How does Fluoroantimonic Acid react to an iPhone 7? I decided to find the answer! FACEBOOK: / techrax TWITTER: / techrax INSTAGRAM: / techrax Music: Anikdote - Imma Killa [NCS Release]
It also melts through glass and needs to be stored in special containers it will also create a deadly gas when it comes in contact with with the battery. Also its not clear. This video is BS
->The bootle not melted -> He still had bowl -> HE still had table -> HE still had floor -> HE still had gloves -> HE still had hands -> He's still alive -> Acid didnt exploded (I heard fluoroantimonic acid exploded even in moisture in air)
That was antimony pentafluoride, which to be made into fluoroantimonic must be combined with hydrofluoric acid/hydrogen fluoride. So yes, he did buy "fluorantimonic acid", but it was not activated properly.
It's not antimony pentafluoride. You can see that the label really does say "hydrogen hexafluoroantimonate" and it has the correct CAS number. It should be a liquid though so I'm guessing that it expired or wasn't properly stored.
My guess is that he purchased Fluoroantimonic acid and someone with some chemistry knowledge scammed him and sent him something else. Probably for the better since he would have killed himself with the real stuff!!
If this Acid is crystalizied it can explode at any given moment aslong as there‘s even a tiny bit air so I don‘t think it‘s real it would just explode in the house, and the phone would be gone in seconds.
@@assootoshmotah2350 yeah I am surprised even in glasial state it could actually do some damage I think it is because the water came from the water vapour from the surroundings
lemme tell you: you did NOT have pure fluoroantimonic acid in that pathetic plastic bottle. Literally the only way you could contain such a disgustingly powerful corrosive agent is with materials that have carbon-florine bonds, the strongest bonds in organic chemistry, and for it to be diluted. Amusingly enough, you could just use Teflon (yes, the same stuff on nonstick pans and car gears as semi-permenant lubricant) because it is the most easily available and best of these type of bonds. That bottle was NOT made of Teflon but of a plastic polymer, and was full of impurities. If it was pure... dear God in heaven. It wouldn't have just melted the phone and glass. If it was 100% pure, there is absolutely nothing that would stop that terrifying chemical. No gloves, no marble, not even Teflon can store pure Fluoroantimonic acid. It will eat through anything and everything it comes across until it has fully released all of its excess protons. Think of how long that could take 100g sulfuric acid and how much space it could take up. Now multiply it's destructive power by this number, and you might get an idea of what we are dealing with here: 10,000,000,000,000,000,000,000. If you don't believe that it was impure or how powerful it is, then consider this: this IS the single most powerful protinating agent that we know of that has been tested by many thousands of chemists. It barely reacted, even in the few spots of liquid there were, with the aluminum phone back. Then take a look at how much damage the sulfuric acid did to the phone in mere seconds, and keep in mind that fluoroantimonic acid is 10^22 times stronger than sulfuric acid, and the sulfuric acid was diluted with water. If there was even 1% of that superacid in every drop that landed on that phone, it would have melted the phone in seconds, blown up the lithium ion battery, dissolved the glass, and then the table and bits of the floor until it was just a tiny dot of organic goop. For more info, watch Scishow's "5 dangerous chemicals" video.
This acid reacts very violently with water. Even moisture in the air could cause it to explode. This guy is just letting it chill in his house overnight, while letting the toxic fumes it releases into his house... seems kinda fishy
This idea was disproven in ChemicalForce's video, where he demonstrates that Fluroantimonic acid isn't this "super melting acid" people think it to be. He even uses glass to transport it at times. It also doesn't explode with water. ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-UWBNcMyfiGQ.html
First, with your level of knowledge you are really going to hurt yourself messing with this stuff, how did you get your hands on these acids? Next, an acid is a compound that when dissolved in water donates hydrogen ions. But your fluoroantimonic acid reacts explosively with water so you would have to use Hydrofluoric acid for it to protonated. The crystals were likely reacting with the moisture in the air over time to create the acid. Which it's good you didn't create it because you would have had a real mess on your hands. Next, yes it is the 'strongest acid' but it's important to remember that acids don't just dissolve whatever they touch. For example there are acids that can breakdown steel but wouldn't react with a banana. Fluoroantimonic acid would be the exemption though since it really does dissolve almost anything.. Which I'm glad you were smart enough to still not touch the phone but basically your test proved nothing. We already know what sulfuric acid does to organic material but not an iPhone and you technically didn't have fluoroantimonic acid.. Oh! One more thing! Let's say you did have fluoroantimonic acid, what would you have done when it quickly made its way to the battery, caused an explosion throwing all of the remaining acid from your glass tub onto you and your face? Or best case scenario what was your plan if it quickly went through phone, glass, and then table?
