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@spaceguy20_124 ай бұрын
saying to your fans to download spyware that steals all your data? Nope
@xcvbnm987654 ай бұрын
@@spaceguy20_12 nonsense, a browser would be banned for "stealing all your data"
@csehszlovakze2 ай бұрын
Vivaldi is better.
@sjb34602 ай бұрын
Please describe the process by which the chemist developed nitroglycerine. Did he know what he was doing? Or was it a lucky guess? How long did it take him to develop the methodology of creating it? What were his failures? What was his motivation? Thanks for your video it's very interesting. Sam.
@spaceguy20_122 ай бұрын
@@xcvbnm98765 yeah well it steals your almost location even when you don’t want it
@runcycleskixc4 ай бұрын
The explanation of the molecule having the oxidizer built in and not needing O2 is very good.
@ShannonDove-sy7ye3 ай бұрын
All explosives have their own oxygen, it's what makes an explosive an explosive. The amount does vary a lot. TNT only has enough oxygen to burn about 60 percent of itself. Ammonium nitrate has a lot of extra oxygen, about 30 percent of the oxygen is left over after the explosion. Nitroglycerin has almost the perfect amount of oxygen, with slight excess, it's about 3 percent left over oxygen after the explosion
@runcycleskixc3 ай бұрын
@@ShannonDove-sy7ye Can one make a "designer" explosive with even less than 3% residual material left over after the explosion, or are there other parameters that need to be considered? One would think there would be others developed after more than a century of NG being in use.
@simonstergaard22 күн бұрын
there will always be leftovers... even when detonating a nuclear device, not all of the fissile material is converted to energy... the world is only perfect on paper
@tompowers84953 ай бұрын
Nitroglycerin is also a vascular dilator......in this aspect it is a medicine that can save lives in case of stroke or heart attack.....
@alvinnorin88203 ай бұрын
This was what I was about to comment upon hearing the first phrase of the video: "explosives ran in Alfred Nobel's blood - okay not literally." I was instantly confused, initially having interpreted that he was implying that Alfred Nobel had taken it for medical reasons.
@alvinnorin88203 ай бұрын
I'm also a little disappointed that he didn't take the opportunity to bring it up at 8:08.
@harveywachtel10913 ай бұрын
The whimsical menu of the Jahn's ice cream.parlors that once delighted hordes of NYC youngsters featured imaginative names for their imaginative concoctions. In addition to their flagship "the kitchen sink: everything but" were smaller but far-from-small extravaganzas. One super-duper sundae was billed as "the bombshell: blow yourself up". In my much-later years, I thought of this every time I took my nitroglycerin tablet. Alas, only one Jahn's remains and it's mostly a diner, and I've been switched to something called isosorbide mononitrate.
@alvinnorin88203 ай бұрын
@@harveywachtel1091 Are there any warnings about it being explosive on the packaging? Like, do the pills blow up if you chew on them?
@harveywachtel10913 ай бұрын
@@alvinnorin8820 As far as I know they are not explosive. I imagine thar the nitro us mixed with enough inactive ingredients.
@MagisterHenrik4 ай бұрын
Great video. Very interesting. I especially liked hearing Einstein's voice ♥ Thank you!
@phdtobe4 ай бұрын
Watching this video made me realize that the use of dynamite in “The Good, the Bad and the Ugly”, which is set during the American Civil War (1861-1865) was anachronistic by a few years, as dynamite wasn’t invented until 1866, nor commercially available until a few years later.
@markmayer20293 ай бұрын
Never let the facts get in the way of a good story.
@ShannonDove-sy7ye3 ай бұрын
Maybe so . ..but nitroglycerin was discovered about 20 years before the civil war. They should have used cans of NG instead of dynamite. Cans of NG was used in blasting.
@phdtobe3 ай бұрын
@@ShannonDove-sy7ye Exactly! But since it was so dangerous, kegs of gunpowder where used instead of NG cans in the Battle of the Crater mine explosion during the Seige of Petersburg in 1864.
@ShannonDove-sy7ye3 ай бұрын
@@phdtobe interesting
@patrolmanracvАй бұрын
Dynamite was invented by the Taoese of China in 1000AD..well over 1000 years ago ..and was used in rockets cannon and mortars at the time ...including fireworks ..
@cielararagi31954 ай бұрын
This guy was literally Oppenheimer before Oppenheimer.
@tomarmadiyer26984 ай бұрын
Boomenpopper
@mikebauer69174 ай бұрын
Killed more people… so far anyway.
