Sciencemadness Discussion Board

Picric acid: different instructions

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grndpndr - 25-5-2008 at 15:13

I understand your thinking i believe and while i assumed 3/16 there were actually 2 diameters of AL tubing used, 3/16-5/16 having no notes just running on recollection had thought 3/16 but as there s no 5/16 left i know wonder as the old cotton? woven tar covered blasting fuse easily made a slip fit into the tubing so more than likely the tubing was 5/16 or the cap likely would have been to long for the uses.
Only undeniable fact was the incredible power/brisance difference between simple FM cap
and the compound caps with 1-2gr TNP.The OD of the mil special cap is interestng at approx. 1/4 with the actual contents maybe 11/4 lenghth he 56.25% wil fnd ts way into notes. Thanks.

PS; Is anyone aware of concave end blasting caps?Wouldnt be terribly difficult to duplicate except placing precisely focusing the jet to be centred in the HE.

PS;closer inspecton revealed the tubing in queston to be 5/16 ,the cost of aging eyes..310 OD/.265 ID,more appropriate dia. for the cap in question?


[Edited on 25-5-2008 by grndpndr]

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[Edited on 26-5-2008 by grndpndr]

grndpndr - 28-5-2008 at 18:35

Quote:
Originally posted by grndpndr
I understand your thinking i believe and while i assumed 3/16 there were actually 2 diameters of AL tubing used, 3/16-5/16 having no notes just running on recollection had thought 3/16 but as there s no 5/16 left i know wonder as the old cotton? woven tar covered blasting fuse easily made a slip fit into the tubing so more than likely the tubing was 5/16 or the cap likely would have been to long for the uses.
Only undeniable fact was the incredible power/brisance difference between simple FM cap
and the compound caps with 1-2gr TNP.The OD of the mil special cap is interestng at approx. 1/4 with the actual

contents maybe 11/4 lenghth he 56.25% wil fnd ts way into
notes. Thanks.


About purifying ASA,Ive used OTC HEET methanol based gasoline antifreeze slightly warmed at least a dozen times w /o any problems as described w/acetone or isopropyl.With the crystals solidifying crystal clear.And finished TNP perfectly
nitrated and purified w/o a trace of impurities.
The pint bottles are adequate for up to 200x325mg tabsIIRC.








PS; Is anyone aware of concave end blasting caps?Wouldnt be terribly difficult to duplicate except placing precisely focusing the jet to be centred in the HE.

PS;closer inspecton revealed the tubing in queston to be 5/16 ,the cost of aging eyes..310 OD/.265 ID,more appropriate dia. for the cap in question?


[Edited on 25-5-2008 by grndpndr]

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[Edited on 26-5-2008 by grndpndr]

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Sickman - 29-5-2008 at 00:35

If I remember right, I remember Rosco Bodine mentioning that he got a descent yield of TNP using fertilizer grade sodium nitrate which had been purified by a method that he didn't mention IIRC. There are several different brands of sodium nitrate, usually seen OTC as "nitrate of soda". I'm wondering if someone or he may know what are the most common impurites in such sodium nitrate fertilizer and how best to purify it. Sodium nitrate is not only useful for TNP nitrations, but also for several nitric esters, details of it's purification from the OTC fertilizer grade would be useful info.
If I understand it right the usual impurities include several trace metals, along with some salts. Has anyone here found a method of purification that boosts the purity of the NaNO3 to a level of purity acceptable for such nitrations that allow a pure product to precipitate without any significant side reactions due to impurites found in the sodium nitrate?

grndpndr - 19-9-2008 at 06:51

Ace hardware;4lb sacks of nitrate of soda 15-0-0,nice white prills.IIRC the amount of sodium nitrate was reduced from 77
gr pott nitrate to 57gr sodium nitrate in a synthesis similar to the one mentioned previously.Ive used this fert.grade sodium nitrate w/o any problems synthesising picric acid .In my experience( shadetree experimenter) its been a tough synthesis to mess up as long as adeqaute time and heat are allowed to dissolve clumps + sulfonate ASA.The only failure was the first,self induced I washed the brilliant picric acid crystals with distilled water until my yield was near gone not realizing the picric acid was dissolving down the drain.LOL no doubt that it and subsequent synthesis were succesful when comparing the brisance to AN/NM 75/25 while impressive, the picric acid was far more effective against target plates and made a heck of a composite detonator and suitable for SC as long as the TNPs density consistent and near optimum.

12AX7 - 19-9-2008 at 12:14

Quote:
Originally posted by grndpndr
Ace hardware;4lb sacks of nitrate of soda 15-0-0


Really? It certainly doesn't show up online..
http://www.acehardware.com/search/index.jsp?kwCatId=&kw=...
Only bicarbonate of soda, nothing else. Specific to your store?

Tim

Rosco Bodine - 20-9-2008 at 10:13

look in bag products, small , soil conditioners

Seek, and ye shall find:P

grndpndr - 14-10-2008 at 05:26

You should be able to order nitrate of Soda any time of year from ACE.If there not helpful google mastrgardening they have the same in 2x4lb sacks for $21 shipped to the midwest.As to purifying it takes fire as easily as drug store Pott nitrate so purfying ive never found nescery for TNP at least.They come as bright white prills w/o any apparent coating and 15-0-0 is the max for nitate of soda.Most Importntly Ive never encountered failure with the stuff as is.
In fact my first failure w/TNP was recently using ACE crude oil black santeen H2S04 drain cleaner.What a mess,no color changes could be oserved through the coal black sulfuric yes it was better than 95% no oxides on addittion of the nitrate just a chocolate brown foaming the few off yelow crystals that were recovered were very large for TNP as well as having a yellow brown hue not the normal canary yellow.Its not the materials so much as it was still a learning experience,#1 go back to batt electrolyte, cheaper and crystal clear after reducing to 95%-
98%. 2x 2.5l carboys are available through auto supply out here s well as a full 5gall 33.3% H2S04 resuting in crystal clear H2S04 of about 20-30wieght oil cheapr than drain cleaner.Also found very inexpensive ASA by the pound vetrinary pure which is good enough for human consumption
googling Vet supplys.Much better and cheapr than purifying $
drug store ASA.Mastergardning also carrys 4lb sacks of 45-0-0 Urea
but it could use purifying with water and filtering to rid it of dirt/other matter

Off topic but humor me if you would, Ammonium picrate came to mind as a family of primarys/ booster/ in dual comp caps but the cost of ammonia required for ammoniun picrate econdarys put me off! Any alternate synthesis not so ruthless with ammonia consumption?

[Edited on 14-10-2008 by grndpndr]

hashashan - 15-10-2008 at 00:31

ammonium picrate as a primary/booster??????? it is unbelievebly inert
this is composition D and it is used industrially as the explosive of bunker busters, it is so inert that it is capable to withstand a close explosion without detonation.

grndpndr - 15-10-2008 at 04:54

Not composition D but explosive D actually and you misuderstood/didnt read my post.Ammonium picrate was never suggested as a primary!!:oOne must start with TNP/picric acid as my Idea developes
Add lead monoxide-methanol = lead picrate.lead picrate primay and TNP = very powerful composite cap.Explosive D or Ammonium picrate as a secondary can be cast as I am sometimes led to believe from ww1 arty reports? Ideal garage HE for shaped charges with a comparitively good VOD and insensitive to many lesser caps.All precautions to prevent various HE's from interacting with metal/each other.
But with all respect a composite cap with 4-5 grams pressed TNP at 7480 MPS with the same of granulated exp D in the det well should overcome any reluctance to fire .:D

However the appetite of exp.D for ammonia in its synthesis will likely put the end to that Idea$$
one of simplicity really.(very few OTC precursors needed)In additon bunker busters arent used industrially to my knowledge and as ammonium picrate has been used in HEAT SC it stands to reason military detonators or engineer special caps will suffice as military det wells are universal for hand carried charges.
Please excuse all the editing but a naval handbook I just came across compares comp A, 91%rdx-9%wax with EXP D sensitivity.:(



[Edited on 15-10-2008 by grndpndr]

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mormanman - 2-12-2008 at 20:51

I don't want to sound like an idiot again but I've tried that synthesis and I just won't dry. Some will but only flakes. I burns very fast so I know it works but I just won't dry.
What do you suggest?
Its TNP by the way.

[Edited on 2-12-2008 by mormanman]

Leander - 4-12-2008 at 01:30

You've probably forgot to wash or recrystallize your product properly. This way some sulfuric acid remains in your crystals, wich prevents drying.

mormanman - 4-12-2008 at 14:17

How do I was it then? I boiled it in the distilled water filter it. I'll read up on it. Thanks for telling me where I should start looking though.

Leander - 6-12-2008 at 13:07

Simply dissolve your TNP in a minimal ammount of boiling water, then cool to ~0oC, filter, dry. This method should get rid of the acid. Usually the only method that yields TNP that doesn't dries at all, is when you filter it strait from the mixed acids and then dry without washing at all. Unsufficient washing though, gives crystals that remain 'sticky' and form little lumps quite easily.

grndpndr - 19-12-2008 at 09:23

My post suggesting granulated exp D in the det well should read the same 4-5 gr of picric acid next to the composite cap
inside the main charge of exp D again next to 5-10 gr. off granulated exp D as the explosive train.:D

quicksilver - 31-12-2008 at 08:40

If one is not working with TNP to begin with then there be problems associated with attempting to yield a detonation with a lower nitrated phenol (or materials thereof). There is some extremely old literature* that had a very interesting test. Back in the day when MP tests were very inaccurate there was a simple determination for whether the (PA) final product had a greater or lesser percentage of DNP in it. A high percentage TNP will detonate from steel on steel impact: Dinitrophenol will not. Folding a few mg of one's final picric acid in a bit of aluminum foil & striking it upon a heavy steel surface w/ a heavy steel hammer will result in a moderately loud detonation.

Majority of TNP has some DNP in the final product (that is what throws off the mp tests from those who have access to a fairly good one). But the "hammer blow" test has yet to fail. If one's sample reacts to a blow of steel upon steel a good bet is that it has majority TNP. DNP can be very light yellow & in all respects a useful material but will NOT respond as picric acid. Often due to the lengthy process & large level of fumes, the proper level of nitration to reach TNP is not achieved. The resulting DNP/TNP material will not respond the way it should in other labs that demand true PA.

* Weaver, Military Explosives, 1907

grndpndr - 12-3-2009 at 04:01

Thanks for the simple testing method!

As Ive never had any 'clumping' problems with the
sod /pott nitrates just the asa 'clumping' requiring time to sulfonate Ill stick with the inexpensive
sodium nitrate.Id prefer AN but as I can only find it online or in 2to4oz cold packs its far to expensive when the cheaper fertilizer grade nitrate of soda is available.

"High Yield" man. nitrate of soda of 16/0/0 in 5lb sacks economically rather than ace 'mastergarden'/Bonide brand 15/0/0 4lb sacks.
More nitrate less fillers?LOL

[Edited on 12-3-2009 by grndpndr]

[Edited on 12-3-2009 by grndpndr]

Zinc - 13-5-2009 at 13:45

A few days ago I made some picric acid (at least I think). To 200 ml of conc. H2SO4 (boiled down battery acid) I added 25-30 g of ASA (extracted from Aspirin pills) and started heating it in a water bath. The mixture than turned dark brown. When the ASA dissolved I added 70g of mixed ammonium and sodium nitrate (don't know the proportions of NaNO3 and NH4NO3 in the mix) in several portions. Then the mix turned orange/red and then orange/yellow. After that I continued to heat it on a water bath for around 30 min. Then I removed the heat and let it coll down. After it cooled down yellow crystals and some hard yellow chunks precipitated from the solution. I then diluted the solution with water. The crystals floated and the yellow chunks remained on the bottom. I then filtered only the crystals, dried them and recrystallized from water. They formed nice yellow needles. Then I filtered them and let them dry and crushed them up (so they dry faster).

Now when the picric acid dried (over night) I tried to ignite a small amount with a torch. At first it melted and then burned but quite slowly and weakly. I thought it should burn faster and without melting so is there anything wrong with it? Perhaps the ASA didn't fully nitrate?

User - 13-5-2009 at 16:12

Well my techgrade PA flashes with dark smoke upon ignition, alltough i have to say its not a real schoking deflagration.
How long and at wat temp. did you do the sulfonation/nitration?
This is very important for the full conversion to PA , working on a benzene ring takes some efford.

grndpndr - 13-5-2009 at 17:18

I tried several times with mine melting a small amt in a spoon then heating until melting then it would rapidly deflagrate with a small pop with a resulting black soot airborne.I never encountered clumping but otherwise
sounds successful.Color,during and after synthesis, crystaline structure sounds OK.
MF always detonated comp. picric caps and the brisance seemed
far and away superior to 70/30 AN-NM. Follow the direction to recrystalize with dist water and you shouldnt have any problems with drying,its just the acidic nature of the beast thats a pain.Also keep away from most metals.

Mine behaved very similarly to the above but i used aspirin
and OTC fert nitrates and SA drain cleaner,sometimes concentrated fresh electrolyte.
[Edited on 14-5-2009 by grndpndr]

[Edited on 14-5-2009 by grndpndr]

[Edited on 14-5-2009 by grndpndr]

Zinc - 14-5-2009 at 01:13

Quote: Originally posted by User  

How long and at wat temp. did you do the sulfonation/nitration?


Then sulfonation/nitration lasted around 45-60 min, perhaps a little longer. The temp. never was over 100 C (heated it in a water bath), except for a short time at the beginning of the reaction (I heated it a few minutes on an open flame so the ASA dissolves faster) and at the end of the reaction (after all the nitrates were added and dissolved I also heated it a few minutes on an open flame).

