKappeln 3 года назад
Nile : "Going supercritical ..." Me : Waiting for 2 Plutonium half balls and a screwdriver ...
@juno4127
@juno4127 3 года назад
Thats exactly where my mind went when i read the title
@beesandwich3366
@beesandwich3366 2 года назад
@@juno4127 same
@NightskySkyler
@NightskySkyler 2 года назад
@@juno4127 SAME
@speedslayerr
@speedslayerr 2 года назад
Great nerd reference
@cholm2070
@cholm2070 2 года назад
Not quite, but you got the spirit of it
@livipup
@livipup 2 года назад
I've never thought of it before, but usually people think of phase changes as linear. That's how I generally think of them too even though I've seen live demonstrations using dry ice and I'm familiar with concepts like the triple point. I didn't really hit me until I was watching this video that solid CO2 is called dry ice because it doesn't ever get wet. It skips melting and goes straight to evaporating. That sounds obvious, but I guess even something obvious can go unnoticed if you just never think about it. I appreciate videos like these that help me get a better understanding of topics like these :)
@serenityempressmomma2017
@serenityempressmomma2017 8 месяцев назад
Thank you for doing what you do it sounds so interesting and very Intriguing and what you guys do . Have a blessed day. I’m from an Alaskan Island horn and raised tell I loved to pnw in 2020 still not have adapted. As others have wanted me to fail.
@DanteTorn
@DanteTorn 4 года назад
13:44 "Mirror mirror on the wall, show me a random pile of silica pellets."
@joshdeighton8636
@joshdeighton8636 4 года назад
Dante Torn lmao
@skylerdickson2939
@skylerdickson2939 4 года назад
this is a great example of an excellent comment
@maddog7795
@maddog7795 4 года назад
The Disney quote is magic mirror on the wall not mirror mirror
@pemo2676
@pemo2676 4 года назад
@@maddog7795 Shut the fuck up
@joshdeighton8636
@joshdeighton8636 4 года назад
maddog you gay
@MrLucky5001
@MrLucky5001 4 года назад
17:41 lol I didn't even notice this wasn't your main channel until you mentioned it
@ricardasist
@ricardasist 4 года назад
Same as I just clicked the notification
@HaloWolf102
@HaloWolf102 4 года назад
I got a notification with a channel I'm not subscribed to, but not the ones I actually have the bell enabled.....k.
@di5963
@di5963 4 года назад
Same
@uwezimmermann5427
@uwezimmermann5427 4 года назад
I also completely don't care whether it's red or blue...
@Goober_gobbler
@Goober_gobbler 4 месяца назад
This is the perfect procrastination video, I know im supposed to be doing something else but i dont feel guilty about it cause its actually so cool and interesting and i feel like im learning
@derskalde4973
@derskalde4973 2 года назад
My guess, these tiny crags in those silica beads acted similar to a prism, breaking the light. I own a small natural crystal I bought at a souvenir shop over a decade ago during a school trip. That Crystal has a few similar looking crags in it, which, if you position it right, creates some little rainbows in it.
@abyss5037
@abyss5037 4 года назад
New title idea: “Playing god with the properties of state changes with the ever looming danger of a pressure filled acrylic glass bomb going off in front of my face for views”
@eertikrux666
@eertikrux666 3 года назад
He would get twice the views
@monirhasan3248
@monirhasan3248 3 года назад
Alternative title : I found liquid-gas
@beepbeepcasucha
@beepbeepcasucha 3 года назад
You really fit your username
@QuinnEthanR
@QuinnEthanR 3 года назад
I think you're forgetting that my man is doing this for fun AND for views
@Yora21
@Yora21 3 года назад
Not for views. For science!!!
@joshuataylor2497
@joshuataylor2497 3 года назад
Nile : he wouldn’t let me pay for shipping That’s wholesome
@chessbae5138
@chessbae5138 3 года назад
Yeah i loved it
@dorgan8777
@dorgan8777 3 года назад
You have triple 6 likes as of the making of this comment
@ratatouilledrinksclorax9897
@ratatouilledrinksclorax9897 3 года назад
You have 969 likes Edit: i ruined the number lol
@pureprogress9359
@pureprogress9359 3 года назад
He just knew he was going to get exposure on his own channel that's why he gave it for free
@xaqvr9151
@xaqvr9151 3 года назад
@@pureprogress9359 fuck off
@supervidere7
@supervidere7 Год назад
Very good closing scene. Well done.