@stankbonkman4 ай бұрын
Difference was Oppenheimer saw that there was no hope for nobels line of thinking firsthand. Thats why we got his i am become death quote
@rickkwitkoski19764 ай бұрын
@cielararagi3195 Oppenheimer didn't discover atomic fission. And he did not create any of the nuclear physics. He was the project manager.
@suprememasteroftheuniverse4 ай бұрын
Only Oppenheimer was literally Oppenheimer. You can't even reason properly. Refrain from commenting ever again.
@vertical77473 ай бұрын
“infernal machines” actually made me laugh for like 10 seconds
@trooperdgb97223 ай бұрын
Thats interesting because I always thought the original designation for Mines was "Torpedos" Then with the development of the Whitehead "Locomotive Torpedo" that name migrated to its current usage....... It is a classically British description I must say!
@GeneSchАй бұрын
@@trooperdgb9722 No idea about English, but in Russian it's exactly like that: mines were originally referred as "torpedo" (translation is redundant here) since as early as 1864 (since at least 1877 the russified form "torpeda" is known, which is primarily used today) and what we currently call torpedoes was referred as "samodvizhuscheyesya torpedo" (lit. self-propelled torpedo) in 1865. The term didn't stick tho, and up till the 1917 torpedoes were called "samodvizhuschiyesya miny" (lit. self-propelled mines), mines were called "miny" (the translation-redundancy-o-meter is firmly off-scale). The remnants of that system survive till this very day in Russian terms for [torpedo boat] destroyer (eskadrennyy minonsets, usually clipped as esminets - lit. squadron mine-bearer), torpedo cruiser (minnyy kreyser - lit. mine cruiser), torpedo boat tender (minnyy transport - lit. mine transport) and torpedo boat (this one actually has several terms - minnyy kater/minnaya lodka etc., all literally meaning "mine boat" with different terms for "boat", later the term "minonoska" - lit. "mine-bearer[ess]" - appears and in 1878 designated as official); the last one tho nowadays is usually called "torpednyy kater" - "torpedo cutter". P/S: Hope you weren't bored by my small philological rant)
@JIm-w1b2 ай бұрын
The Wright brothers said the same thing about airplanes, that if opposing armies had airplanes that could drop bombs, war would be impossible. This was an inspiration for them to develop airplanes. One of the brothers lived to see world war 2
@daspicsman5 күн бұрын
And now they’re dropping grenades from small drones. War just isn’t fair anymore.
@PoorMansChemist4 ай бұрын
A channel that does the history of chemistry? Yes please! How has YT never recommended this channel to me before?
@chemistryofquestionablequa62523 ай бұрын
It's pretty good too!
@marks16383 ай бұрын
Because they're afraid we'll misuse it. Just ask any kid playing with a chemistry set.
@LectronCircuits2 ай бұрын
Dynamite is so much fun, it's a real blast. Cheers!
@MP-te3bt4 ай бұрын
Thanks for another great video! Not only do you make them really easy to understand and informative, you actually manage to make them interesting!! 👏🏼
@zionent83924 ай бұрын
I'm so happy that I found this channel. You definitly deserve more subs. 7:45 and yes, which chemist doesn't?
@psf954 ай бұрын
I realize it's a minor detail within the context of your videos, but out of all the popscience channels I follow, yours is the only one that cares about proper pronunciation of names. Much appreciated :)
@suprememasteroftheuniverse4 ай бұрын
"pop science" is not science. At least, somehow you confess being a ret rded gen z brat.
@suprememasteroftheuniverse4 ай бұрын
Now that I have watched the video I want to know what drug you are on. His pronunciation of every name, including dynamis, is terribly wrong.
@suprememasteroftheuniverse4 ай бұрын
"pop science" is not science.
@suprememasteroftheuniverse4 ай бұрын
You must be a gen z kid.
@suprememasteroftheuniverse4 ай бұрын
At least, you somehow, confess being ret rded.
@5eurosenelsuelo4 ай бұрын
Great video. The history of science is often fascinating.
@morkbovАй бұрын
I'm a mining engineer. 35 years experience. I can say than our "modern" way of life strictly depends on minerals we extract from the earth. If Nobel hasn't invented the dynamite, we wouldn't be watching youtube to learn about this.
@ChrisKelly-i8o4 ай бұрын
So interesting. So well explained!
@diandimitrov40024 ай бұрын
Such an amazing video! I would love to see a video about Linus Pauling’s life and the way he contributed to quantum chemistry and protein science. I think such video is missing right now on KZbin and Pauling was such an influential chemist.