I forgot to say that the H2SO4 had a small amount of I believe lead particles floating in it (only a small amount). So probably some lead was also dissolved in it. Could that cause a problem?

User - 14-5-2009 at 02:39

Well it could lead to the formation of leadpicrate, which makes your product unpredictable.
But still i cant really imagine it ruining the product.
My lab notes recall something like leaving de ASA in the nitrating mixture till the next morning.
I do these things rather late and tend to go to bed afterwards.

I think your product just isnt fully nitrated.
If the sulfonation isnt fully finished the nitration also takes longer, I cant find the data backing that up.


quicksilver - 14-5-2009 at 07:04

[Please see my previous post]

I would only re-iterate that impact testing was of value during the turn of the 19/20th century to determine the very rough level of true TNP from DNP back before MP testing was exacting enough to determine levels of nitration. While DNP will form lead picrate just as TNP, it is only TNP that will detonate at the milligram level via weight drop testing (or a tiny amount enclosed in foil, struck w/ a hammer against a steel anvil)

If one does not have access to a quality MP test apparatus; striking a "match head" level amount will detonate - should the product be of great percentage - TNP.
DNP just won't perform in detonation via impact at that level of material. The problem of both DNP/TNP existing in the same nitration is quite common & both will perform in making picrate salts as well as secondary detonation from sufficient primary initiation. However this is a test of such crude measurement, one may have a combination of DNP/TNP to as high as 20% DNP.

I have found no late 19th century testing that would yield a conclusive result of "pure batch TNP". The problem of melting point testing without a quality lab-level machine is that to achieve conclusive temp measurement with something like a thermometer, the volume/weight level would need to be too dangerously high. I have seen very small weights of TNP detonate vigorously when struck with a steel hammer on steel anvil consistently & questionable samples did NOT respond to this stimulus. Yet those same questionable samples yielded lead picrate; indicating the presence of nitrated phenols....

I did a short search of old literature, hoping to find some other method but I couldn't find any that would put the lab at a realistic purity level of above 80+%

[Edited on 14-5-2009 by quicksilver]

grndpndr - 17-5-2009 at 02:20

TNP melts at a relatively low temp and deflagrates at a slightly higher temp.Recall it was used in ww1 arty shells loaded by melting the tnp.As I said it melts in a small teaspoon using just a cig lighter and shortly after decomposes by quick deflagration, small pop and a small amount of black soot.Combine that with the hammer impact test mentioned and there should be little doubt as to the product.Why your not getting there has to be inadequate time for sulofonation and or nitration.Perhaps the aspirin your purifying has a buffer that isnt being removed.Problem with your SA, Time allowed for sulfonation,temp etc.To rapid addition of the nitrate, inadequate /poor quality nitrates with additives.Poor synthesis instructions.Frankly I believe it to be a difficult synthesis to make fail!?:o Given the comparitive brisance to moderately high VOD HEs I have to assume what was made was always at least 80%TNP, likely far more than the 80%.;)

Zinc,ive never encountered anyone experiencing problems with used ,concentrated batt electrolyte salavaged from junk batterys which Im sure contained a great deal of lead.The very full of sediment (lead Oxide?) was simply removed by allowing the sediment to settle until electrolyte was clear and decanting the clear electrolyte.the used electyrolyte never required filtering and was absolutely clear after condensing by boiling w/o any filtering.

As far as purity of the TNP after recrystalizing from dist water no discoloration of the water or change in the color was noted,still retaining the distinctive bright canary yellow crystalls.
[Edited on 17-5-2009 by grndpndr]

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quicksilver - 17-5-2009 at 06:31

I remember back in '06 that a gentleman here made it from Oil of Wintergreen; I've seen it made from Indigo - & successfully.
I totally agree, it's hard NOT to make TNP. It may be one of the more "flexible" higher nitrations. To purify the aspirin easily, make a paste from the materiel [the solvent] at or above 80C prior to a slow filtration (again at such or higher temperature) so that the binders are removed to a greater degree.
However if one is using a solid nitrate to create a mixed acid, make sure that material has been brought to complete solution & maintain control of a sulfonation [that is thorough]. When someone has trouble with TNP often it comes back to a sulfonation that is incomplete.
If I didn't care about the stench, quite honestly I think I could even make horn or wool function because once you get the little indicators correct it's kitchen chemistry.

It's an interesting question however that of using a battery electrolyte with lead material exposed therein. Just my opinion; but I would need to make that decision depending upon the condition of the material and how much lead is actually broken down within the salvaged material. It could be a real mess that has time & condition enough to go into solution. Is drain cleaner that difficult to get?
However on that note I would think over using a material (unintentionally) that brought lead into that lab. It's all too easy to loose sight of what the material is & can do. {Very bad pun; sorry.} A possible mistake here is no joke.

The introduction of lead could definably be a very serious hazard. It has been the major source of factory travesties in the distant past.




[Edited on 17-5-2009 by quicksilver]

grndpndr - 26-5-2009 at 03:19

Used battery electrolye is probably a bad Idea.New 35% electrolyte can be ordered at most parts stores relatively inexpensively.I believe another advantage to a clear H2SO4 is you can observe the progress of the synthesis through color changes maybe an equally important indicator than time/temp alone?

grndpndr - 8-6-2009 at 08:58

Slightly off topic. Anyone have info on trimonite?a melt castable tnp/mononitronapthalene. 7080 mps vod 1.6 gr cm/3.Curious as to info on this mix and dinitronapthalene/tri-
nitronapthalene-tnp melts or if they are to sensitive for secondarys/melts.

Hennig Brand - 8-6-2009 at 15:08

http://www.ias.ac.in/jarch/proca/3/00000257.pdf
Derivatives Of Salicylic Acid-Part IX

Is this how the nitration using ASA proceeds? If it does and goes to Nitrosalicylic Acid then straight to TNP, With no DNP at all then this appears relavent, as nitrosalicylic acid from the little bit I read appears to be very stable and a poor explosive unlike DNP, as well as being much more insoluble in water than Picric Acid. Any insight is welcome.
I have been reading posts on Picric Acid where ever I can find them off and on for the last year or so, and experimenting albeit with only partial success.

Sorry to cut you off grndpndr, if I could answer your question I would. Your into something there I haven' t even heard of.

[Edited on 9-6-2009 by Hennig Brand]

grndpndr - 8-6-2009 at 16:47

The mononitronapthalene/dynitronapthalene etc is completely seperate from the TNP synthesis.Mononitronaphthalene is used to lower the melt /mix temp of TNP and possibly use some of the excess O2 acting as a fuel if sufficient Mononitronapthalene is incorporated.
Read the entire thread, it covers most if not all the reasons for failed picric acid synthesis as well as the successful efforts. Assuming you have a reliable synthesis its either your precursors are contaminated/poor quality or your attention to detail is lacking as its generally accepted that picric acid is one of the easier synthesis to successfully complete. Regards,no offense intended but reading the thread should answer your questions.

[Edited on 9-6-2009 by grndpndr]

Hennig Brand - 9-6-2009 at 06:29

Thanks for the reply. However this chemical(Picric Acid) has been giving many experimenter a hard time, to the extend that most appear to be giving up without getting satisfactory results(at least on the several forums I have read from). Everything is simple once you know it! Maybe the level that a lot of us are functioning at is making this more challenging than others perceive it to be. I find, as I believe others have here and elswhere, that the solutions, and evan the nature of the problems with this synthesis can be elusive.

Meant to put the edit here

[Edited on 9-6-2009 by Hennig Brand]

Hennig Brand - 9-6-2009 at 06:55

I made Picric Acid several times in the last few days. The last time I used ASA bought pure as ASA powder USP. I used homemade nitric acid evan though in the past I used KNO3. I have not been able to find sodium nitrate. And rather than turn my Nitric Acid into Sodium Nitrate I thought it wise to use the acid. This would I reasoned make it easier to see what exactly it was I had at the end, with out worring about unknows before/after filtration. K sulphate much less soluble and problematic than sodium one. I didn' t take notes early on, but taking Rosco' s advice I do now(it realy helps to clarify the big picture).
For the first time a few days ago I used liquid Phenol as the feedstock.(ordered from town drugstore, fused USP, hydrate 8% water). I got a bad yeild of 13 grams from 20 of Phenol. However for the first time I had something that would easily detonate from a quick snap from a hammer on an anvil. Which has got me wondering about the nature of the impurities in the ASA route. Since my last experiment with ASA yeilded more than 20 grams of somthing that seems like Picric Acid to me, from 18 grams of ASA. This seems to be a respectable yeild, yet this stuff appears relatively insensitive. Is it possible to have a yeild like this and still be quite impure?, or so much as to impair function?

497 - 9-6-2009 at 07:24

Test its solubility in water. 1 gram should dissolve in 15ml of boiling water or 78ml at 25*C. This should be fairly conclusive as to what your product is.

Also recrystallizing from boiling water should help purify it if there are impurities.

My guess is the 8% water in your phenol caused the lower yield. IIRC many people tried phenol and got lower yields, so maybe there's another factor..

Hennig Brand - 9-6-2009 at 08:02

I think you are right about the water in the Phenol. I tried to get pure Phenol, a Kg actualy but the hazard charge was more than the cost of the Phenol. Maybe if sulphonation was done with very concentrated H2SO4 and no dilution was done prior to nitration this problem could be mitigated. Just remembered something. My H2SO4 was boiled down battery acid, boiled down last fall, and kept in an old miracle wip jar with a plastic lid. These jars are cheap and convenient, but after checking acid density it was clear that the top was leaky to the point that enough water was absorbed to bring acid concentration down to 82% or so. I guess I always thought before that a little extra water in this synthesis was not a big deal. I guess my extra water maybe turned out to be more than a little extra.(Acid water and Phenol water combined)
This is interesting regarding the water issue:
pg77 in Notes On Military Explosives by Erasmus M. Weaver Major General U.S. Army copywright 1917
Titled Manufacture of Picric Acid-Equel quantities by weight of concentrated H2SO4 and phenol are mixed in an iron vessel, stirred and heated by steam to from 212F to 250F(121C). From time to time tests are made to see if the phenol-sulphonic acid formed is soluble in cold water. When it is so the mixture is allowed to cool and twice the quantity of water is added. Then it goes on to talk about the nitration.

This seems like a lot of extra water. Unless deliberatly miss-leading, this seems to indicate that my little bit of water, probably not more than 15% would not be a problem. They did not discuss there yeild however.

[Edited on 9-6-2009 by Hennig Brand]

[Edited on 9-6-2009 by Hennig Brand]

Hennig Brand - 9-6-2009 at 08:26

In the very early days of Picric Acid use as a munition I read that they initiated it with a booster of Picric Acid and KNO3 mixed
(something like 50/50 or 60/40 I believe). This mixture is more easily initiated than the pure Picric Acid, althiough significantly less gas volume, but still apparently a good initiator. This booster was of course set of with Mercury Fulminate. Had they failed to set it off with just Fulminate?(I haven' t found the answer). I had to search fairly hard to find the information I did find. I believe that Picric Acid the munition to be quite challenging to prepare, as compared to any old sample of TNP. As others have said it seems to be somthing of a lost art.

grndpndr - 9-6-2009 at 14:06

I know improvised TNP to be sensitive to 1gr MF caps probably half that amount.Also MF and TNP as a composite cap also works well if the TNP/MF is kept well seperated from one another in an AL tubing preferably with some sort of inert coating inside the cap to be on the safe side.Not to forget being properly pressed!Though i think caps should be used almost immediately.Neighbors could become skittish if a composite cap became unstable and det in the garage lab.Very difficult to explain at 3am to grumpy LEO.In any event NO boosters are required to detonate Picric acid!!

I guess id start with my synthesis first and verify its ability to synthesise TNP.Then id look at my precursors, 85% H2SO4 is an obvious problem with any synthesis involving concentrated H2SO4. I question its ability to sulphonate ASA and absorb the water produced during nitration.Are you purifying the ASA correctly, using uncoated plain aspirin dissolved
in hot methanol and filtered.Finally is the nitrate salt of reasonable quality/correct amounts.

It just seems to me with reasonable quality precursors and an accurate synthesis followed correctly observing time and temps as well as observed color changes "TNP is a difficult synthesis to screw up" having no experience beyond using manufactured munitions/explosives. To beginning with imp binary's and commercial caps.To peroxides,various 'dynamite's', fulminate's. and finally basic nitrationsI find it hard to believe there is so much difficulty with picric acid?