Appreciate clearing that up...so basically I just had to mix it with HF acid? How fast do you think it would eat the iPhone and get to the battery at that point?
it says aqueous solution on the bottle, but fluoroantimonic acid can't be used in an aqueous solution... so you either got scammed, are scamming your viewers, or both
Guys, it's still really cool, and your ruining the entertainment with comments like this, so if you don't like it, fine, but don't ruin it for everyone else
Ruin what? Nothing happened because the acid wasn't nearly as strong as it should have been. the only the effect it had was that it ate the paint of the back of the phone
Fluoroantimonic acid explodes with water, and the bottle clearly says "In aqueous solution 60%-70%". Also, the name ends in "antimonate". What you bought must be fluoroantimonate, which the salt of the acid. And you are lucky they sent you the salt. You could be probably dead if you had manipulated real Fluoroantimonic acid like you did on the video. "Basically any exposure of the acid to the human body via breathing or skin contact is going to be too corrosive and too toxic that it is lethal with no countermeasure to survive. The acid can also eat through glass and many other types of containment. It shouldn't be handled directly by humans." And yeah, the iPhone will be completelly dissolved in few seconds. (and the glass plate, and the table, and probably the floor under it depending on how much you poor), only the gold and platinum parts will resist. This thing is 20 quintilion times stronger than sulfuric acid.
This isn't full potency fluoroanitmonic acid, I'm a fan but I'm sorry man you've been scammed. Under full potency it would certainly dissolve even the glass bowl it was poured into. Biggest clue of a scam? The bottle the acid is stored in says "rinse skin with water" in case of contact. Water will explosively decompose real fluoroantimonic acid. Not only that, but even a day with high humidity will result in violent decomposition. No authentic chemical distributer would list this instruction on what is the strongest acid we have ever produced. You likely were given a diluted or lower potency version of the acid, which unfortunately would likely render it to no longer be the superacid you expected. We measure superacids on their ability to share a proton and rip electrons away from their atoms (what makes acids, well, acids), and this more closely resembles a weak acid. The resultant fumes, for one, would have been incredibly toxic and wreaked havoc on your lungs and skin, having little to no problem dissolving any clothing it contacted. What you bought may very well have been a superacid, one with an exceptionally low Hammett Acidity Function, but it's not what you thought it was. Take carborane, for example: it's something like a million times stronger than sulfuric acid (conjecture, I could look it up, but clicking to a new tab and searching is a lot of work), but it's noncorrosive. The reason is that it shares protons in such great quantity that the material it's supposed to be shearing electrons away from essentially becomes stable, and it is what we would call a "gentle" superacid. Also, fluoroantimonic acid doesn't have a pH of -31, it has a Hammett Acidity Function of that number, however to be calculated under pH scale requirements it would need an excess of 10^31 moles of an aqueous cation per liter. That's 10,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000 moles. Or one metric fuck-ton of moles. Letting you know so you can have an idea of what to look out for if you do another science-adjacent video. If you need a consultant for a future idea, DM me and I'll likely be able to assist. I'm an engineer and have studied and worked in several scientific mediums.
This idea was disproven in ChemicalForce's video, where he demonstrates that Fluroantimonic acid isn't this "super melting acid" people think it to be. He even uses glass to transport it at times. It also doesn't explode with water. ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-UWBNcMyfiGQ.html
For those who don't know, flouroantimonic acid reacts violently, as in explodes, not just with water but also particles in the air. So that is definitely not flouroantimonic acid.
what he had was basicly flouroantominic acid in a deactivated form. In order for it to actually be what people think of as flouroantominic acid though he would have to mix it with hydrogen fluoride. This creates the activated acid that eats though pretty much everything. In its deactivated state it no more powerful than sulfuric acid. They put it in the crystalline salt form in order to ship the chemical safely and the chemist is expected to mix it with the hydrogen fluoride
@@KClO3 Because the actual worlds strongest acid has to be stored in a Teflon contain, not a plastic bottle, and you can see it smoking when it comes out of the bottle.