@darkknight-nw5nc4 ай бұрын
I just love physics and chemistry..I look forward to learn the history behind these discoveries
@chemistrycapital4 ай бұрын
Thumbnail and animations are 🔥
@JH-lo9utКүн бұрын
Most videos on Alfred Nobel and dynamite focuses on the weaponization of this invention but this overshadows the huge HUGE importance this invention has had on the modern world, as a tool. Modern deep mining and construction would not be possible without dynamite. The late stages of the industrial revolution is directly shaped by this invention, by giving acess to almost unlumited amounts of certain raw materials, -iron ore, limestone, oil, and by overcoming physical obstacles. Most people, thankfully, do not come in contact with dynamite in their daily lives. It is now a highly regulated and strictly controlled substance, despite the fact that thousands and thousands of tons of it is used around the world every day. This has led to most people only really thinking about dynamite when it is used outside of it's intended purpouse -as a weapon of mass destruction.
@triklettriklerbu15924 ай бұрын
Very informative video. Thank you for explaining chemistry.
@Crispy_VAАй бұрын
DynoNobel is still one of the biggest explosives suppliers in the world to this day. I enjoyed the video, thank you!
@kyleeames82294 ай бұрын
It kinda makes one wonder… just how many will never speak of the technologies they have envisioned; let alone research them in any depth because they are too well aware of how easily their innovations could be abused, and would sooner die than entrust even the basic concept which they have devised to any modern institution? What innovations would be possible were we not living in an inhuman dystopia and all were truly free to innovate without fear of their creations being harnessed to vile ends? Leonardo DaVinci actually designed war machines for some of his career. As a pacifist, he intentionally included design flaws in all of his blueprints, in hopes that if the lord who employed him would ever commit acts of senseless violence, the weapons would fail him, while he still got paid for every design he created. It is, in my opinion the noblest of frauds ever committed. My point is maybe we could have such technological miracles as FTL travel and fusion power, but those who could offer Humanity such creations know they could be weaponized in ways that make a nuke look like a firecracker, so they never speak of their ideas, let alone put pen to paper.
@kevinroberts7814 ай бұрын
You're welcome
@williamkechkaylo79153 ай бұрын
well said
@ShannonDove-sy7ye3 ай бұрын
Chemist are not going to keep quiet about a discovery just because it might not be good for society. Humans don't work that way. When we discover something interesting, we want to shout from the rooftop about it, we want praise for being so smart.
@ShannonDove-sy7ye3 ай бұрын
If a scientist discovered fusion or FTL travel he's not going to keep it a secret, you can bet the farm on that. (Easy cold fusion)
@brucelytle1144Ай бұрын
AI just may be one of those Ideas!
@Polkem14 ай бұрын
Very great video, quite saddening how you have such little subscribers for the quality of work.
@FlorenceSlugcat21 күн бұрын
While some may think his invention makes him a bad person because of its potential use in war, i think it makes him a really good guy. Dynamite is simply a tool, a tool to blow up things, which can be extremely useful. It has contributed to mining operations massively, aswell as road building, demotion of old structures, terraforming, and railroad construction. Theses are all important civilian times projects. At the end of the day, it is up to humanity to decide how they will use the tool, and up to humanity to use it in a manner that will do good.
@phobos70194 ай бұрын
Absolutely fascinating!
@is98934 ай бұрын
Another awesome video, keep up the good work!
@Cornz383 ай бұрын
And people now do have this "running through their blood" as nitroglycerin is a vasodilator and is used to treat angina and some other conditions.
@4kevbot34 ай бұрын
Another great video. Many thanks (again).
@gordonwalter42933 ай бұрын
Clear well explained with intelligent reflections in the later parts.
@hulkthedane75423 ай бұрын
I would say, that Alfred Nobel was spot on with his idea of people stopping wars, if they new they could obliterate each other in seconds - that is pretty much the reason why atom bombs are not being used. His dynamite was just too weak.
@ShannonDove-sy7ye3 ай бұрын
Yes true, the dynamite was too weak. But I read that bombing raids with regular explosives such as dynamite could kill just as many as a nuclear device. The US could have done just as much destruction without the nuclear bo..
@radiorob75433 ай бұрын
There's no putting the genie back in the bottle. Dynamite, thermonuclear weapons, A.I..
@s.porter86463 ай бұрын
That's enthalpy maaaan
@Dingghis_Khaan2 ай бұрын
Alfred Nobel and Richard Gatling. Two men who fruitlessly hoped their destructive weapons would scare countries into ending war forever.