Probably one of the most forgiving synthesis that are known in my very limited experience.personlly id look at every aspect of your procedure from the beginning.Reading all the available online synthesis compare them with Davis and Urbanski among many others.Examine the quality and quantity of your precursors. But again less than ideal percursors and method s were normally rewarded with good
quality TNP even before recyrstalizing or purifying.
And as far as
m ercury fulminate is concerned it easily detonates TNP when properly presed in the cap.In fact MF and TNP if properly isolated make an excellent composite cap
with picric acid being quite easily detonated with quite good power excceeding that of TNT in nearly all cases.I wish you better luck and a safe experiment.regards

[Edited on 9-6-2009 by grndpndr]

[Edited on 9-6-2009 by grndpndr]

Hennig Brand - 9-6-2009 at 15:57

I am aware that people with descent picric acid have no problem detonating it. I was just wondering if some of the early problems with this explosive are being experienced again by many who experiment(mostly me). The processes may not have been perfected back then(it would be easier to learn from their mistakes and problems than our own)
Thank you for wishing me well. I do have a question but first I will explain my last proceedure with ASA and 95% drain cleaner acid. I used the 82% with the phenol experiment. So used 80mL of H2SO4 and 18g of ASA powder USP(comes pure and already powdered, pound at a time or more if you wish)Drug stores can order it and animal feed places often have it as it is put in their water for variuos ailments.Sulphonation was carried out between 110-140C and for more than four hours. It was allowed to cool to room temperature(sat in old car all night).Mixed acids consisted of 30mL H2SO4 90% and 30mL HNO3 90%.
For whatever reason about half was added dropwise over the course of about an hour with excellent stirring from a home made magnetic stirrer(just built two days ago). They are realy easy to build (half hour if have the couple things needed), using old computer power supply fan. I have a variable voltage/current PS so I use that to accuratly control the speed of the stir bar.Damn stir bar cost me $15 at the drug store, they must have seen me coming. Temperature was taken up through 40, 50, 60, 70 as last half of mixed acid was added. Temperature was regulated by feeding boiling water into a water bath around the beaker(on the magnetic stirrer).This second addition took most of an other hour. To heat further I had to use a hot plate. I used a sand bath and stirred by hand, but once the temp got up over a hundred I didn' t stirr much. The reaction seemed very slow, however I heated at 110-115C for 3 hours, all the while these small bubbles could be seen rising if I looked close.Temperature was controled with thyristor,commercial light dimmer 2000w(hot plate control is garbage, very cheaply made bimetal device). At the end let it cool then added about 280mL very cold water then just let it sit in fridge for many hours(didn' t take it in till no more nitrous fumes evolved).Yeild 20+g of pale yellow crystaline product no oxidation seen at all. Magnetic stirring is awsome, even though I didn' t have it at the end, I don' t think it' s as critical at the end though, at least from an oxidation perspective. Maybe poor end stirring is causing me a problem with reaction completion.
I have been doing a little looking around at info on nitro derivatives of salicylic acid and I believe what I have predominantly is trinitro-m-phenol-sulphonic acid. It is the fourth benzene ring diagram on the link I gave up this page some. From what I can read it appears to be kind of a natural stopping point for the nitration of salicylic acid, however of course as it says in the link if forced more the end product will be Picric Acid. I just need to figure out how to apply a little more force. I have another link here that has a method to manufacture and good/small description of trinitro-m-phenol-sulphonic acid.
http://www.ias.ac.in/jarch/proca/3/00000259.pdf
(more than half the way down pg)
m.p. 105C
pale yellow (very pale yellow)
hygroscopic (mine is very, even after carfully washing off H2SO4 several times and recrysalizing from water then drying in oven at between 60-80C)
The description seems like a good description of the crap I have on a plate right now. Does this seem right to you? If so any ideas as to why I can' t seem to break those last bonds and get true TNP?
note:I was wrong to say very hygroscopic, it is not deliquecent or anything, it just never realy dries out no matter what. Also solubility of this stuff appears at least close to what it should be for Picric Acid. Maybe a small quantity of this hygroscopic, poor explosive intermediate to Picric Acid could cause the characteristics observed in my sample? Other people at different times have talked about unexplained hygroscopicity even sometimes with fairly descent yields I believe.

[Edited on 10-6-2009 by Hennig Brand]

[Edited on 10-6-2009 by Hennig Brand]

Hennig Brand - 10-6-2009 at 08:12

On more careful observation of my product form ASA after recrystalization it appears that my yeild has dimminished more than it should have for pure picric acid. I used about 300mL of boiling water to put my 20g in solution(should have been more patient with additions probably would have taken less H2O).My yeild after letting stand for 24 hoursin solution, then vaccum filtering and drying with moderate convection heat was only about 14g. I think this at least 2g more than I should have lost if fairly pure sample(I know losses can vary bassed on impurities but this seems excessive)
The hygroscopic nature of my product would indicate greater solubility than a non hygroscopic sample(I think). If it is the trinitro-phenol sulphonic acid then this would explain a lot as the solubility in the 40% H2SO4 solution after dilution at the end of nitration would not be as great as it would be in the water during purification(I think). The problems with losses due to nitro-sulpho-phenol are disscussed a little in a couple places in Urbanki book one section on manufacture of picric acid. A couple methods in that section report loses of from 20-30%(of theoretical)they partly attributed these losses to the inability to completely convert all of the nitro-sulpho-phenol to Picric Acid(oxidation losses also accounted for some,and lower nitro phenols). This was with very refined processes, and expert procurment and care of reactants. I believe lessons may be learned from this that can be used when dealing with the trinitro-phenol-sulphonic acid when going from ASA. Is this nitro-sulpho as easy to deal with as the phenol version? (I would also like to point out that if my 20g yeild did have much nitro-sulpho in it, due to bonded water in that molecule(as illustrated in link on last post), then my mass would have been reading artificialy high. For every mole there is 4 moles of water bound according to that.
Since I now have probably 60+g Picric + Sulpho (if correct), it could probably be nitrated further to nearly pure Picric Acid, if I could find or figure out a process. As purification seems impractical, unless I am just lacking techniques for purification. At some point, as pointed out by others purifications becomes difficult, and sometimes impractical.(good solid nitration should be primary goal,most economic way!)
There may be other routes to Picric Acid from ASA but I believe this to be the usual. But there is a lot I don' t know. Any insite appreciated.:)

7 hours later
note:I have been making kind of a mess of this, the ideas are there but there are inconsistencies and mistakes through the last page. I believe that I have solved my problems or at least figured out what they are. I have more information, but rather than hammer through with fuzzy thinking and mistakes, I am going to wait do some reading, experimenting and writting things down. Then I will have a better chance of writting something concise and to the point.
I think we may be able to get a good handle on the personality differences between the ASA and phenol routes(pros, cons, etc).

[Edited on 10-6-2009 by Hennig Brand]

[Edited on 10-6-2009 by Hennig Brand]

Hennig Brand - 11-6-2009 at 06:15

I know I have been blabing a lot, I promise to relax a bit but I have something to point out.

ASA(C9H8O4)molecular mass-180.157
Salicylic Acid(C7H6O3)-138.12
phenol(C6H5OH)-94.11

Regardless of how one believes the reaction from phenol to proceed(maybe in different ways at hte same time in varying amounts), there will be one mole of water produced for every mole of ASA turned into phenol(as well as one of CO2, and what looks to be two extra carbons?)
Most of way down in this link has good diagrams of ASA to salicylic and to phenol(even though I don' t know if I agree with everything stated on the page completely).
http://www.crscientific.com/article-aspirin.html

So 94+18=112
18 over 112=0.16
times 100=16% H2O
Or exactly double the water produced than what my phenol USP hyrate fused liquid(92%phenol/8%water) has in it. There may be other sources of water peculiar to this reaction(oxidation,other), I don' t know yet.
So water is a much bigger concern with the ASA route, which explains somethings I quess.
This coupled with a greater need to achieve greater reaction completion with the ASA route because of more problematic intermediates(postulated by me), makes this a blow to the ASA route. I still have many reasons for liking this route and will continue to struggle with it.

Just a thought, I wonder if the water could or is removed during sulphonation of ASA. The reason I ask is the mole of water is broken off whether one goes to sulph-phenol or sulpho-salicylic acid. The max temp I have seen for a sulphonation in Picric Acid synthesis is 150C I believe, but I realy don' t have a working knowledge of the limitations. A look at a vapor pressure chart for sulfuric acid mixtures might give some insite as to whats possible(as well as decomp info for sulpho products in solution).?
The other thing is that the carbon dioxide is not broken off untill the conversion to a phenol. I have seen no release of CO2 during sulphonation, but then again maybe I wouldn' t see it?
If anyone is interested I believe there are procedures for precipitating, separating and analysing the product of a solphonation. I have seen one procedure for sulpho-phenol and sulpho-salicylic acid I believe, but I am not exactly sure in what book right now. This might be a way of definitively finding out about the sulphonation process, under different conditions. It might be rewarding for someone.

[Edited on 11-6-2009 by Hennig Brand]

[Edited on 11-6-2009 by Hennig Brand]

grndpndr - 11-6-2009 at 17:23


Im not a chemist and I dont play one on TV.Just a fascinated layman,intrigued by all the aspects of energetic materials and thier uses including the odd uses such a explosive welding of dissimilar metals.The synthesis, ballistics ,shockwave formation and reactions of monroe and miznay chardin effects
theoretical and practical having used weapons that utilized these principles in the military

I did see some interesting info that may be of import with your phenol synthesis and low yields.From Davis, 'Chemistry of Powder and Explosives',pg 159 "..oversulphonation and the loss of unconverted water soluble nitrated sulfiuric acids in the mother liqours...Unless carefully regulated the production of phenol is accompanied by losses,either from oxidation of the material with production of red fumes which represent a loss of fixed nitrogen..."

IIRC you let the synthesis cool to room temp before the addition of the nitrating salts?All Ive read indicates this is not the correct way to do the synthesis the explanation of why is on page 3 of this thread ! The first post on that page
by Roscoe Bodine! In fact all of MR Bodines posts are informative and as accurate as any youll find. Read his posts and Im sure many if not all of your questions would be amswered far better than anything I could help you with or a good portion of the members for that matter.

I havent used phenol myself or seen it used but Davis's book
contains a claim by Olsen and Goldstien that they were able to develop a process by which 100gr of phenol were nitrated to yield 220gr of picric acid!Although phenol is not an easily available over the counter precursor as is ASA which is far cheaper particularly as youve mentioned as a pure powder from a vet or ranchers supply co.In fact the majority of available imp.picric acid synthesis use ASA purifyed from aspirin tablets via methanol or HEET an easily available product here used to prevent gasline freeze/remove water from the fuel tank.Take heart, ive read that picric acid is one of the easiest high nitrates to synthesise.Soon youll wonder how and why you thought it was a difficult synthesis.

Im very interested in how your magnetic stirrer was improvised. Perhaps you would be kind enough to PM me with the basics. Regards grndpndr

[Edited on 12-6-2009 by grndpndr]

[Edited on 12-6-2009 by grndpndr]

Hennig Brand - 12-6-2009 at 09:45

Thank you for the information, the stuff in chemistry of powder and explosives is good stuff and I will keep it in mind. Actualy I was up till 2a.m. this morning doing another ASA go and I used only a two hour sulphonation, mostly out of lazyness, but after reading your post I am glad I did. I was also much more careful of the water, I verified that my H2SO4 was of at least 95% purity and I used a little less of my nitric acid(I thought originaly that by adding it in excess that I was doing the reaction a favor, but actualy once fully aware of water issue, I realized that by adding more than needed I was actualy adding more water to the mix.:( My nitric is measured at 90-92% by density, so that 8-10% water, but another thing it is kinda yellow cause I didn' t use vaccum or much gentle heat when distilling(in a rush). Dissolved nitrogen oxides can realy through off a density reading. e.g. in book 8 of encyclopedia of explosives and related items, I believe(same book that Picric Acid is in, n before p), it has some densities for different grades of nitric acid. White fumming 98% I believe is around 1.505 s.d., and the red fuming can be over1.59. Big difference, although I am unsure of all the implications. With practical knowledge a person could probably just look at the shade of the acid and tell a lot(I think). If my density was taken and used on white nitric tables what does that mean for my actual water content?
My yeild from my experiment was about 16g from 18g of ASA after recrystalization, which is a much better yield than last time. The reaction went totaly different. Color changes where very sharp. At first it was of course a purply, brown, blue or somthing then it went realy red, and after heating light again.(I think it went yellow but because of brown dye, (yellow plus brown does give a lighter brown I would think?) The product crystalized in beautiful large needles of a little darker yellow than my last experiment. It filtered and dried very easily(pure joy to work with)
When one adds Sodium Nitrate to H2SO4 there is no water produced (NANO3+H2SO4=NaHSO4+HNO3), to realy replace this one does need a nitric with no water( is this correct). I wonder if the power labs guy actualy tried his synthesis with 70% HNO3 and ASA? He did seem to try and compensate by useing a lot of the acid, but at 70% he is adding a lot of water to. In the future I am going to use HNO3 of strength and purity as good as I can produce. I haven' t gave a sample a whack yet because of torential rain storm all day, but the material looks good.
Rosco Bodine, I never realy known him to work with phenol when making Picric Acid(maybe he did and I didn' t see it). These reaction are not at all the same in their personality. There are similarites but that is as far as it goes. Phenol takes to nitration very easily and as a result water is not nearly as stiffling on the reaction. The end product seems to be quite different because of impurities, although if both went to absolute completion then they would of couse be the same,(pure TNP). Even with small yield the product from phenol seems better than a comparatively larger one from ASA(in my limited experience with phenol,(2 experiments)), however I have no doubt that some on this site can make a product from ASA that rivals any from phenol.
You are right about not letting it cool to much before nitration I believe(reaction seems to need a bit of momentum, several sources say to not let reaction temp dip below 100C during final stage, I presume to mantain this chemical momentum?
I get my pure aspirin very cheap as I have friends at the drug store, or they are at least friendly to my hobby(I am carful to always make my experimenting appear benign). A pound for 12-13$ canadian.
Ah the Monroe effect, I played around with that a bit a couple years ago when looking at home made claymore mines(just educational), cool stuff! I like shaped charges, but have never built one. I have played a little with different tampings and charge configurations though. I' ve made about half a dozen different nitric esters(ethers?) with very limited problems compared to these damn aromatic hydrocarbons.As well as peroxides (HMTD is the best in practise, regardless of what it says on paper, than AP) I also make a lot of my own chemicals(acids, bases, chlorates,metal powders, solvents, etc). I like improvising lab equipment as well, mills, stills, electrolisis cells,heating devices, modified vaccum for chemical use, magnetic stirrer, electronics and other.
I have seen those claims of super high yields with phenol as well, and while I don' t doubt they get it, I have also seen a lot of lab texts quoting yields not that disimilar from mine.
I would gladly tell you about the magnetic stirrer, even tell you how to obtain the parts. Maybe a picture and a discription should go somewhere?

