I read in sci.electronics.design that Bill Sloman
wrote (in ) about 'CB
Radios, Cellphones and Gasoline Vapor Ignition', on Wed, 24 Mar 2004:
Not an experiment I'd recommend. Acetylene is thermally unstable, and
cylinders of compressed acetylene contain kieselguhr
http://www.nobel.se/nobel/alfred-nob...kieselguhr.htm
l
for exactly the same reason that nitroglycerine is only commercially
available adsorbed onto kieselguhr.
Ozone is is also thermally unstable, and I don't think that it is
commercially available at all (with or without kieselguhr).
There have always been macho physicists and chemists who wanted to push
the envelope of risky experiments; Moissan, for example, who made
diamonds (not very good ones) by quenching white-hot hollow iron ingots
with carbon inside. Who was it who first produced titanium metal from
the oxide with the aid of potassium vapour?
Ozone has certainly been liquefied: it is a very deep blue, almost
black. Acetylene can't be liquefied at atmospheric pressu the solid
sublimes (turns to gas) at -84 C.
Mixing liquid acetylene and liquid ozone could produce a very loud
report -
Particularly as it would have to be done in a pressure vessel!
a mixture of charcoal and liquid oxygen used to be used as a
commercial explosive.
Pure hydrogen peroxide is another nasty liquid - the British, and more
recently, the Russians have had cause to regret using it as a torpedo
fuel.
Was the British torpedo fuel *pure* H2O2? It would seem at first sight
unnecessary.
--
Regards, John Woodgate, OOO - Own Opinions Only.
The good news is that nothing is compulsory.
The bad news is that everything is prohibited.
http://www.jmwa.demon.co.uk Also see
http://www.isce.org.uk