@imperialresolutionАй бұрын
Amazing Video.. Very Energentic & Nobel Inspirising.. Great Cheers
@zooblestyx3 ай бұрын
Please allow the record to reflect that this video is why I subbed :)
@erazemburger11534 ай бұрын
U earned a new sub
@davidsricker23382 күн бұрын
Thanks for a excellent information video !
@ChristianMiersch4 ай бұрын
You touched the guilt aspect, outstanding.
@Mike204643 ай бұрын
Fantastic video! Thank you
@glorybound75993 ай бұрын
Thank you. Very educational and it expanded my knowledge of the inventor and the first peace prizes history.
@Brantdrangus84894 ай бұрын
Excellent video. Thanks heaps❤
@Roxor1283 ай бұрын
Sounds like Nobel was in the same camp as Gatling. He invented the rotary multi-barelled gun in the hope of making war too terrible to wage. Both men were far too optimistic about the future of warfare.
@riverraisin13 ай бұрын
They actually made war more fun for people who wage war.
@mr-x7689Ай бұрын
depending on how you see things. Nobel did get his wish fullfilled in a way. The Nukelear bomb (Nuke) is the bomb he envisioned, and it would never had worked whitout his invention the dynamite. Several shaped charges of dynamite sorrounds the core made out of plutonium among others. and to detonate the bomb you detonate the dynamite charges to essentially compress the core to a critical point. So in the end he kinda got his wish. after the nukes invention we haven't had any really large scale war due every one being scared shitless about triggering a nuklear war. Sure there been a large amount of smaller wars, but none among the nations whom have nukes. But ofcourse that dosn't stop countris of "saber ratteling" like when nazi russia is just about weekly for the past 20 or so years treatening the world with nukes. (i'm not kidding about it, there is an official list of every time russia has maked a nuke treath. and its about weekly for the past 20 years, and is still regularly updated.)
@Aurochs3304 ай бұрын
Chemistry is so cool
@laernulienlaernulienlaernu89534 ай бұрын
"POETRY, I WANT YOU TO BLOW THINGS UP!"
@Jmcinally944 ай бұрын
Son eventually blows himself up. Has a stroke in guilt, never recovers.
@laernulienlaernulienlaernu89534 ай бұрын
@@Jmcinally94 maybe he should have stuck to poetry.
@suprememasteroftheuniverse4 ай бұрын
@@Jmcinally94Alfred Nobel didn't explode himself.
@suprememasteroftheuniverse4 ай бұрын
@@Jmcinally94are you ret rded?
@suprememasteroftheuniverse4 ай бұрын
@@Jmcinally94are you re arded?
@stevengill17364 ай бұрын
Might be interesting to do a video on how they mastered the industrial production of such a sensitive material. They had to figure out how to nitrate glycerin safely, store it safely, and to build nitration facilities that could be run remotely, In earlier days the nitration shed had slides on the sides of the building so the operator could escape if the nitration showed signs of getting out of control. Might be interesting also to trace the development of ammonium nitrate as a blasting agent, leading to far less dynamite being used in mining, although gelatin dynamite is still used in some hard rock mines. There's a lot of interesting chemistry history in explosive development, and there's new ones still in development - check out CL-20! Thank you kindly for the great video! Cheers...
@chemistryofquestionablequa62523 ай бұрын
The way that ammonium nitrate was discovered to be explosive is horrifying.
@remicaron31914 ай бұрын
Things are always used for terrible things not by man kind but by the few elites who always want more.
@pgzzz3 ай бұрын
I've just found this channel. Excellent videos my friend. Subscribed 😊
@sliderule58913 ай бұрын
Thank you for filling in the details how dynamite and the Nobel prize came into being.
@colinwhite5355Ай бұрын
I wish I could agree that it is ‘humanity’ which decides how these technologies are used. Instead, it is a very small section of humanity, the sort who would better be described as ‘inhumanity’. Thanks for a great presentation.
@pauljanssen75943 ай бұрын
I remember watching the documentary on nitroglycerin Dynamite 🧨 Dynamite was a way of hauling nitroglycerin safely
@floranhupscher272Ай бұрын
very nice that you found the Einstein recording
@stevenl78783 ай бұрын
Just one comment regarding the black powder used in Nobel’s initial blasting cap. Black powder doesn’t detonate which is why it is classified as a low explosive or a propellant. He likely moved to mercury fulminate because it is a primary high explosive and it does detonate meaning it creates a shock (or detonation) wave. The detonation wave is needed to properly initiate a high explosive, such as nitroglycerin.