What is PM?, do you mean just put in a post, or is it something else like email.(I don' t do a lot on computer other than look for info)
For starters though go to shroomery.org and look at the section on home made magnetic stirrers, thats where I got the basic idea. I don' t believe they had a speed control on theirs they just made it a slow managable speed by choice of power supply. A variable current or voltage power supply would be best, which is what I use(before chemistry I did a lot of home brew electronics). A small power supply from a model train set is variable output they usualy put out 16 volts or so which is over the 12volt specs on the fan motors, however as long as the output is not left wide open the current would not be enough to hurt the motor I wouldn' t think. Some small DC motors are tough as nails anyway, and this one has its very own worlds largest cooling fan! Distance from the fan motor to the attachment of the magnet will have to be determined through trial and error as the magnet strength and the distance will determine whether or not the magnetic field locks up the motor, or impeeds its function at low current(speed). Some sort of spacer will probably be in order. I used some PVC pipe the same size as the hub the blades of the fan attach to. The magnet could be held above the motor when running to see the effect on it at different distances and different speeds. The make spacer desired length. I ground a groove to seat the magnet in the top of the pipe, and hot melt glued it in place and also to the fan hub. A frame was made out of wood and small nails(as well as the casing piece the fan was attched to on the PS).The fan was taken off and put back on the opposite side so sides faced up, on yours it may be already right. The beaker with pill and some water can be held above the running fan/magnet at different speeds and heights to see what works best with your magnets. Remember as you get further away from a magnet the force becomes less, but also the lines of force change direction(my Dad told me this, he was a bit of a pyro in the fifties, I found some chems from the fifties, when he was a teenager, H2SO4, powdered metal). I got my magnet out of one of those perpetual flashlight, you know you shake like hell and get a little bit of light for a short time. Any way they are pretty cheap some times(full size name brand one for 7$ I think, 1/2 price). The magnet in them I believe is a rare earth magnet, strong, strong magnet. Probably too strong, but it is what I had. It is also not nearly as long as my pill(stir-bar), with gives me less torque, but the magnet is so strong I can hold the beaker away above and it works fine. To strong a magnet may cause extra pull and friction, but unless you are worried about burning out the motor or power supply, if for what-ever reason they are a little too weak, I wouldn' t worry about a little extra power consumtion.
I think it can be turned into a hot plate stirrer as well but I am still toying with it. I am looking at an old stainless electric skillet or something like that in my junk pile. Good stainless too, the kind a magnet don' t stick to! If the stirrer could be placed underneath this or something like this(maybe made of something else) and didn' t interfere with the magnetic field, I think it could work. The skillet/frying pan thing could be accuratly controlled with a big light dimmer, or something better and more professional if you wish.(something maybe with feed-back so you don' t have to be always adjusting temp a little?) Either water or oil would fill the pan, maybe evan sand depending on use. We will see how it goes.
I don 't know if all computer fans are DC but they must be. Avoid AC, it is very difficult to control unless the motor has brushes. Most times fancy power electronics are employed to change frequency of AC to moter(expensive). Some AC motors, like in some ceiling fans may be speed controlled with a light dimmer, but they are the anomoly, and are the appropriate power rating for the dimmer.
A DC speed controller can also be built, but most should not need to be reduced to that(unless they want).


[Edited on 12-6-2009 by Hennig Brand]

[Edited on 12-6-2009 by Hennig Brand]

Hennig Brand - 14-6-2009 at 04:19

I just wanted to say that I finaly have success with ASA route(although in small final yield). The last ASA experiment I did I told you I had 16g after one recrystalization, well after drying it seemed to melt well, burn well, look well, but it was still quite insensitive. It also seemed to not dry quite as well as it should(indicating presence of sulpho-phenol?). I did one more recrystalization and only collected the first 11g or so that came out of solution on cooling before it dropped much below 40C. I left the rest in the beaker and when it did come out, man what bad looking stuff(I believe floculant is the right word). Anyway this 11g of product dried in oven at 60-80C for hour or so and was tested and it seems to be about the quality of my sample from phenol(easily set of with quick snap of hammer on anvil, with satisfying crack). I need more work on my nitration obviously. As Grndpndr has said the product should probably almost be able to be set off right from the nitration. I think that if I can get a product that is decent after one recrystalization I would be happy though, which would also afford a better yeild. With more care to keep both acids strength at start of nitration up over 95%, the last stage of nitration would be much quicker, and would go more to completion before petering out. With even what I thought was a small amount of water the final stage of nitration goes on for hours, and even then never realy seems to complete. 11g from 18g of ASA, nothing to brag about, but I have a sample that is dry and a high concentration of TNP. For now I am happy. :)

Final note, when a nitration is such that it goes on for hours at 120C or near that, it is distilling of your precious nitric acid, leaving behind a mix with a higher concentration of water, and maybe even not enough HNO3 to do a complete job of final stage nitration.

Does anyone know if I could be damaging my Picric Acid in anyway by drying it in the oven at less than 80C? If still significantly damp when it goes in it may change the crystal density and stuff I think but I don' t know for sure. I don' t think it would change it chemicaly though(TNP is pretty tuff at those temperatures I think)
[Edited on 14-6-2009 by Hennig Brand]

[Edited on 14-6-2009 by Hennig Brand]

1281371269 - 14-6-2009 at 10:26

I followed the instructions given in the second post of this thread (only using a tenth of all the amounts) and everything went fine, correct colour changes, until the last step - getting out the picric acid crystals.
I realised that what the step described was basically adding water and then cooling and filtering, so I added the water (a great amount more than instructed) cooled, filtered...and got a nice yellow / orange filtrate. I then tried boiling this down a little and then recooling, to no effect.
I did notice that on heating it changed from orange to more of a light yellow colour. How can I get the crystals out of the solution? Would boiling all the liquid away work or would there be a risk of detonation?

entropy51 - 14-6-2009 at 11:42

Mossydie,

The Merck Index says picric can detonate at over 300 C, way above the temperature of boiling water, but the stuff crystallizing on the walls of the heating vessel might be overheated without good heat control, for example over an open flame or a hot stove.

Just start over!

Best not to improvise the first time you try a prep.

1281371269 - 14-6-2009 at 11:48

I'd also have to boil off the H2SO4 that was in there...but it does seem a little bit of a waste :( Ahh well.

hissingnoise - 15-6-2009 at 07:28

You do know that H2SO4 boils @ ~338*C?

1281371269 - 15-6-2009 at 11:27

Yes, that was my point!
I should have made it clearer. Boiling off the impurities is certainly a bad idea. I wonder if I could use the liquid acid to make lead picrate?
Adding it to lead monoxide should work but Lead Picrate is also water soluble so I wouldn't really have achieved anything unless it has a much higher detonation temperature (aka critical temperature?).
[Edited on 15-6-2009 by Mossydie]

[Edited on 15-6-2009 by Mossydie]

grndpndr - 15-6-2009 at 12:52

lead picrates extremely sensitive and very likely to detonate
at the slightest whim.I am very likely overstating the instability of lead picrate but for the amounts youd be needing a few grams of TNP and a few grams 'litharge' lead oxide/monoxide its not worth the risk.FWIW I was thinking along gththe same lines as TNP is an excellent booster in a composite cap and from waht Im told is excellent with MF/TNP
1/2-1gr/2-4gr TNP engineer grade cap perhaps?

Since so far marginally successful synthesis have you noted the temp at which your sulphonating then nitrating
your TNP? Ive recovered some old notes and unless im missing something the temps your using are double what ive ever heard used for asa- H2SO4/Nitrate salts!

70-80c H2SO4 sulphonating temperature lasting until the mixture turns black than perhaps another 1/2 hr-3/4 hour further at the same temperature.

Remove from heat! cool to 30- 50c then begin to add nitrate salts slowly,temp shouldnt rise above 70-80c causing minimal nitrous dioxide fumes,which will only waste the nitrates.A reddish hue should begin to be evident.After all the nitrates have been added let the synthesis cool to room temp the yellow cast should be very evident.

Crash the synthesis in a ice cube /water mix about
2x the amt of the synthesis when the ice has melted
filter off the crystals.Some save the liquor from the synthesis but personally I havent seen folks have much luck getting additional picric acid OT a few grs.hardly worth the effort IMHO

Take the filtered crystals and add them to about 200ml boiling water per 40 grs asa from starting synthesis again cool the remaining hot mix in a fridge or freezer if anxious t until the TNP again recrystalizes
This is Supposed to be a very pure trinitrophenol sufficient for the great majority of uses including long storage with 10-30%water.

Acetone is also mentioned as a final recrystalizing purification method but i do think Its rarely needed.Given good clean precursors the water crashed TNP should be at least a good tech+ grade more likely closer to a reagent grade.

Ive seen it tested by putting a pinch in a spoon and heating with a common lighter waiting until it turns black/bubbles then geflagrates with a distinct pop.Others say over 80%TNP will detonate from a hammer blow with a few small pinches wrapped in paper towel or AL foil on an anvil or another heavy piece of steel.It seems to me MNP, DNP should
be removed from the TNP with the recrystalization as well as be visible in the water assuming anys present.
Regards

You can dry the crystals in the oven at its lowest heat with the door ajar at most 70c but Id prefer the sun or a dessicator.Im going to try a jerky making machine that was given to me.Moderate heat along with air circulation.

Theres also a similar method for recrystalization /purifying using acetone but no one has ever mentioned its superiority.

[Edited on 15-6-2009 by grndpndr]

[Edited on 15-6-2009 by grndpndr]

1281371269 - 15-6-2009 at 13:03

This is more or less what I did right up until adding the ice when I found another member of the household had prepared a crushed ice smoothie :mad: . I will retry the synth at some point although I'm out of MeOH atm - my choice for removing the ASA from the tablets because it's cheap and easy to get hold of although a bit annoying because I had to evaporate it in a place devoid of any civilisation and in a good breeze. I could have used Meths but I wanted the colour changes to be as evident as possible, it being my first attempt at the synth and all, and the purple dye would have ruined that.

grndpndr - 15-6-2009 at 14:15

A lead picrate synthesis also reccomends heating the just synthesised lead picrate @ 80c for 2 hours to convert it to pure lead picrate rather than a monohydrate.Supposedly lessens sensitivity.It vseems far more shock msensitive than friction sensitive although charts will need to be consulted.

I didnt know youd found the correct times and temps.Earlier posts indicated very high synthesis temps.
That part is fine but reading the synthesis by color change and other reactions seems equally important. You will be successful with the whole firing train Im sure, Lead picrate/TNP/Ammonium picrate exp D.

The real disadvantages are many however toxicity and a permanent dye being a couple of many only melt /mix Ive run across is trimonite MNN/TNP 7048 @1.6gr cc3

1281371269 - 15-6-2009 at 15:23

Yeah, I should buy some Iso propyl or ferment some EtOH really, MeOH scares me even if it would take quite a large dose to do real damage. Shoving some yeast in a saturated sugar solution, leaving a few weeks and then distilling should do the job...sounds pretty easy. PhZero also suggested home brand mouthwash as a cheap, if not totally pure, EtOH source.
But I digress,
I may have also added the KNO3 too fast - the instructions said '<1g / minute whilst stirring'. With some better equipment and an automatic stirrer it could be added constantly and very slowly whilst I stayed totally out of the way. As it was I got some nasty NOx fumes given off and had to hold my breath for a few seconds, then move away, take a gulp of air, move back in. Not totally practical. I'm in the middle of building myself a stirrer so that one should be sorted before my next attempt.
I don't even have a thermometer ( :O, I know) so I was just estimating on temperatures using a water bath and a vague scale on the hot plate. Is it important that they be very accurate?

Hennig Brand - 16-6-2009 at 04:55

If you shove regular yeast in a saturated sugar solution you will just kill them off. Also without some nutrients to aid the yeasts growth and multiplication(budding) they will die out very quickly and you will get little to no alcohol. The max percent sugar concentration that regular yeasts can handle(with out croaking) is a concentration that yeilds less than 15% alcohol and maybe more like 13% for some yeasts or if yeast are stressed for whatever reason. Considering that water can dissolve about 2 parts of sugar to one of itself(which is very thick and syropy), this is many times more than what any yeast will handle. Also if using refined white sugar nutrients must be added or the yeast will die with little alcohol production. There are prepagaged yeast plus nutrient mixes bought from brew shops that will alow one to easily make ethanol from pure refined sugar and water without having to know about nutrients.

[Edited on 16-6-2009 by Hennig Brand]

quicksilver - 16-6-2009 at 06:38

The sulfonozation of the benzene ring material in PA or related materials (styphnic acid) may produce poor yields due to oxidation of the precursor if that portion of the lab is not monitored carefully. Generally, it is safer to allow for more time rather than higher temperature during this preliminary (given that you are working with a fair quality H2SO4) - to the nitration. This had been the issue in the 19th century when wool, horn, or Indigo had been substituted for materials such as phenol. Methylphenol (oil of wintergreen) or ASA are much more controllable except when contaminated.
Those who did not attempt to clean up their ASA found this a constant problem.

A great deal of valuable material can be found in the thread dealing with oil of wintergreen as a starting point for PA as the sulfonization of that material was a delicate balance between heat & time.

Hennig Brand - 16-6-2009 at 08:49

If one did have problems with oxidation would it be obvious at the end? Would there be just a mysterious loss of yield, or would it be very clear with insoluble products. In reading posts on the subject I have seen many times people talk of red,dark yellow, maybe some almost black resinous material which was very insoluble. I just wonder if maybe oxidation could acount for a loss or partial loss of yield and still maybe not be an obvious cause visualy?

