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Author: Subject: Carbon Foam Refractory Made From Bread
careysub
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[*] posted on 31-10-2016 at 06:46
Carbon Foam Refractory Made From Bread


Yes, really:
https://www.acs.org/content/acs/en/pressroom/presspacs/2016/...

This could be very useful for people devising very high temperature furnaces.




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[*] posted on 31-10-2016 at 07:37


Finally a purpose for the shitty bread they sell in my town.

Or maybe thats why the bread is so shitty, because they are secretly making carbon foam, and they sell the remaining (made with a recipe adjusted for carbon foam bread...

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[*] posted on 31-10-2016 at 08:13


Is it conductive?
I wander if it is similar to the foamy carbon you get by carbonizing sugar with concentrated sulphuric acid.

The smells in that lab... it must be alternating lovely fresh bread followd by terrible burnt toast.




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[*] posted on 31-10-2016 at 08:15


Ha, that is... actually pretty awesome. Now I'm picturing the chemists consulting professional bread bakers to get the consistency just right.



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[*] posted on 31-10-2016 at 08:33


Quote: Originally posted by phlogiston  
Is it conductive?
I wander if it is similar to the foamy carbon you get by carbonizing sugar with concentrated sulphuric acid.

The smells in that lab... it must be alternating lovely fresh bread followd by terrible burnt toast.


If its conductive it would be the best electrode for electrolysis on the planet, high surface area and cheap.
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[*] posted on 31-10-2016 at 09:04


Cool find. Here's the paper.

Attachment: yuan2016.pdf (2.1MB)
This file has been downloaded 1103 times





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[*] posted on 31-10-2016 at 11:08


Quote: Originally posted by zts16  
Ha, that is... actually pretty awesome. Now I'm picturing the chemists consulting professional bread bakers to get the consistency just right.


Hah! This is were "kitchen chemistry" gets serious. Break out the yeast and flour and set to work guys (and gals)!




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[*] posted on 31-10-2016 at 11:38


Odd.

I watched a utoob vid a while back by AvE (probably no relation to ave) doing exactly this with sliced bread.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Wex_yKfrTo4




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careysub
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[*] posted on 31-10-2016 at 13:55


It was put on YouTube four days after the posting date of the ACS item, so it may well have been inspired by the published research.

Also, it would appear that he is using commercial batter-whipped bread not properly risen kneaded dough, which can achieve a dense even porosity (or even a not-dense even porosity) - notice the huge pores that are present!

An even texture will always be important for consistent, uniform properties.

[Edited on 31-10-2016 by careysub]




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[*] posted on 31-10-2016 at 14:19


'Odd' in the sense that it clearly shows that i watch more utoob than read academic papers.

Didn't think i was that facile and shallow.

I'll have a Word with myself.




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[*] posted on 31-10-2016 at 18:12


This sounds like a very economical process.

And if any of the slices come out looking like Elvis or Jesus you could sell them on Ebay for a hefty profit!
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[*] posted on 1-11-2016 at 00:57


Nice find. I'm trying to put a furnace together myself for metal work. I wonder if excluding air would be sufficient for the carbonisation to work. A really lazy way might be to fill out your insulation cavity with bread then fire up the furnace - anywhere that gets hot enough will carbonise and the rest will presumably just toast and dry out.
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[*] posted on 1-11-2016 at 04:56


Today's All Saints day, or 'Dia de los Muertos', so it's a day off.

What better way to spend it other than to pyrolise bread ?

Two slices of bread (one a dense brown, the other white) were weighed at 31.75g and 32.50g respectively.

before.JPG - 43kB

The samples were prepared (wrapped in tinfoil) and introduced into the custom-built pyrolysis apparatus (a wood fire).

fire.JPG - 85kB

The fire was left to burn for 1 hour and the bread samples were recovered and allowed to cool for 5 minutes.

The brown slice had disintegrated almost completely, the largest fragment being approx 2cm across.

The white slice had entirely retained it's shape, although the size had decreased by approximately 50%.

It weighed 5.35g, representing an 83.5% weight loss.

after.JPG - 62kB

Under a cheapo USB microscope, the material appears very porous.

scope2.jpg - 76kB

Those lines are 1mm spaced.

I wonder how this will fare as a method to activate carbon ?

One way to find out ....

[Edited on 1-11-2016 by aga]




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[*] posted on 1-11-2016 at 05:04


Lovely aga.
Interesting that the white performed so much better than the "healthy" bread.
What I find remarkable about the report is the claims of mechanical strength.
If this proves to be a route to reasonable quality activated carbon then it is certainly cheap, simple and easy to do. I look forward to seeing your results.




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[*] posted on 1-11-2016 at 06:40


The 'bread' is now rigid, yet breaks if you try to bend it, although it does not just fall apart.

Before doing the I.N. thing, i thought i'd test the bread's heat resistance.