yo the acid he used whatever flouroantimonic acid idk how to spell it has hydroflouric acid in it and that acid attacks glass his bowl is should have been destroyed
If RU-vid was here 70 years ago, there would be a guy saying "hey guys, today we're going to see if this telephone survives a nuke" *drops phone in Hiroshima and runs*
The slippery material means that PTFE will not absorb the chemicals it comes into contact with, and the strength of its carbon-fluorine bonds makes it non-reactive. For these reasons, Teflon-coated plastic containers are ideal for storing a wide variety of acids and bases.
You literally would have to be working as a chemist in a huge lab to gain access to the stuff. It's never sold commercially and never will be. Even trying to get it illegally would be challenging as if the container is breached, you're fucked, end of story
Bruh that's not the strongest acid flouroantomic acid is stored in teflon containers because that's the only metal that can resist it it even eats titanium also he is alive
@@A2C2 just in case if you can soak your house with that acid 😃 Something that technically possible didn't always implementally possible.. But yeah.. you're right the strongest acid can easily melt your house, or maybe the entire earth..
LMFAO. Interview with CNET: "All I can confirm is I indeed went out my way to purchase Fluoroantimonic Acid, yes. Now did I activate it with HF? No." Well it's not Fluoroantimonic Acid if it's missing the hydrogen fluoride 😂
@ 1:17, it says hydrogen hexafluoroantimonate (V) which is fluoroantimonic acid, and the bag it was in was slightly yellowed so it probably could have just dries up and the crystals are fluoroantimonic acid soaked antimony pentafluoride???
Everyone gets the PH of fluoroantimonic acid wrong, it's -28, and that's not what he had. It would have very quickly melted through the glass he had it in, through the table, through the through his floor and the concrete foundation underneath, and keep disolving dirt underneath for quite a while. Also, if that was the real stuff, the gloves would do absolutely nothing, it would just instantly melt through the gloves and burn straight to his bones.
It doesn't matter where he did it, that wasn't fluoroantimonic acid, and he didn't even do enough research to get its PH level right. It would still tear through the glass bowl like it was nothing, then just keep going and literally dissolve the dirt. You ever see acid in sci fi movies that just instantly melts through metal like it's nothing? That's almost how strong FAA is, the moment he put it in the bowl it would have just fell straight through the glass like nothing was there. He wouldn't even be able to keep any of it in the bowl to put the iphone in it, but even if he could, the iphone would melt away into a soup of liquid metals. I don't care that he lied about what acid it was for views, I care that seemingly no one in the comment section understands that it's not FAA.
Lord Kittens McTavish he shouldn't mess around with fluoroantimonic acid, if even a tenth of a gram touched his gloved hand it would eat through the glove, his hand, and then the fluorine would, quite literally, burn through his bones by bonding to the calcium and ripping them apart atom by atom.
This is not true Fluoroantimonic acid. Fluoroantimonic acid can only be stored in Teflon and burns through glass extremely quickly. Fluoroantimonic acid is so carcinogenic that even 1 millionth of a gram will cause death if inhaled within 30 minutes. Fluoroantimonic acid explodes if it comes into contact with any other liquid such as the H2O2 and H2SO4. I appreciate your effort to promote Apple though. If you're going to try and use the worlds strongest acid, at least be accurate with your video.
Mackin Cheezy Gaming In theory that would make sense, but with acids they have a high protonation rate. Super acids, like Fluoroantimonic Acid rip protons off of any other compound they come into contact with. So if you were to dilute it in water it would do no good as it would have a violent exothermic reaction. I can understand where you're coming from as in chemistry a lot of standard acids and bases are diluted in water. But with super acids you cannot.
Yes, i know, but there is a possibility to go beyond the ph scale, basically going behind sulfuric acid means that you have a super acid the ph of which can be measured by it's protonation capabilities. Go watch SciShow video on superacids, they explain it there.
He *does* realize that the acid will be 3000000 times more effective if its aqueous, right? He *does* understand Brønsted-Lowry theory, that you know, the acid has to disassociate in water so that it can react, and that hes limiting the reaction to the surface area of the lattice, right? Right? Oh, I forgot he's an idiot. I get that it's just for views but be careful, read into your stuff more.