[Edited on 16-6-2009 by Hennig Brand]

Rosco Bodine - 16-6-2009 at 09:02

There may be a way to finesse the synthesis using
oil of wintergreen as a precursor, but from my own experience it was determined not to be nearly as good a precursor as ASA. ASA has no difficult reaction management, contaminant byproduct, or end product purification issues. ASA is the way to go on this one,
and by closely following a pretty well tested general process model, the results are very predictably good.
It is usually counterproductive to vary the parameters
by very much, not to say that no refinements can be made upon a process that is general for further optimizing it.

Hennig Brand - 16-6-2009 at 09:36

These figures taken from Urbanski book 1

TABLE 109
SOLUBILITY OF PICRIC ACID IN WATER
Temperature°C Content of picric acid, g
in 100 g of the
solution in 100 g of the
solvent
0 0.67 0.68
10 0.80 0.81
20 1.10 1.11
30 1.38 1.40
40 1.75 1.78
50 2.15 2.19
60 2.77 2.81
70 3.35 3.47
80 4.22 4.41
90 5.44 5.72
100 6.75 7.24

Note: Picric Acid can be slow and reluctant to go into solution, don' t add heaps of water when dissolution is slow. Some time must be allowed in between additions to effect solution. These tables will give a good idea of how much is needed approximatly anyway. It is obvious that with a small yield one could easily(if not careful to be mindful of solubilities) to loose entire yield to solution.

The solubility of picric acid in sulphuric acid varies with the concentration
of the latter. It is highest for concentrated acid and lowest in 18-20% acid. This
can be seen from Table 110 [41b].
TABLE 110
SOLUBILITY OF PICRIC ACID IN H2SO4
H2SO4
CONCENTRATION
% PICRIC ACID CONTENT IN 100 G
OF THE SOLUTION

18°C 50°C 80°C

0 1.184 2.399 4.541
2.3 0.230 0.692 1.940
4.7 0.142 0.368 1.251
10.0 0.091 0.265 0.727
18.0 0.079 0.214 0.561
25.5 0.092 0.230 0.587
50.5 0.429 0.645 1.104
69.7 0.928 1.424 2.203
87.9 2.461 5.826 7.610
97.4 7.531 12.785 24.020
100.0 10.180 16.230 25.860

As can be seen easily at certain concentrations of acid the solubility of Picric Acid drops to almost nothing, which can be highly useful. Most recipies try to drop the concentration to somewhere below 40% to extract the TNP from the nitrating mix.

Much prettier tables can be seen in Urbanki book 1 Chemistry and technology of explosives, as well as other tables and information.

Sorry I had this all neat and when I posted it it went all jumbled up again, erase if not useful if you wish or maybe tell me how to fix.

I must have been frigging with those tables for a while, Rosco got a post in(guess I should have looked)
I tried just about everything at one time or another by way of a Picric Acid precursor (at least the common ones). The only one I had real success with the first time was Phenol.
The Oil of wintergreen as I recall gave a very foamy reaction during nitration which threatened to boil over. I also got a much lower yield than I did from aspirin, and the product seemed kinda damp and fluffy. I bet it does work as a precursor but I bet the procedure for it would look much different than the one for ASA. I tried oil of wintergren 3-4 times, less success even than with aspirin at the time.

[Edited on 16-6-2009 by Hennig Brand]

[Edited on 16-6-2009 by Hennig Brand]

Hennig Brand - 16-6-2009 at 10:37

I would like to describe my last ASA experiment briefly that I did in parts over the last couple days.
I first made fresh HNO3 and was careful to end the distillation just as proceeding into the water zone. S.G. was 1.55, and I got 144mL of it, (awful tempting to see if I could get close to100ml of N.G. out of it). Anyway this acid must be pretty close to pure (95-98%?), a little yellow but not to bad.
First sulphonated at around 120C for 1 hour with 20g ASA and 100mL 0f 95% H2SO4.
Let cool to below 60C then started adding mixed acids(22mL of HNO3 S.G.1.55 and 28mL H2SO4 95%). I used a lot less acid this time because after doing stoichiometry I realized that 20mL should be enough but I added an extra 2mL for losses due to distillation and maybe the inadequacy of my acid.
Temperature was kept around 70C during entire addition with very vigorous stirring from magnetic stirrer, after which temperature was brought up to 110C for 1 hour with some manual stirring .
Yield after 1 recrystalization was 17g of material that can be made to puck from a hammer blow on an anvil, though with a little difficulty. One more recrystalization would make awsome material, and will probably leave me with approximately 14g very pure product if no effort is made to retrieve some from the water of recrystalization.
I did not use the oven to dry this time as I think it was making a more fluffy product, though the differences in product could be more related to my higher yeild this time than anything else.
I would have to say that keeping that water concentration down is key. I guess I allowed myself to down-play the water issue, it is off great importance especialy when using aspirin I believe.

Rosco Bodine - 16-6-2009 at 13:36

Some presence of water within a certain limited range is actually favorable for highest yields in nitrations .

off topic but enjoy, all work and no play.... and all that

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3UYfa0jeL4k&fmt=18

Hennig Brand - 16-6-2009 at 14:45

Thanks man, I would like to watch now but alas I am way out in the country and technology hasn' t found it' s way here yet. My dial-up is even slow for dial-up! Probably time to break for that satellite internet connection, it has come down in price a lot in the last few years. I will definately check it out when at my girlfriends, as she lives in the city and has the benifit of high speed. Maybe just let it download when computer not in use. Thanks and have a nice day :)

Hennig Brand - 16-6-2009 at 16:16

I just watched the first minute or so of the video and I feel like I have reached the height of zen. Just joking, but seriously, very relaxing. I am curious what you were thinking when you posted that. If you are catholic I meant no insult to the church in this post.

Rosco Bodine - 16-6-2009 at 18:12

The church is no enemy of science at all, but is generally its historical advocate. That definitely is a consciousness expanding video in my opinion. The file is 21.7 MB and because these good videos have a track record of disappearing, I have saved the flv file on an alternate server.

http://www.mediafire.com/file/ztzdtzzfwyb/Mystico.flv

Here is a download link for a standalone freeware flv viewer which is good for playing saved flv files.
http://www.brothersoft.com/d.php?soft_id=59435&url=http%...

You might like this too. I've been on some of these climbs,
in my younger years.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sVjYX4-LZx4&fmt=18

[Edited on 17-6-2009 by Rosco Bodine]

quicksilver - 17-6-2009 at 05:45

Quote: Originally posted by Hennig Brand  
If one did have problems with oxidation would it be obvious at the end? Would there be just a mysterious loss of yield, or would it be very clear with insoluble products. In reading posts on the subject I have seen many times people talk of red,dark yellow, maybe some almost black resinous material which was very insoluble. I just wonder if maybe oxidation could acount for a loss or partial loss of yield and still maybe not be an obvious cause visualy?


I would refer you back to Rosco's experiments & his deductions on the subject. The "where, when" of oxidized product appears to shift. His conclusions of ASA as superior may, in fact have more to do with the starting medium (liquid) & it's responses to temperature in a magnetic stirrer (or without).
However it may also be a property of the oil of wintergreen itself & surrounding (additional) materials such as alcohol depending on where obtained. Such a thing may exist with ASA. Large Boluses for cattle have minimal binder of a easily extractable nature. Adulterants will ruin an experiment quicker than poor equipment. :(

ASA may be obtained in a known purity level and as a solid, it may have more consistency when exposed to a given temperature (the oil of wintergreen may separate out for a period during sulfonation).
I have seen successes vary with wool, horn, & indigo & the simple concept of their density may be a contributing factor in their usage (as a precursor).
Obviously the horn must be ground fine, the wool must also be of a powdered property, & so on. Or the black sludge of oxidation will be apparent sooner with higher temp than lower. But will exist more so than most any pure ASA. Frankly some of the finest light white-yellow TNP I have seen was an ASA lab.
{.....Which "popped" consistently with impact at a multi-milligram level.}
The whole issue of an powdered alkali nitrate used to obtain nitrogen, etc is a separate bedevilment... Those that may add greater nitrogen my not be the best for evolving a solution with H2SO4....

[Edited on 17-6-2009 by quicksilver]

grndpndr - 18-6-2009 at 08:20

Speaking of 'clean' ASA ive always seen cheap uncoated aspirin tablets slightly wetted to soften then dissolved in methanol or "HEET', a methanol based gas additive,filtered and dried.The resulting ASA must have been relatively pure as the experiments were always very successful yielding a very brightly colored light canary yellow before and after recrystalization using the very simple OTC H2SO4/NaNO3 method.However the vetrinary supply route may be better as what Ive seen advertised is pure powdered ASA at approx $7 lb if your in a rural area its likely available at a farm /ranch supply.Its claimed to be pure but the usual purification may be wise at its first trial use.I have always seen the lower temp range/more time for sulfonation and nitration used.
although unfortunately no notes were kept.

[Edited on 18-6-2009 by grndpndr]

Hennig Brand - 18-6-2009 at 13:37

I wasn' t really trying to be critical of the video and to be truthful I have only seen the first bit. I have been under the impression, from everything heard and read though that Christianity has many times been in direct opposition to scientific progression, or at least anytime when it appeared to be threatening the power and influence of the church. The Catholic church was more than any other group responsible for the dark ages wasn' t it. Although according to some sources the dark ages were not as stifling to all progress as is usually portrayed in the popular media. I realy don' t know for sure. Weren' t many of the witches that were burned just people thinking a little differently than the church, some of them scientists. The church has been very good in a lot of ways. In many parts of Europe until Christianity took hold there was little organization and little progress in many ways(this is my understanding). I think the church has done horrible things in many ways that would definitely be deemed drastic human rights violations today, to their own people and most definately to people of other countries and backrounds. Today judging by the state of society many could use a little more religion though!


Does anyone know for sure that ASA is/or isn't more sensitive to oxidation during sulphonation than phenol, and if so by how much. I ask because the reaction with phenol is much easier to find information on(for me anyway), therefor a comparison would simpify things.
I would think the phenol would be more delicate from my observations, at least than pure ASA. For sure it is during the nitration(maybe I am drawing a false conclusion partly based on the nitration differences?)
As has just been said though the two or more starting materials may be very difficult to compare using similar techniques during the nitration procedure. Results obtained would be relative to the procedure used. However there must be some way to find something conclusive about just the sulphonation portion of the lab with different feedstocks. Someone, somewhere must have studied this(probably in one of those 30-40$ journals on line). It doesn' t seem like the kind of thing I am prepared to tackle but I have seen procedures in texts to analize sulpho-phenol and sulpho-salicylic acid after a sulphonation. It must have been done somewhere at least a few times. Isolating the problem would be ideal, but trial and error does get good results usually, with a little work and record keeping.

The churches treatment of Galileo might be worth looking into for some as he was one of the primary founders of the scientific method and was treated less than well by the church.

[Edited on 18-6-2009 by Hennig Brand]

[Edited on 18-6-2009 by Hennig Brand]

[Edited on 18-6-2009 by Hennig Brand]

Hennig Brand - 19-6-2009 at 14:14

Quicksilver after reading through your post again I can tell you have been "through it" with the Picric Acid in great detail. I would say a lot of you here have more experience than me with this. In your post you stated that adulterants can ruin an experiment quicker than lack of proper equipment. I used to, (before getting aspirin powder USP) purify aspirin with acetone and I always felt that something other than aspirin was still getting through the purification that was easily oxidized(at least with my aspirin). I was very inexperienced at the time(more than now) and I tracked down some pure ASA which seemed to put an end to a lot of my resinous oxidation products, though now that I know better what I am doing maybe I should give it another go just to see? A lot of things where changing simultaniously at the time with my synthesis. Barring the impurities some kind of mechanical stirring(magnetic seems to be the most convenient and effective at least for small scale) makes a horendous difference to nitration efficiency, and speed and to reducing losses due to oxidation/localized heating, high concentrations of nitrate/HNO3 in spots. Hand/manual stirring can get the job done but in my experience it is just tremendously tedious and laboursome and still does half the job of any good mechanical stirring device. I have seen it stated in texts that in aromatic hydrocarbon nitrations(especialy TNP) that agitation is probably one of the most important parameters next to temperature control. Then again if you use a feedstock with junk in it I guess all the care in the world to temp and agitation isn' t going to make up for it(as you said), these things are still very important however. Using good ingredients is definately paramount though and to the inexperienced(me) it can sometimes be difficult to tell.
Although maybe not absolutely necessary I find the magnetic stirrer to have greatly simplified the procedure, making it much quicker and easier, and with a superior product(at least for me).
In my last few attemps, (which were more successful I think) I tried to get around some of those seperate bedevilments. One way was of course was by using the known pure ASA, and the other was by avoiding the nitrate salts and using HNO3. I haven' t found NaNO3 only KNO3 so HNO3 greatly simplified things in some ways compared to the K salt (I found anyway). When added as a mixed acid with H2SO4 it seems to be pretty straightforward and convenient. I guess this all depends on one having the equipment to make the acid though, and as many have said not needing the acid(HNO3) is maybe one of the main appeals of the other synthesis using nitrates, and even using this explosive at all.

quicksilver - 20-6-2009 at 06:41

Magnetic stirrers are a fine thing - that's for sure.
Occasionally, ammonium nitrate is just the thing for making a sold nitrate/mixed acid because it appears to "mix" well in your H2SO4 unlike sodium nitrate, etc.
So lets say you only source is "cold packs" (that are expensive); you can still get a good mixed acid from such a thing.
IF you can only lay your hands on KNO3, use something to drop the particulate to a very fine level (600mesh or 40um). You'll get a much better mix & a much better final product. This is where your $19.99 coffee grinder outshines the mortar & pestle. :P

There ARE some threads on making a magnetic stirring device but must people find that a mechanical stirring device (non-magnetic) can be rigged up to do the job as there are some stainless steel devices for mixing paint that, with a bit of fine tuning, will suffice. If you have a real one from a lab; treat it like a baby. Replacements cost at least $100+.

