metalresearcher
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Video of spectra of arc melting
I made simultaneous video of arc melting metals with two cameras one equipped with a spectroscope.
Here the result:
<iframe sandbox width="640" height="360" src="http://www.youtube.com/embed/35hjMeM_kec" frameborder="0" allowfullscreen></iframe>
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blogfast25
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Awesome! What spectroscope did you use? Do you have any stills of the spectra? It would be interesting to see if you can find lines of non-Fe elements
in the steel spectrum. Or try stainless steel and see if you can identify chromium lines.
Or set your camera to shoot a number of stills, like every 2 seconds or so, then select the best pics for further analysis.
I love it. Please describe experimental conditions a bit better, especially how you achieve the arc.
[Edited on 23-4-2012 by blogfast25]
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GreenD
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this is awesome!
Why the hell would you do this so close to a computer lol
ʃ Ψ*Ψ
Keepin' it real.
Check out my new collaborated site: MNMLimpact.com
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DDTea
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Looks like you've built yourself a ghetto plasma emission spectrometer. This is great for demonstrations and videos but you may be able to squeeze
more use out of this by eliminating stray light.
With some software post-processing, you could probably mitigate the O2/N2/Ar background from that big mean plasma ball.
Basically, record the emission spectrum of the arc when it's not contacting any metal, then subtract that spectrum from that of the arc melting a
metal.
Either way, keep up the good work and let us know where this project is going!
"In the end the proud scientist or philosopher who cannot be bothered to make his thought accessible has no choice but to retire to the heights in
which dwell the Great Misunderstood and the Great Ignored, there to rail in Olympic superiority at the folly of mankind." - Reginald Kapp.
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Ozone
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Excellent real-world example of AES!
O3
-Anyone who never made a mistake never tried anything new.
--Albert Einstein
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rannyfash
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watch out for O3 and NO, also try vapourising zinc, it plasma a lovely blue/violet colour, or vaporise carbon in a vacuum and dissolve the sublimed
material in toluene, whalah buckyballs, high temperature arcs are really good for chemical synthesis if you have fire cement to build a 'ghetto' arc
reactor, i made a small amount of calcium carbide although i vaporised my crucible
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rannyfash
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http://www.ch.ic.ac.uk/local/projects/unwin/Fullerenes.html
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Eddygp
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Great video, although the camera could be at another angle, to make the image clearer. Good job!
there may be bugs in gfind
[ˌɛdidʒiˈpiː] IPA pronunciation for my Username
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