@theforge129
@theforge129 Год назад
With the kind of stuff you do, I was genuinely expecting the other type of supercritical
@NightRunner417
@NightRunner417 3 года назад
0:19 - Unintentional epic demonstration of how the gravitational constant simply _does not care_ how massive a volume is with regard to freefall. Same envelope, same rate of downward acceleration. It's elegant.
@sourcandy_account3632
@sourcandy_account3632 2 года назад
i mean you could bought two bottles but the other one is full, and the other one is empty and drop it down.
@ScienceForeverKnowYourSciences
@ScienceForeverKnowYourSciences 2 года назад
Thanks Mr scientist
@ardenfaust2527
@ardenfaust2527 2 года назад
This was a really nice way of describing what I was thinking in less caveman speak, thanks
@just_a_dustpan
@just_a_dustpan 2 года назад
Woah you’re right! I didn’t realize but that’s so much cooler than I thought!
@olimincraft4867
@olimincraft4867 2 года назад
@@sourcandy_account3632 There would be a difference in acceleration, as the difference in mass would impact how easily the bottle would go trough the air
@GMCLabs
@GMCLabs 4 года назад
Ben sure is a nice guy isn't he? He's gotta be one of my favorite youtubers, really wish he made more videos. But I'll take the quality over quantity.
@verdatum
@verdatum 4 года назад
Exactly. I happily support him on patreon and don't mind at all when he goes silent for a little while, because he always comes back with something amazing.
@xenonram
@xenonram 4 года назад
@@rlev5398 dude, gtfo with that nonsense. You've spammed this video with your stupid begging.
@thecodewarrior7925
@thecodewarrior7925 4 года назад
@Ring Ring wait whaaaaat?!?!
@checksum00
@checksum00 4 года назад
Definitely, Ben is one of the rare RU-vidr that I'm sure he's not slacking or dropped off the face of the earth if he doesn't post for 6 months. His videos are so high quality, I'm actually surprised he managed to make so much of them.
@sillywilli.27
@sillywilli.27 2 года назад
I just learned about this in chem and now i got recommended the video, cool how stuff works like that
@hannankruger4315
@hannankruger4315 2 года назад
15:00 the stone "opal" is made mainly out of silica. That silica presipitates out of water and creates microscopic silica crystals that are joined together along with some water molecules. The wired color changing behavior that opal shows it called "iridescence" and in this case it's cause by light shining through the tiny silica cristals and then getting split as it passes through because of the tiny gaps between the crystals. Maybe something similar is happening with this silica beeds, but in this case carbon dioxide molecules got trapped inside of the tiny microscopic cracks that it created, and the light is getting split as it passes through because the gaps are just big enough to only allow certain wavelength to pass.
@Canetoady
@Canetoady 11 месяцев назад
No opal is made out of microscopic spheres which are glued together with silica
@hannankruger4315
@hannankruger4315 11 месяцев назад
@@Canetoady what do you think the spheres are made out of?
@Canetoady
@Canetoady 11 месяцев назад
@@hannankruger4315 you said they are made of microscopic crystals that are made of silica
@ikchess
@ikchess 4 года назад
CO2 critical pressure is 1070 psi, so it's a nice observation that you'd see the phase boundary re-established where you did. I did my PhD looking at oxidation reactions in supercritical water (much higher temp/pressure so we need sapphire windows, or the like to be able to see the liquid/vapour boundary disappear) so was fascinated with this video - really good job of visualising a really interesting aspect of thermophysical behaviour. I might have been a little more careful with a pressurised container, though!
@MegaShiney99
@MegaShiney99 3 года назад
Very interesting
@wannabewallaby1592
@wannabewallaby1592 3 года назад
your work sounds super interesting! I'm pretty sure I wouldn't understand your paper, but I would like to see what happens irl
@snaeshaads8203
@snaeshaads8203 4 года назад
10:52 "showing a little bit of pressure" *gage shows something like 25 bar*
@tubeland344
@tubeland344 4 года назад
The gauge shows Psi, not Atm
@ehsnils
@ehsnils 4 года назад
@@tubeland344 The black scale is PSI, the red is bar - and the top value was like 40 bar/500psi, so no the gauge WAS NOT BROKEN, it was perfectly OK.