Agitation with air is feasible: I have seen it done with an aquarium pump and a vortex design for the insertion tubing.

1281371269 - 20-6-2009 at 07:02

Making one is very very easy if you have an old broken computer hard drive and fan lying around. A speed control can even be fitted with an (apparently) simple piece of electronics. The issue is that the teflon bars aren't all that cheap. I tried making one with some screws and PTFE tape but it wasn't really satisfactory.

Rosco Bodine - 20-6-2009 at 10:19

Please indulge this digression, to try to shed some
light on a consideration of ethics and science in a historical perspective.

Quote: Originally posted by Hennig Brand  
I wasn' t really trying to be critical of the video and to be truthful I have only seen the first bit.
Recommend you see all of it, then be the critic. Alice cannot describe wonderland before traversing the rabbit hole:P fulget crucis mysterium
Quote:

I have been under the impression, from everything heard and read though that Christianity has many times been in direct opposition to scientific progression, or at least anytime when it appeared to be threatening the power and influence of the church.
Better to ask a Christian than to trust the commentary of historians. There is a difference between the history of all Christendom in the entire world, and what may have been the bad behavior of any ambitious sectarian interests, including any corrupt acts of a small minority of Catholics. I am not a Catholic and I can recognize that. There is a very large population of the church and it is not all Catholic. Peter was one of twelve disciples, so there are many more derivative branches than the Catholics.
Quote:
The Catholic church was more than any other group responsible for the dark ages wasn' t it.
Actually no, the fall of Rome and the chaos which followed was probably most responsible for the early middle age decline of culture and learning, which the scholars of the church preserved.
There is historical direct correlation in the declining use of Latin which was the language of the learned and cultured, the scholars, doctors, teachers, ect. and the literature which sustained a higher standard of life, with the parallel decline
of society, in that early middle age period of decadence when
ignorance and darkness was prevailing.
Quote:
Although according to some sources the dark ages were not as stifling to all progress as is usually portrayed in the popular media.
Correct
Quote:
I realy don' t know for sure. Weren' t many of the witches that were burned just people thinking a little differently than the church, some of them scientists.
Possibly, but that would seem unlikely.
Quote:
The church has been very good in a lot of ways. In many parts of Europe until Christianity took hold there was little organization and little progress in many ways(this is my understanding).
Correct
Quote:
I think the church has done horrible things in many ways that would definitely be deemed drastic human rights violations today, to their own people and most definately to people of other countries and backrounds. Today judging by the state of society many could use a little more religion though!
No argument there, except that faith is better than religion, hope is good too,
and always love is still better than either.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5nkZHidDGUk&fmt=18

Latin / English

O Lux beata trinita - O Blessed Threefold Light
Fulget crucis mysterium - The Mystery of the Cross Shines Out
Lucis creator optime - Most Wonderful Creator of The Light
Aeterna Lux caelestia - Everlasting Heavenly Light

Beata Lux - Blessed Light

Quote:

The churches treatment of Galileo might be worth looking into for some as he was one of the primary founders of the scientific method and was treated less than well by the church.

Galileo's astronomy wasn't what got him into trouble with the church, it was his trying to interpret scripture in the light of science which got him in trouble. Wrong light for the job.


[Edited on 20-6-2009 by Rosco Bodine]

Hennig Brand - 20-6-2009 at 11:24

There are ways to make stir bars,procedures can be found in old lab texts. The one I have seen a couple times is to put something ferrous or magnetic in a piece of glass tubing and seal the ends by melting process. The teflon is probably the best but a substitute can be improvised or so it says in the books.
With regards to the stainless, I took one of those cocktail battery powered stirring devices(hand held), and replaced the cheap plastic stirring arms with stainless steel welding rods(tig rods). The cromium I believe or something else made a huge mess and produced this big fluffy precipitate that filled my beaker. And to make matters worse I couldn' t seem to get the beaker clean enough to keep the same thing happening even without the stirrer(it looked clean but wasn' t):(. I eventualy did get it clean and never looked back, now using only glass and teflon. It is good to point out though that there are many different types of stainless steel and some are probably very suitable for nitrations(I believe industry uses stainless in a lot of these sorts of situation). I just don 't know enough about the different metals, and was not sure that it would be cost effective, and would maybe raise some eyebrows if I order some exotic stainless. There may be some common stainless that I overlooked though, that would be suitable) . I have since rounded up some large chunks of teflon in the form of runners for snowmobiles(people do a lot of that around here) which could be cut/shapped into a paddle or something for the cocktail stirrrer. The batteries could be replaced with a small cheap (wall wort) power supply of suitable voltage, and speed could be controlled simply by using variable resistance between power supply and motor(remote control via cord). One of the main reasons I abandoned the regular motor stirrer, for the magnetic stirrer was abviously because the stirring contraption had to be used with something large enough to except the stirring apparatus and still give space to work while doing experiment. The rising acid vapors also were damaging to the stirrer(plastic, exposed metal, motor?), I could tell it would be an isue in the not to distant future(probably destroy the stirrer), I am sure there are ways of doing it though, and protecting it from acid vapors. The cocktail stirrer was only $5, so no big loss and it was a valuable learning experience. The magnetic stirrers seem much more versatile, useful and user friendly. And in my limited experience easy to improvise a descent diy model.
Coffee grinders are awesome, I use them all the time and have several for different uses. The last two I bought were about $10 each and were simple yet tough and practical. I always did powder my KNO3 for TNP nitration but a lot of the problems seemed to be in relations to the characteristics of the chemical itself and its products during and dealing with them after nitration, rather than with the partical size of the chemical when adding. I guess that could be a problem to, but I don' t know as I always powdered my nitrate as per Rosco' s instuction in his posts.

Note: when I was researching teflon I believe I found that it was at decomp temperature at about the same temp as melting, but that layers or pieces could be made to fuse without decomp at a significantly lower temp. This might prove useful(I experimented a bit but didn' t put much in and didn' t get great results). It is done however in industry routenly I think, whether or not teflon tape would work well I don' t know. Also there is much thicker teflon tape that can be bought, one example is the stuff used for gas lines instead of regular plumming(it is much thicker, good around stills too).

[Edited on 20-6-2009 by Hennig Brand]

[Edited on 20-6-2009 by Hennig Brand]

Hennig Brand - 20-6-2009 at 12:06

Interesting insites on religion and science Rosco. I only have the little knowledge I have on the subject because I have read some, but mostly I have listened to those who have spent more time at trying to understand history(older family members usually). It seems like you know what you are talking about and the things I posted where just my feelings mostly with out the benefit of a great deal of research. I maybe shouldn' t have said as much, as these issues can be very emotionaly charged and personal for many(I don' t mean you personaly, its just that such discussions are not deemed apropriate for polite discussion by many). I will check out your links soon and try to keep an open mind, I tend to develope tunnel vision when I get into something to the exclusion of all else(it is my greatest weakness and also my greatest strength). Time could be well spend studying such things I would say, for one interested in overall personal development and understanding. Some of what I wrote may have been distorded by my memory and interpretation from the original source. I appreciate the links, and insite on the subject. I am not very religous, even though brought up more so, yet I like to try to keep an open mind(more so as I get older).

Rosco Bodine - 20-6-2009 at 14:48

Something significant which many seem to forget is that the very origins of literacy and science are linked to religion of one sort or another since ancient times as the means of recording and publishing and glorifying the
greatness of some royal personage of some variety, calendering and scheduling of rites, and seasonal events, constructing of monuments, composing musical tributes, preparing medicines and so forth were
royal commissions which required patronage of the wealthy rulers and society in support of such arts.
Indeed for many thousands of years, the
greatest number of persons on earth who could even read and write only did so because that was essential to their commissioned occupation of maintaining the records of royals, who also directed that religious and historical records, scientific, mathematical, literature,
and other art be preserved. So it was the "priests"
of whatever variety who then became the worlds museum keepers, chroniclers, historians, and librarians. Especially noteworthy in that regard were Christian monks, some of whom were scientists as well as being priests at the same time. Roger Bacon outlined the general methods of logical scientific experimentalism
which holds through little changed today, and he was a Franciscan friar affiliated with Oxford university. Orders of nuns have left their bodies to science for post mortem studies of diseases of aging. The truth is that study and increasing of knowledge and reasoning is one of the principles of Christianity from its originator, but there is the caveat that its purpose be ethical and serve the greater good. Not all scientific pursuit would be reasonable or ethical simply by being scientific because
the same science which produces the cure for a disease like smallpox, could also kill many millions. And the same science which leads to the nuclear power plant,
can also in a more perverse usage have apocalyptic effect. Therefore with scientific knowledge also comes a
moral responsibility. There are ethical oaths which doctors and engineers are supposed to follow in respect of that same moral responsibility to do what helps rather than harms.

[Edited on 20-6-2009 by Rosco Bodine]

Hennig Brand - 20-6-2009 at 15:34

Very interesting indeed. Without really knowing, after reading your last post it all seems to hold true logicaly. I guess for whatever reason I was unaware of the importance that the religious community played in laying the foundations of, and nurturing along the way of scientific progress and achievement. They seemed to be the main players for a long time, especially early on, and still to a great extend right on up to modern time right?
I don' t know if you have had the same experience but in growing up my experiences when talking to priests or ministers was usually one that left me feeling that religion and the church were in competition with science (or at least some of its theories). This is just the impression I got, not necessarily reality. It may have been that I was tormenting these people a little by asking questions that may have conflicted with their belief system(these people were also usually not science orientated to any great extent, or not at all), and I was being a little over enthusiastic and threatening(unintentionaly), as I was young and lacked good people skills.
I wonder if western civilization could have made a lot of the accomplishments it has without its early start with, and influence of the christian religion? I would guess not, but I don' t know exactly to what extent it is true.
Interesting stuff.

Rosco Bodine - 20-6-2009 at 20:53

If you think about the engineering and art which definitely involved science to an enormous extent and at great expense just for the construction of churches then it becomes clear that by necessity the church is probably the single greatest patron of the arts and sciences. But the purpose of it all being for the glorification on earth of a God who cannot be seen or measured with instruments but is a matter for the heart to discern, is a concept which gives atheists indigestion, so they deride and ridicule the church. When surveying the worlds splendid monuments to whatever is considered glorious by whatever religion, the architecture alone should make a statement. And institutions of higher learning, the colleges, particularly the older ones were many of them
originally and principally seminaries whether that is the public perception or not. So it really comes down to it
that we can even read and write today is probably a heritage which is ours in the present age a gift from some ancient "holy men" of the past. They were the worlds ultimate archivers and teachers of knowledge
at one time, and that time is one which may not necessarily be marked by a beginning or an end.

[Edited on 21-6-2009 by Rosco Bodine]

hissingnoise - 21-6-2009 at 04:58

Quote: Originally posted by Rosco Bodine  
But the purpose of it all being for the glorification on earth of a God who cannot be seen or measured with instruments, but is a matter for the heart to discern, is a concept which gives atheists indigestion, so they deride and ridicule the church.

Rosco, the thread is about is about synthetic routes to an energetic material; it has nothing whatsoever to do with a belief in an imaginary "Super Being". . .
Your religious beliefs are your business and you're welcome to them but I am an atheist and I detest seeing organised superstition being discussed on a science forum, of all places.

Hennig Brand - 21-6-2009 at 07:01

I agree we have derailed the thread a bit and will be more careful in the future about this. However I think it less than scientific to take a rigid stance on some of these issues concerning science and religion(I do respect your right to your opinion though). I do feel however that without some faith in something, or a belief in some way that "things will work out" life is more impoverised in many ways, life and death are usualy or can be much more difficult for people with out a certain amount of hope for the future. For awhile I would have called myself a definate disbeliever and at some level I still am for sure, but in looking around people with faith seem to generaly be healthier and have an easier time in life and death. It definately gives hope to many. Sometimes entertaining the thought of a posibility of things we don' t understand can be healthy I think, and needn' t take the place, or discredit hard science in my opinion.
Back to TNP and I am sorry to stray from the topic.

Does someone know if I could purify or get the water out of my phenol? It is a hydrate?/bonded with water and made to fuse. On looking it up it probably actualy has about 10% water in it even though before I said 8% from memory. Does anyone know off-hand how this is done? It would be a good source of phenol as the little bottles come with about 100g in them and they are less than $10 and there is no hazard charge associated with their purchase. It is still expensive I know but for experimenting it is fine(100g is quite a bit to play with)

quicksilver - 21-6-2009 at 08:54

My most productive advice on the subject would be this: Look to local Universities & attempt to "buy" their surplus chemical /lab equipment. YOU WILL GET RESULTS if you appear in person are an adult & never offer to pay in cash (unless asked). I have gotten MANY goodies that way! Some things of high value also! make absolutely sure that aside from rudimentary items - nothing you ask about may be used to make drugs - no List 1 stuff, etc.

If you hit pay dirt, be very forthright about the fact that you love chemistry as a hobby and have some plausible reason for experimentation; such as working on a new design stick fly-paper, but only when asked......No one REALLY cares about making a sub gram quantity of some designer primary or whatever; even the ATF so long as the whole issue is quiet (no pun intended) & safe, but don't be irresponsible or you'll also get others in big trouble. Remember they are thinking about that too! Seek and yea shall find.