Makar Lock haha, someone else who understands. I facepalmed when he said "Crystals, what in the world?" No way the distributer would send it as an aqueous solution lol
Lol fluoroantimonic acid literally explodes when it comes in contact with water and it reacts violently with moisture in the air. It also requires a special clearance level and license to purchase. Not only would it eat through the plastic container that it came in but it would have immediately dissolved the phone and the container you had the phone placed in.
Damn so much misinformation. First, pH is not a measure of how strong or weak and acid is. Meaning, it is a measure of the concentration of hydronium ions. This means a low concentration of strong acid and a higher concentration of a weaker acid can produce solutions of the same pH. Just saying...
jalene150 It's Hammett acidity function is -19.2! Fluoroantimonic acid, the strongest known acid, has a Hammett acidity function value of -31.3! This is what the pH of a solution would be if it were possible to pack 1031.3 moles of hydronium into each liter of solution.
the concentration of hydronium ions does indicate the strength of the acid. If more hydronium ions are present in a solution, that means it is a stronger acid. As for the second thing, if you dilute a strong acid in a lot of water you will have a lower concentration of hydronium ions in the same volume of solution, so of course it will be a weaker acid.
0:51 - Says he's not going to mix the fluoroantimonic acid with anything... 3:28 - "So now I'm gonna pour a couple drops of hydrogen peroxide in the container..."
Agent Anonymous he did say, "initially" but yeah he doesn't usually stick to what he says. Once he said he'd pull his phone out of liquid nitrogen and charge it. Instead he smashed it with a hammer
Even worse, if it were Fluoroantimonic acid it would react violently with the 35% hydrogen peroxide, because the other 65% is water. Fluoroantimonic acid and water produce a rather violent reaction.
It would explode on his face, so yes, he would get 3rd degree burns if that really was fluoroantimonic acid. Even sulfuric acid reacts violently with water, and fluoroantimonic acid is 10 quadrillion times stronger than sulfuric acid. I guess hydrogen peroxide would have same effect.
No, they don't. The uploader was using teflon to store the acid, and the comments are full of people claiming that teflon gets dissolved by it, which it doesn't.
This is litteraly false, this acid is so strong that there are no footages of it yet, and this guy just shows us 100ml inside a bottle? Only teflon can survive this acid
@Mr Sunday7 thx for the tip, i just thought this plastic bottle couldn't handle The acid, but by the video, that's boring, it looks like everything else except from what i know fluoroantimonic does, i guess i'm wrong, i have to study it a bit more..
@@magnuslikestanks6044 It can only be used for scientific purposes so only scientist that test corrusive acid can have Fluoroantimonic acid in a lab but if they take it home they are for sure getting arrested.
LuksterCOD1234 The fuckin fuck im going fuckin break my phone if this is fuckin fuck true Jesus fuckin christ how the fuck does fuckin apply pay him for fuckin their fuckin iphones into they can't be fucked in the fuckin ass anymore
this stuff reacts extremely violently (fancy wording for explode) under contact with oxygen, also its illegal to buy, as its really fucking dangerous to have, this shit eats through solids faster than a black man through kfc, :3
Carter Lane you misread what i said, the acid would explode on contact with oxygen, therefore this acid in the video is fake as it's impossible to obtain, it must be handled under very controlled circumstances or shit will go down
*calls apple care* Techrex: hey um I *accidentally* poured the strongest acid on my phone and I can't get it to turn on. Apple care: have you tried resetting your phone?
*DISCLAIMER* : The acid used in the video is NOT Fluroantomonic acid. Fluroantomonic acid would burn through the glass, the bag, his hands, eat the entire phone, the table, the floor and then the concrete. It can only be stored in a teflon container.
Actually, idiot, that IS fluoroantimonic acid. However, a superacid that fluoroantimonic acid is, in this state, requires an activation chemical. Hydrogen fluoride. Without that, the incredible reactivity of fluoroantimonic acid is inactive. Had he added hydrogen fluoride to those crystals and dilluted them in water, that would be the true super-mega-saiyan-potent acid you imagine. Check your facts.
A Random Commentator Actually stupider is the more common and grammatically correct comparative to stupid. Although from what I know, more stupid would also be correct.