@jimwang4011
@jimwang4011 4 года назад
the old pressure is good. just different range
@paavobergmann4920
@paavobergmann4920 4 года назад
critical point is 31°C / 73,4bar.....reachable, but...no joke
@waterlife.1905
@waterlife.1905 Год назад
I see a pair of JBL LSR305s!!!!! I have them too. Amazing monitors. No matter where you stand in the room you can hear both them. Amazing stereo image and very clean accurate sound. JBL Professional is good stuff. Huge respect Nileblue!
@detlefschrempf5387
@detlefschrempf5387 2 года назад
The colorfull cracks you saw in your silika beads indeed looked like thin gaps, that have a width in the range of the wavelength of visible light. The same and more uniform you can achieve when you put two supper smooth glassurfaces together. What you will see is called Newton's rings. That was an awesome video and the effect of CO2 gas becoming more dense than the liquid is astonishing. I allready liked it over on Ben Krasnow's channal. I just saw that Black Gryph0n already said the same thing...
@_g_520
@_g_520 3 года назад
This man doesn’t buy things itself, he buys the material for it and makes it for our entertainment
@bruhmomment2999
@bruhmomment2999 3 года назад
yeah
@Chewyshoot
@Chewyshoot 4 года назад
"supercritical" is just such a cool term in general
@StefanReich
@StefanReich 4 года назад
I am supercritical of your general behavior (just an example sentence)
@TheMilmino
@TheMilmino 4 года назад
It was supercritical that you made that comment.
@_BangDroid_
@_BangDroid_ 4 года назад
The word will take off any day now, it's at a supercritical mass
@greatscott636
@greatscott636 Год назад
Star pattern tightening. Very nice!
@marija6113
@marija6113 2 года назад
absolutely amazing!
@briangeer1024
@briangeer1024 4 года назад
Man, everything we learn in high school is either a simplification, generalization or lie.
@guy3nder529
@guy3nder529 4 года назад
and none of it translates to real life skills
@anotherguy1260
@anotherguy1260 4 года назад
Because kids in highschool are idiots incapable of grasping the bigger picture. AKA undeveloped brains.
@pugmaster0008
@pugmaster0008 4 года назад
Just like my history class. Imagine going to history to learn about world wars and stuff and instead u learn about hippies. idek anymore.
@jaxonm530
@jaxonm530 4 года назад
@@anotherguy1260 bruh
@SkinnyBlackout
@SkinnyBlackout 4 года назад
@@anotherguy1260 Not necessarily that. Most of the time it's just unwillingness to learn, lack of interest, which result in quick loss or poor understanding of acquired information.
@fredk4745
@fredk4745 3 года назад
"Going Supercritical" Me: "oh cool he's making a nuke"
@madladdie7069
@madladdie7069 3 года назад
Yeah that's what I thought too. Even though I had recently read about supercritical fluids.
@James-kd6kf
@James-kd6kf 2 года назад
That was my dad's thought reading out the title, he's worked as a safety operator at Hanford.
@1224chrisng
@1224chrisng 2 года назад
the FBI watching Cody'sLab be like:
@gaia35
@gaia35 11 месяцев назад
7:55 Something notable that was mentioned once. The waving that happens with the very still horizon of the liquid and seeing the waves of the liquid take on a turbulent waving cloud formation.
@mintytavor8332
@mintytavor8332 Год назад
your videos are more educational than any of my lectures or English classes
@Ruskaga
@Ruskaga 2 года назад
An interesting experiment might be to first shine a laser through the enclosure when it's empty and then later when it's filled with supercritical CO2, and measure the difference in diffraction.