Regarding the subject of religion, I am not a practicing Catholic but I remember the teasing about the Pope said there is no vacuum & things of that nature but I still pray. I actually believe in something much greater than myself & I also shed a tear or two while doing so. I think that ANY organized religion can be found to have made a mistake or several. but in the greater perspective of science & religion, it would be a damn lonely place to be without some faith in something. But these are private matters that often change over time as had science.
If Albert Einstein (who was a practicing Jew) could believe, who am I to say such things are opium for the masses? I also remember his brilliance was not recognized when he was young. That tells a great many things about perception of what is science & what is human nature.

Hennig Brand - 21-6-2009 at 08:56

I imagine everyone has seen these but I wanted to ask about it anyway.
http://www.jbc.org/cgi/reprint/82/1/1.pdf
There are other links (a couple I have found with procedures for Picric Acid purification), this one has a good procedure that can be used to produce sodium picrate as the intermediate during purification or potassium picrate. I have tried these proceedures a few times a while back with some of my yeilds from less than perfect nitrations of ASA with not great results. It did get rid of some material and made a better product I think but it was still no where near what I have been getting lately from my more successful nitrations from ASA.
Even now when I do a nitration with ASA at the end during purification with water there is a small amount of much more insoluble material. It is not resinous or anything, it is crystaline and some appears more boyant than the rest. I usualy scrap it of the surface with a spoon and decant to get rid of the stuff on the bottom. I believe this material to be 5-nitro salicylic acid (+ other?),mostly which would be the result of incomplete nitration, and early on I think I had much more of this(probably mixed with some resonous material). If you look up the solubility of this compound it is soluble in more than 1000 parts of water, compaired to Picric Acid' s 78mL. And to make matters worse it forms salts with bases as do all the salicylic acids. It would form a similar red/orange solution with sodium/potassium carbonate and is yellow before and after purification. I don' t know how much nitro salicylic acid could be in the mix after nitration but when using the Picrate purification method it maybe works a little differently when going from ASA than from phenol(different impurities, different situation?)

Interesting perpectives Quicksilver. People are very suggestible aren' t they, and perception is at least a distortion of reality, as well I believe.
I will take your advice and try to be tactful with the university lab people and see if I can get some results. The problem for me is(I think) once I get talking to the educated in chemistry it becomes a little obvious what my interests may be. Maybe I am just perenoid. I also think that universities can be as a matter of course not very friendly to the experimenter as a matter of course, with the justification being one of a liability issue(which is at least partly true), but is used too often(in my opinion) to discourage any science outside of the institutions(university,industry,goverment, etc). One has to learn to work with the system a bit out of necessity I guess.

[Edited on 21-6-2009 by Hennig Brand]

[Edited on 21-6-2009 by Hennig Brand]

quicksilver - 21-6-2009 at 09:41

IF we are just talking about yield levels then phenol is your choice. If such is not available ASA is fine. But any route than direct nitration will not get you what you may expect. This was the whole issue with R-Salt & RDX; the problem there being the precursors (acidic anhydride) being too tough to obtain for the synthesis of choice.
Plant-level synths are MUCH more efficient than anything one can do in a lab. The recycling of acids being a major issue. That's why items like CL-20 are so expensive.....they can't be plant produced via the re-cycle of their expensive precursors. The military STILL pays top dollar for CL-20. IF we were to deal with plant-level TNP one could even start with benzene. Plant-level TNT is so inexpensive that costs are ridiculous. That's why we still use it today.

Most fellows interested in energetic materials skip the reading about plant production, thinking they could never emulate it or compose a lab that would function in that medium. But actually, it can be done on a lab-dedicated level. It's a great hassle, yes. But IF the idea is to have enough TNP to make sand castles with - it could be done. Most folks could experiment till boredom with a few ounces. :D

Rosco Bodine - 21-6-2009 at 13:16

The possibility of using ammonium nitrate or sodium nitrate or magnesium nitrate, dissolved in azeotropic nitric acid and added dropwise to a sulfuric acid solution of the sulfonated precursor derived from aspirin could be an improvement in terms of producing a lower viscosity nitration mixture. It would be easier to make addition of the nitrating agent as a flow control of liquid, than to
use an auger type feeder for making addition of a solid nitrate. It also seems possible there could be catalysts for the nitration which would allow for nitration in more aqueous systems where nitrosylsulfuric acid is not an
inherent byproduct or intermediate. IIRC one of the things I thought about but never tried was instead of using a sulfonated intermediate, to alternately attempt a nitroso intermediate and then nitrate that, without any sulfuric acid involved at all.

Hennig Brand - 22-6-2009 at 11:14

I don' t completely understand the pros and cons of using solid nitrates dissolved in azeotropic nitric acid or any nitric acid which is less than anhydros, But I do understand from experience the great advantages and facility of using a liquid nitrating agent instead of a solid nitrate. I have also read the parts in Chemistry of powder and explosives and Urbanski relating to Picric Acid and they both talk of expedient methods by allied governments to manufacture Picric Acid, and in them is talk of using weak nitric acid and nitrates(sodium nitrate usually), which was workable and got results but was described as inferiour I believe to concentrated acids. This in no way means that it is not possibly very useful to the hobbiest, if only as an expedient method. Rosco and others have pointed out, and proven that the methods using nitrates can be very fruitful and successful indeed.
I know this has been discussed here and elswhere at least a couple times, but if someone with some practical knowledge(actualy has done it) could oblige me and explain a little about detonating Picric Acid say in a compound cap(or other), I would appreciate it. I have samples that can be set off with quick snap of a hammer on an anvil, to give an idea of what I am working with.
I was also under the impression from reading other posts that AP was not all that great at setting off TNP, is this true? How much better would HMTD be for this, if any? Or should I try for something else by way of a primary(I have been hoarding a bit of mercury which could be used I guess, but I don' t think it will provide any performance enhancement). What does the hammer blow test tell about a TNP samples ability to be initiated by primaries for example, and under what conditions.
From someone with experience, some detail of possible pitfalls would also be appreciated. I feel that I could make it work no problem now, or at least "after a fashion", but words of experience would probably provide insite into things overlooked by me.

Here is something that may be of a little interest to some. It looked a little shoddy at first but it is supposed to be from a reputable company, and labled as expedient proceedures(which can look less than professional by their very nature anyway).
http://www.dtic.mil/cgi-bin/GetTRDoc?AD=AD410390&Locatio...


[Edited on 22-6-2009 by Hennig Brand]

Rosco Bodine - 22-6-2009 at 20:03

Anhydrous acid is not needed for TNP. Use of solid nitrates is not just a hobbiest expedient method. Some solid nitrates have a greater nitrating effect than nitric acid, in anybody's lab. Urbanski charts the nitrating activity of various nitrates and it is not a fixed rule but can vary also with the thing being nitrated.

There is further I should share concerning the general "search for truth" by science or philosophy or religion with regards to intellectual honesty. It has been observed by me that there is a measure of agnosticism found in the humility of honest religious people, honest scientists, and honest philosophers, which is an intellectual honesty about the unknown, including things honestly recognized as probably being not knowable.
As an experienced observer who is familiar with analysis, mathematical proof, logical deduction, and reasonable conclusions, which are required for valid thinking, I personally know that a measure of agnosticism must
be present to keep ones feet on solid ground with respect to the ethic of intellectual honesty. The pseudo-certainty which emboldens atheists to proselytize a falsehood that science and religion are somehow at odds, venturing the false "belief" and proposition of atheism that science has exclusive claim to reason and rational perception and other noble virtues, while religion does not or cannot, and is only "superstition" has always been observed by me as lacking that reserve of agnosticism found to be always present with those who are intellectually honest. The certainty of "belief" of atheists about something which no mortal could be certain, even to an extreme of their venturing to redefine history which may not fit their belief so that history becomes more politically correct with regards to their biased view, is an indulgence not even allowable to science. Ironically, for their lacking the humility of agnosticism
any atheist has a bias which is intellectually dishonest and
provides that false confidence of youth which emboldens their ridicule of their elders (and their betters) for being
superstitious. Scientifically speaking, how do any of us know
that the entire realm of things which we know is not itself a
"science experiment" on a cosmic scale in which we are
unwitting participants ? If there can be no certain and definitive answer to that question, then what intellectual superiority could actually exist for anyone having the audacity to presume their own unproven knowledge or belief about any "meaning of life" kind of stuff is somehow an ignorance which gives them license to chastise people of faith as being "superstitious" or "unscientific". There is an inherent non-sequitur there which must be denied by all
irrational fanatics whether they are religious fanatics or
atheist fanatics or anything intermediate. Whether this same
rule also applies to any extra-terrestrial fanatics or extra-dimensional fanatics not covered by the preceding limits
would of course be pure speculation :D

Science and philosophy and science and religion are inextricably linked in the purpose of seeking greater knowledge and if that fact doesn't reside comfortably
with some individuals belief preferences, then they lack maturity. There is simply no honest intellectual basis
for bias and ridicule there concerning "superstition" than
there is for racial or gender bias. Men from earth in a spacecraft orbiting the moon were overwhelmed by the experience of what they were seeing and it was near Christmas as I recall many years ago when they got on their radio and began transmitting back to earth what they felt
compelled to be reading ......from Genesis. My family was
directly involved in that Apollo mission so I have a special
insight concerning the linkage between science and religion.



[Edited on 23-6-2009 by Rosco Bodine]

Hennig Brand - 23-6-2009 at 02:35

What I meant in my first sensence of my last post was that I did not understand all the implications of using nitrates, advantages or disadvantages. I am aware that you have used solid nitrates to great effect, and was not questioning this whatsoever. It does say in some of the more reputable books that the use of nitrates and weak HNO3 was more of an expedient method for certain goverments at certain times, at least from phenol when producing Picric Acid. I just added that for edification and by no means was trying to discredit the nitrate methods. I did say in my last post and will repeat that you have been very successful in your use of nitrates to produce Picric Acid. I will say that those methods are less straight forward (in my opinion), as far as being a more difficult nitration proceedure and more difficult to purify. I would say that it is a great advantage to not need to acquire HNO3 which could easily more than make up for any added difficulty in using the nitrate. You personaly probably have the proceedure down to such an exact science that the difficulties are probably precieved as much less, as well you have NaNO3 which is far superior to both KNO3 or NH4NO3 in function in a ASA nitration(I think?)
In a lot of ways what I wrote was an appeal for more exact information from others. For instance I wouldn' t mind hearing a bit about the greater nitrating effect of some nitrates, if you wouldn 't mind ellaborating a bit.

After looking it up it appears that the word expedient doesn' t necessarily mean inferior at all .(maybe in a military context it would be different). It mostly means to me to carry something out in the most advantagious way, by way of short time and good results and is an adaptation usually of the usual techniques.
I don' t think you would tell me to convert my HNO3 into a nitrate prior to nitration, would you? I know this is probably a rediculous thing to say but I thought it might make a point.

I would judge that any technique using ASA to produce Picric Acid could be aptly called expedient. I do feel that these procedures can be very useful and get good results, and am not trying to take anything away(it is just not seen as the usual methods by our "main chemical institutions", or most desirable if one had every chemical and convenience at their fingertips at industry prices). Maybe for the hobbiest ASA routes are the norm, and others the expedient?

[Edited on 23-6-2009 by Hennig Brand]

[Edited on 23-6-2009 by Hennig Brand]

Rosco Bodine - 23-6-2009 at 03:21

Some of your questions would be answered already in the earlier posts in this same thread and in other threads, I can't really go back and review it all right now to more specifically answer your posts. Do your homework and most of what you are looking for is already there. Ordenblitz did a good photo documentary and there is another thread where
some temps and times were very specificially noted. That
specificity is accurate and important for reproducing the results. Get sloppy and results could vary, unpredictably.

[Edited on 23-6-2009 by Rosco Bodine]

Hennig Brand - 23-6-2009 at 04:01

You are correct that I like many others should do more reading and understanding, rather than talking. There is however a recognized process in learning by which every time a topic is revisited it tends to be done in a little greater depth, and new ideas come fourth as a result of building on the old. I apologize for boring you.

I do agree with your opinions about athiests and agnostics, although have never realy verbalized it quite as well as I feel you have. It does seem realy dishonest to take a rigid fanatical view about religion and science most of the time. I have seen in many who profess to feel this way, what I believe to be a desire to be pugilistic, and threatening to others about something that is personal and emotional for many. This seemingly irrational anger/aggression towards the possibilty of something not understood and possibly greater than what we are could be just the way their fear is being manifestated. Human emotions come out in a lot of strange ways, and I would say it is at least important to try and be honest with ourselves about what we are realy feeling(I have gone through some of these same processes myself at different times). The thought of uncertainty just plain makes some people really nervous to the point of acting irrationally. I am not saying that there isn' t some athiests that are being fairly truthful about their feelings. The truth is that most people(especially with out science training or backround use much emotion in decision making(I believe), and the more emotional charged the issue the less rational processes are used effectively, in some extreme cases little rational thought is used at all. There was some really good stuff in a Time magazine a couple years ago about the brain and how it works in different situations.

[Edited on 23-6-2009 by Hennig Brand]

Rosco Bodine - 23-6-2009 at 06:32

I applaud your perspicacity for recognizing that there are those among us who would push other peoples buttons
for sheer amusment, as if they were the walking incarnation of the left hand of an accordion player,
and the world was their polka :D

And your posts did not bore me, I just don't have time
right now to research the old posts or I would be more helpful.

quicksilver - 23-6-2009 at 11:05

@ Hennig Brand

I have a source for you....
ADVANCED PRACTICAL ORGANIC CHEMISTRY, J. Leonard, Lygo, & Proctor (especially CH 16 "What To Do When Things Don't Work) - saved my efforts many a time...
It's inexpensive & many folks here have read it. I still have mine & that was a 1st edition. I go back to it every so often as it answer things like this so concretely & gives examples of how to set up an example for the use within a common lab. It's a paperback (cardboard back) & inexpensive. You'd love it; as it doesn't start off with useless material.

