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wierd siency stuff

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Old Sep 20, 2007 | 10:58 PM
  #1  
jacob's Avatar
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Default wierd siency stuff

wtf is this

http://www.collegehumor.com/video:1776285/
Old Sep 21, 2007 | 12:16 AM
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Default Re: wierd siency stuff

It's a percipitate reaction with oxygen. Sodium Acetate I believe? I'm not sure really.
Old Sep 21, 2007 | 01:53 AM
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Default Re: wierd siency stuff

Actually I don't believe it has anythign to do with oxygen. I believe its a super cooled liquid. Freezing actually releases heat, since it would be a solid at room temperature, it just requires a shock, or a crystal of the solid form to start a chain reaction. Sodium Acetate is used in those reusable heat packs. They are sealed, with no oxygen and are activated by bending a metallic disc that creates an audible click and shockwave. The solidifying action propagates outward from the disc, and within a couple seconds the whole packet is solid, and very hot.


Edit, I was pretty close. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sodium_acetate
Sodium acetate is also used in consumer heating pads or hand warmers and is also used in "hot ice". When sodium acetate trihydrate crystals (melting point 58 °C) are heated to around 100 °C, they melt. When this melt cools, it gives a supersaturated solution of sodium acetate in water. This solution is capable of supercooling to room temperature, well below its melting point, without forming crystals. By clicking on a metal disc in the heating pad, a nucleation center is formed which causes the solution to crystallize into solid sodium acetate trihydrate again. The bond-forming process of crystallization is exothermic, hence heat is emitted.
Old Sep 21, 2007 | 03:29 AM
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Default Re: wierd siency stuff

nerds
Old Sep 21, 2007 | 09:27 AM
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Default Re: wierd siency stuff

Originally Posted by Mista Bone
nerds
seriously.. nerd alert! :P

pretty cool though
Old Sep 21, 2007 | 04:45 PM
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Default Re: wierd siency stuff

Originally Posted by aero
Actually I don't believe it has anythign to do with oxygen. I believe its a super cooled liquid. Freezing actually releases heat, since it would be a solid at room temperature, it just requires a shock, or a crystal of the solid form to start a chain reaction. Sodium Acetate is used in those reusable heat packs. They are sealed, with no oxygen and are activated by bending a metallic disc that creates an audible click and shockwave. The solidifying action propagates outward from the disc, and within a couple seconds the whole packet is solid, and very hot.


Edit, I was pretty close. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sodium_acetate
That's pretty freaking awesome. I forgot that a precipitate reaction can only occur in a solute anyway.
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