@user-pr6ed3ri2k
@user-pr6ed3ri2k Год назад
your coment has 42likes blweird
@myspacemodulator
@myspacemodulator Год назад
This could be very dangerous with certain supercrititcal elements right? Simple light passing through certain elements in this state might not be very dangerous, but think about how accelerated photons do cause friction enough to do what we see lasers doing already. I'm willing to bet that stimulated emission of radiation on supercritical materials could be used to annihilate atoms in ways that with certain elements could potentially make glycerol trinitrate look like pop-its and nukes look like firecrackers Or do I just have an overactive imagination?
@joeligma4721
@joeligma4721 Год назад
@@myspacemodulator Overactive imagination considering he had the lights on and there was no boom
@giran4914
@giran4914 11 месяцев назад
@@joeligma4721lasers and light bulbs are different lmao
@giran4914
@giran4914 11 месяцев назад
@@joeligma4721definitely wouldn’t be like nuke tho
@lichewitz8905
@lichewitz8905 4 года назад
I get so freaking hyped whenever there's a new video!
@Queer_Nerd_For_Human_Justice
Those silica beads are beautiful!
@fetamean
@fetamean Год назад
I'm sorry but 8:21 the reflections in the background make the hazy CO2 look like a foggy mountain range or plains. Beautiful work. I love how it looks like it's raining when you cool it down.
@1Jamesinator
@1Jamesinator 3 года назад
This Comment is specifically to remind Nilered that it's "about a year ago" that he discovered the silica bead cracking thing and that he should do a video on it already
@istealstreetsigns
@istealstreetsigns Год назад
Why didn’t he mention that opals are literally formed from silicon dioxide and water
@epicguitar1602
@epicguitar1602 3 года назад
Nile: casually jostles 5+Atmospheres of pressure in one hand
@planet3333
@planet3333 2 года назад
Would be amazing to see this done in a miniature world where you would control the weather like this this and make some really cool scenes or photos of art
@madezra64
@madezra64 Год назад
I have work tomorrow and need to finish my InTune training. That means now is the best time to watch a chemistry video for 20 minutes!!!
@lexuankhoi-james3657
@lexuankhoi-james3657 4 года назад
NileBlue: is interested in aerogel Also NileBlue: *makes a 20-minute video about supercritical carbon dioxide*
@RCichard
@RCichard 4 года назад
4:25 - Two words for you from your mechanic buddy Trikie_Dik.... TORQUE WRENCH! Hardware has grades or classes (depending on imperial vs metric) and those all have set torque specs where the hardware can be set to maximum tightness without causing damage. Keep in mind your host material being clamped may not be able to withstand those max values - but you can do some trial and error, find the key value for your application, and repeat those steps for future iterations of the same test.
@komerka35
@komerka35 2 года назад
10:55 "A little bit of pressure" meanwhile it shows 40 bar
@DawnBooks
@DawnBooks Год назад
I definitely didnt assume you were going to make aerogel and I was really disappointed you hadn't shared it here.
@BloodAsp
@BloodAsp 4 года назад
Chopping ice this year, I fractured a chunk such that a fissure crack inside of a crystal clear block produced a rainbow. I thought it was either acting as a prysm, or the prospect of it being a thin film interference made me giddy. The effect was beautiful! So glad I had my camera, though pictures never come out as good as real life. The internet made me do it: imgur.com/gallery/8WDdHkm Enjoy! I would be curious to hear why people think it is either a prysm or TFI effect we are seeing.
@bads
@bads 4 года назад
Link to the picture
@jadeblades
@jadeblades 4 года назад
Could you upload them to an imgur album and send us the link?
@wizzerd229
@wizzerd229 4 года назад
Woah
@pooounderscoreman
@pooounderscoreman 4 года назад
Pics or it didn't happen 😉
@wheeler2137
@wheeler2137 4 года назад
I want to see these pictures
@MrMartinSchou
@MrMartinSchou 4 года назад
A bit late to the party, but if you're doing this again try adding grains of sand and a magnetic stirrer rod. That will allow you to really show turbulence in the super critical fluid.
@dubbleyou248
@dubbleyou248 3 года назад
Good idea
@Nat-oj2uc
@Nat-oj2uc Год назад
13:20 awesome proof😍. Those tiny pieces move like it's fluid
@evadefromfriday202
@evadefromfriday202 2 года назад
Nile red is that one science man that fascinates people while also making them completely confused
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