MANY people begin to turn to undergrad-university textbooks in this hobby as the answers for the "little things" are readily available. What's more it teaches you how to find the answers! Your horizons will expand as the thirst of idiosyncratic info is always there and patents may lead you astray due to the "trade secrets" phenomenon! My other suggestion when searching these things out is to look toward chemistry practiced in the turn of the 19-20th century because that is what we often practice in hobby chemistry (unless we have a grad background).

grndpndr - 23-6-2009 at 12:42


Ive been a fan of the late19th early 20th century literature
not as cutting edge perhaps which is an adavntage for me
frankly.Id love to be capable of mastering or even an understanding of cutting edge technology but late 19th/earlt 20th is difficult enough.Might I be able to find the book you referenced online for the downloading?Hope springs eternal.Failing that a source of the book+ approx cost?
Kill 2 birds with one stone (dual thread) a recent experiment by someone im communicating with desires to use TNP in a composite cap, possible booster.he related 1gr AP failed to detonate 1gr TNP using al tubing with epoxyed endcaps.Both were pressed to 1.2 gr cc3.That should be optimum for AP but lightly pressed for picric acid thus making TNP easier to detonate though with less VOD than optimum of 1.6-1.7 gr cc3? personally Ive never had faith in AP seeing and hearing of to many failure as well as instances where quite large quantities of AP were used in fac t Inordinate amounts to achieve detonation both in caps and as booster charges.Never having been a fan of AP its my suspect as the TNP appears to be good TNP by all the recognized tests.Hammer /anvil det.Melting to decomposition and deflagration with a small pop with black soot byproduct.a result of testing a known good synthesis of TNP. Failures with AP never with unrefined/ OT washed mer ful of 1 gr
pressed to the equivalent of abit more than 3gr cc3 4250+MPS.Merc ful. being quite difficult to press to full density even using a med size vise and dowel arrangement/plexiglass shield and protective gear including EARPLUGS. Suggestions,comments?

[Edited on 23-6-2009 by grndpndr]

497 - 23-6-2009 at 21:06

My suggestion would be HMTD. It seems to be far superior to AP in almost all aspects, especially initiating ability (not just in my experience, many others have said the same). Of course it is still very dangerous stuff, but no more so than AP or MF. I would imaging less the 0.5g would do the trick for TNP. I have found HMTD is best initiated by a small amount of pyrotechnic material coating a nichrome wire, rather than direct nichrome. Sometimes with a power source that is too weak or nichrome that is too thick, it can fail to DDT. Never had it fail by initiating with a "Solar Flare" igniter (used to start model rocket engines.) I'm sure a visco fuse would do just as well, but I don't trust them for large scale stuff.

[Edited on 24-6-2009 by 497]

JohnWW - 24-6-2009 at 01:00

Quote: Originally posted by quicksilver  

ADVANCED PRACTICAL ORGANIC CHEMISTRY, J. Leonard, Lygo, & Proctor (especially CH 16 "What To Do When Things Don't Work) - saved my efforts many a time...
It's inexpensive & many folks here have read it. I still have mine & that was a 1st edition. I go back to it every so often as it answer things like this so concretely & gives examples of how to set up an example for the use within a common lab. It's a paperback (cardboard back) & inexpensive. You'd love it; as it doesn't start off with useless material.

http://rs554cg.rapidshare.com/files/150690239/0748740716.djv... 2.0 Mb - Advanced Practical Organic Chemistry - J Leonard et al (CRC-2nd Ed) - also http://ifile.it/hyrvb3f/0748740716.rar

grndpndr - 24-6-2009 at 03:13

Appreciate both replys gents.497 HMTD was suggested as he has all the precursors for both the fulminate and the HMTD
which I wasnt aware of.The more i looked at HMTD the more I was impressed ,particularly the lack of that nasty ass Mercury.:(

The_Davster - 24-6-2009 at 06:01

Quote: Originally posted by 497  
My suggestion would be HMTD. It seems to be far superior to AP in almost all aspects, especially initiating ability (not just in my experience, many others have said the same). Of course it is still very dangerous stuff, but no more so than AP or MF. I would imaging less the 0.5g would do the trick for TNP. I have found HMTD is best initiated by a small amount of pyrotechnic material coating a nichrome wire, rather than direct nichrome. Sometimes with a power source that is too weak or nichrome that is too thick, it can fail to DDT. Never had it fail by initiating with a "Solar Flare" igniter (used to start model rocket engines.) I'm sure a visco fuse would do just as well, but I don't trust them for large scale stuff.

[Edited on 24-6-2009 by 497]


HMTD is comparable to lead azide in terms of initiation ability, which is a better initiator than Hg fulminate.

Federoff states that 0.06g of HMTD will initiate picric acid.

That said, it still has the metal reactivity issues, and the instability/decomposition during storage.

Rosco Bodine - 24-6-2009 at 06:48

Federoff would have to be citing data for a reenforced cap and it will require a whole lot more to do the job.

Lead Azide or the azo-clathrate will work better. Picric Acid is relatively insensitive and not easily initiated, as is true for many nitrated aromatic compounds, being only slightly more sensitive than TNT to initiation. Styphnic acid is a bit easier to initiate and almost as powerful as TNP, probably on par with TNT, but more easily nitrated, synthesized. Initiation of these relatively insensitive materials is a task for an "unequivocal primary" especially in an unreenforced cap, and HMTD isn't one of those.

On a humorous note, cleverness can lead to a smile
of self-satisfaction which is similar to a cat that ate the canary scenario, however one should be watchful ....
as that may not be the end of the matter :D

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DkLwFfAwbts&feature=relat... Bill The Cat

[Edited on 24-6-2009 by Rosco Bodine]

Hennig Brand - 24-6-2009 at 12:25

Even a relatively thin steel tube has much greater strength than just about any common aluminum one, doesn' t it? Just how reinforced do you mean? Or is this way just not very practical? There really is just no comparison between aluminum and steel, as with the primaries I haven' t had a chance to play with the better ones yet. Time to dig up some azide! That stuff on clathrates looks nice, powerful and staight forward.
Thanks for the links and info in the last half dozen posts or so, it is very helpful to me.:)

hissingnoise - 24-6-2009 at 13:49

Common metals other than aluminium shouldn't be used with HMTD as they react with and sensitise this primary. . .
A reenforced detonator contains a small inner cap which contains the primary.
When the base-charge is loaded the reenforcing cap is inserted on top of the base-charge and pressed firmly to fix it in place.
Davis describes reenforced caps in the section on detonators in COPAE!
They're not reinforced as such.
In general, reenforced detonators are more effective than non-reenforced detonators. . .

[Edited on 24-6-2009 by hissingnoise]

The_Davster - 24-6-2009 at 16:04

Quote: Originally posted by Rosco Bodine  
Federoff would have to be citing data for a reenforced cap and it will require a whole lot more to do the job.



Oddly enough, 0.05g reinforced cap, 0.06 unreinforced. For a non-unequivocal primary this seems wrong. (Page H84 )

Also interesting is the sand crush data, 42.5g for HMTD vs 16.5 for Hg fulminate :o

Perhaps it is an under-appreciated primary?

Still go with one of the unequivocal ones, and to add to rosco's suggestions: silver nitrotetrazolate.:P

[Edited on 25-6-09 by The_Davster]

Rosco Bodine - 24-6-2009 at 18:27

Federoff is basically a collective encyclopedia of assorted
data and some of it is just plain wrong data from the source. HMTD is not going to self accelerate quick enough to make the DDT in those quantities, much less
to function as an initiator, and yeah similar misreporting
exists for remarkable initiating ability of other compounds which simply don't have nearly the sass as is reported,
DDNP is another. I look at some of those figures and wonder if they are by a decimal place overoptimistic. There would have to be some really unusual "trade secret" sort of configuration being used to somehow get some materials to do the tricks reported, because those reported results sure aren't confirmed by my own observations, and I always trust my own data, at least those times when I double check just to make sure. And I have double checked HMTD. It will do the job as a quick improvised and near term usage material, but it is not useful except for the short term because it has a definite stability problem with deterioration that is a clock that starts running when it is made and is definitely temperature dependant stability favored by cold and
instability effected by even ordinary, mild, not even warm temperatures.

An interesting improvised cap which might be a worthy experiment is a betaine permanganate base charge having a lead nitranilate initiator, or a mixture
of the two materials as an initiator for picric acid.
If workable, this would probably be a step above HMTD in terms of sophistication, yet less technically difficult than azide or tetrazole initiators.

[Edited on 25-6-2009 by Rosco Bodine]

The_Davster - 24-6-2009 at 19:40

Curiously these extravagant claims are not referenced nicely like the other HMTD properties indicated. I would like to try to find the original 'exaggerators'. I bet it is a patent.

497 - 25-6-2009 at 02:41

Quote:
but it is not useful except for the short term because it has a definite stability problem with deterioration that is a clock that starts running when it is made and is definitely temperature dependant stability favored by cold and
instability effected by even ordinary, mild, not even warm temperatures.


Many people have said this, but I have yet to see anyone mention any actual first hand experience with this problem.. Also is there even any real tested data/information on the mechanism of decomposition, the products, the effects of conditions, or anything related to the decomposition of HMTD in storage? Virtually everything I've seen regarding HMTD instability seems to be speculation or referencing to something that is speculation..

The reason I'm a little doubtful, is I have seen with my own eyes a sample of HMTD that has been kept by a friend for over a year now at room temperature in a barely sealed plastic container. After a over a year it has undergone no noticeable change in appearance, smell, quantity, sensitivity or power.. So maybe the instability issue is a little overblown?

I do agree that something like azoclathrates would be preferable, but for simple experimentation (no need for storage, small scale) I think HMTD is perfectly usable.

[Edited on 25-6-2009 by 497]

hissingnoise - 25-6-2009 at 05:06

Quote: Originally posted by 497  
So maybe the instability issue is a little overblown?

I too found that HMTD could be stored safely without special precautions. . .
The product of my first synthesis was incompletely washed and smelled of methylamine.
After several months sitting in an open container it developed a slight cream colour but its explosive properties were unaffected.
A thoroughly washed sample was kept for around two years in a garden shed which heated considerably in summer and although I checked regularly for signs of decomposition no changes were found.
I eventually gave up checking and all but forgot its existence for about a year after which time I took it out to demonstrate its deflagration to some friends. . .
They were suitably impressed!

Rosco Bodine - 25-6-2009 at 06:02

HMTD instability is something that I have observed consistently is a predictable problem which is also reported in the literature. It is not speculation and
the deterioration by weight loss confirmed due to chemical decomposition has been charted and published.
IIRC there is something charted regarding the decomposition rate in COPAE. That decomposition is the rule and if there is a stable sample of HMTD then it is the anomaly.

quicksilver - 25-6-2009 at 07:02


HMTD was found to be too UV, temperature, friction, & compression sensitive to be of practical use in industry. USBoM did quite a few tests w/ HMTD compressed at various levels & unfortunately it "didn't stay put" in that it would loose it's compaction over time easier than many other materials of the day. UV sensitivity was a comparative unknown to many & HMTD's UV issues were fairly great. As mercury was starting to get expensive and in warmer climates the fuse caps were not lasting 6 months in magazines that could easily rise to 60C (or warmer) for periods of the day. Even with Bake-a-lite capsules the USBoM felt it was just not the best choice.
Hydrazine was easily enough synthesized & the concept of a primary that could have an almost limitless shelf life was highly desirable. Prior to this Pb Picrate with a compressed TNP base was experimented with and found to be useful to the #6 level. This let many off the hook as a #6 was all that was appropriate with many materials used at the time. This was also why many in Europe believed TNP to be the most versatile energetic material to mass produce.

One of the last books I posted in the "Worst Books" thread had this material directly from the USBoM, the tests, results, etc. Hydrazine became of age much later than one would have expected but many people felt that the industrial investment in mercury fulminate to too costly to switch to an unproven material (politics of DuPont).

Thus HMTD's instability was not speculation. Tests really were done quite extensively at the time. This was due to it's ability to be a great initiator. But the factors (as above) put it out of the running unless sciences know today would have been employed (vacuum sealing, non-metallic capsules of high strength, etc.).



[Edited on 25-6-2009 by quicksilver]

Rosco Bodine - 25-6-2009 at 07:30

There is a quite lengthy thread at E&W where I posted a bunch of historical patent references
http://www.roguesci.org/theforum/showthread.php?t=367&hi...
I never explored solvent recrystallization for purification to see what may be helpful there but that is a possibility
for experiment, as well as possible double salt formations which are sometimes a means of stabilizing an otherwise unstable material.

I try very hard not to do bad science nor report bad data,
and when I speculate or propose unknowns I generally try to identify that sort of qualified information for what it is as intuitive or hypothetical. The instability of HMTD is a fact for every sample I ever made and there have been quite a few.

The thread which Axt started about 2,3,5,6-Tetraazidobenzoquinone which evolved into chloranil and nitranilic acid related discussion could lead to some interesting experiments. I keep having to go back and take another look there so maybe I have an idea brewing subconsciously :P

The lead azo-clathrates definitely still bear further investigation and in my opinion are actually the most intriguing thing to arise, of lesser technical challenge than the energetic tetrazoles which are of course top of the heap. I pretty much said this same thing many years ago and so far anyway, it still holds true in my estimation.

The hydrazine nitranilate or some of the possible nitranilate complexes in possible mixture with lead nitranilate or other materials also has an interesting potential for experiments.

[Edited on 25-6-2009 by Rosco Bodine]

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