Here's a piece with some copper melted on top of the bread with an electric arc.

copper.JPG - 72kB

Neither the arc (2000+ C) nor the 1085 C copper appear to have bothered it at all.

[Edited on 1-11-2016 by aga]




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[*] posted on 1-11-2016 at 09:57


Incredibly, the slice of bread from Lidl, wrapped in tinfoil, then stuffed into a fire for an hour, achieved an Iodine number of 486 !

(500 is regarded as the lowest I.N. for it to be regarded as 'activated').




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[*] posted on 1-11-2016 at 14:22


I wonder how doing this under a nitrogen atmosphere would change the results. Once the Día de Muertos ends I'll try to get some parts from the closest hardware store to get a high temperature controlled atmosphere setup running.

Quote: Originally posted by aga  
Incredibly, the slice of bread from Lidl, wrapped in tinfoil, then stuffed into a fire for an hour, achieved an Iodine number of 486 !

(500 is regarded as the lowest I.N. for it to be regarded as 'activated').

Without chemical activation? pretty nice!




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[*] posted on 1-11-2016 at 14:28


Aga, have you measured the electrical conductivity?
The paper mentioned a conductivity of 0.26S/cm, which seemed reasonable.
I wonder what numbers your high tech equipment could achieve.
*asking for a friend...*
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[*] posted on 1-11-2016 at 14:41


Dunno.

Didn't test electrical resistance. Probably in the Mega-Ohm range.

The post shows it all : bread, some aluminium foil, a fire, 1 hour, you got the same material.

This is not hard to do, at all, for anyone.

Edit:

aga is spelt aga, not Aga.

I'm not the Aga Khan.

Sharim might get annoyed if this keeps going on.

He might be Googling for stuff about one of his many multi-million dollar ventures and get a load of Toast, Carbon and failed chlorination of ethanol results.

[Edited on 1-11-2016 by aga]




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[*] posted on 1-11-2016 at 15:15


Quote: Originally posted by battoussai114  
I wonder how doing this under a nitrogen atmosphere would change the results.

Might change it, but harder to Try.

I think that just wrapping the slice of bread in more layers of Al foil would have worked better, say about 6 wraps (i used 2).

The dense bread was fubar in my experiment, but the Al foil had disintegrated as well, letting air in.

I was lucky that i tried with 2 samples.

JUST DO IT and report results - no need for complexity, it's just a slice of bread wrapped in tinfoil in a fire.

Might work in an oven (250 C) too. No idea, not tried it.

This particular experiment requires NOTHING that people do not have access to.

No expense required, apart from the Time.

If you have any interest in the material, just make some as has been fully described.

It is a Wicked material, at least as far as heat resistance and carbon 'activation' are concerned, probably a Lot more.

I zapped some copper to 1000 C+ on top of a slice of Toast today, and the toast survived !

Awesome.




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[*] posted on 1-11-2016 at 16:02


Well, when the process is refined and tested, it deserves its own published procedure in the wiki -- as does making potato starch for use as an indicator.
(Are there any other similar processes that need to be written up? And by similar I mean very accessible using household items, straightforward procedure and producing an invaluable lab consumable for the home chemist that most professional labs pay reasonable bucks for.)




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[*] posted on 1-11-2016 at 16:06


Go for it. You da man.

I just zap, burn and boil stuff up.

Give it some Science spin dude !




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[*] posted on 1-11-2016 at 16:27


Ok. Well in time I can do that. So far there are two on the list:


  • Starch – for which I will write up NileRed's procedure
  • Activated carbon (aka super-toast) – for which I will summarise the procedure and results of this thread. So long as you post your findings aga I can do the deed. With my current state of affairs I cannot see me getting the chance to quantitatively test any super-toast any time soon. I would be interested to know if pre-treating the bread with something will elevate the product from good to awesome.


What other procedures of this nature deserve to be written up?




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[*] posted on 1-11-2016 at 18:11


I will bet that both nitrogen and carbon dioxide will work pretty well. After all carbon is pretty inert with respect to nitrogen and carbon dioxide (and water).

Aga is probably creating the latter atmosphere with his foil-wrapping procedure.

Pyrolyzing the bread (with some intrusion of air) will produce water and CO2, and while there is the Boudouard (CO2 + C <-> 2CO) and water-carbon (C + H2O <-> CO + H2) reactions exist they are sluggish equilibrium reactions, and there is huge excess of carbon in the system.

Isn't this sort of how they make charcoal?




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[*] posted on 2-11-2016 at 00:12


Quote: Originally posted by careysub  
Isn't this sort of how they make charcoal?

Pretty much the same, yes.

The main (only ?) difference is in the structure of the end result - the bread is less dense.

Retaining the structure durying pyrolysis is the hard part when it comes to making things like a carbon aerogel.

http://www.buyaerogel.com/product/carbon-aerogel/




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