@24680kong3 ай бұрын
Black powder can generate a shockwave when contained. In fact the image at 7:24 says f) svartkrutladdning, which means “black powder charge”. Dynamite still has some sensitivity, unlike trinitrotoluene which is much harder to detonate.
@stevenl78783 ай бұрын
@@24680kong No it can’t. That’s why NG replaced black powder as a blasting explosive in the 1860s later to be replaced by dynamite. Black powder cannot burn fast enough to reach DDT nor propagate a detonation wave to maintain detonation. This is scientifically proven. Post one reference from a peer reviewed scientific journal that states bp detonates…
@stevenl78783 ай бұрын
@@24680kong find me the detonation velocity for black powder and list your reference.
@stevenl78782 ай бұрын
@@24680kong Black powder cannot generate a shock wave. If it could it would have a reported velocity of detonation, and it doesn’t. The whole purpose of nitroglycerin as a blasting explosive was to replace black powder. If black powder detonated there wouldn’t be a need for NG.
@Bodi20003 ай бұрын
Surprised by the Opera content, thanks! I depend on Opera, and have converted a few others to it.
@christophercripps76393 ай бұрын
Nitroglycerin was used in the petroleum drilling industry in the early years. It would be poured into cylindrical metal containers called "torpedos" (the current naval torpedo were originally called "automotive torpedos"). The torpedo would be dropped down the borehole to clear blockages of rock chips. There are accounts of workrrs filling up torpedos in their kitchen (with a wood stove nearby) with the predictable tesult from time to time - BOOM. Gun cotton (highly nitrated cellulose >~ 13% N) was also a 19C invention. It soon was banned in many countries due to the risk of unintended explosions. In its dry form a single spark can detonate it; nitrated cellulose is unstable in storage unless high purity control is in place to remove excess nitric acid; even then stabilizers must be used to absorb free nitro groups. Yet, the Brits found dissolving gun cotton in nitroglycerin make a suitable smokeless gunpowder - cordite (which needs stabilizers for long term safe storage). Nobel had invented Ballistite in a similar manner but used less nitrated cellulose and sued the British government for infringement of his UK patent l but lost in the UK.
@spannaspinna2 ай бұрын
Nitrocellulose just burns if you put a match to it
@MrMaguire221b4 ай бұрын
Here from the Reddit post 🔥
@richardsims18053 ай бұрын
Very good dissertation on the life and times of Alfred Nobel et al.
@PowerCrafter123Ай бұрын
I think this video was the first time I ever heard a recording of Einstein's voice, and I have been to the place where his birthhouse in Ulm stood XD
@hackedbyBLAGH3 ай бұрын
Somehow this feels like my first time hearing Einstein's voice.
@jaygin6518Ай бұрын
What is the energy that is released?
@robertclark89913 ай бұрын
Came here to share info. I once worked for world color. A printing business. I worked in gravure printing. Smelled like spray paint. The ingredient was tolulene which happens to be the Tri-Nitrate-Tolulene ingredient. (Maybe spelling it wrong.) There were 2 retaining tanks. They were huge. At least 25 foot tall and maybe 20 across. They said if it blew up it would be pretty substantial. I could be wrong. I was young.
@ryankisiolek874117 күн бұрын
Awesome vid brother. Critical thinking 💯 ❤
@frederickacker53793 ай бұрын
Beautiful 😍 BRILLIANT WORK 👏 👌 😀
@steveshoemaker63473 ай бұрын
Thank you for this excellent video about Dynamite ..... Old F-4 Phantom ll fighter jet Shoe🇺🇸
@StepaTalisАй бұрын
Thank you, you made making my school presentation actually fun (impossible but true)
@attilagergely67343 ай бұрын
Hi! Thank you for the video. I have one question: Are you sure the equation is correct for the decomposition of glycerin trinitrate? It's strange that the production of CO is favored compared to the more stable CO2. (4C3H5N3O9→6N2+10H2O+12CO2+O2) (4:17)
@TheDustysix3 ай бұрын
Dynamite must be rotated regularly. It was the first Permissable Explosive in Coal Mining.
@miguelcastaneda72573 ай бұрын
Dynamite like this was still being used in 1960s...there was a dirt cave the city had dug into side of river bank as kids we used to go in there and wipe sweat off sticks to entrance and flick off finger and laugh at explosion....we should be dead...stuffs probably still there city didn't care about our part of town..tucson
@johnpetrakis379Ай бұрын
You must watch the great Roy Schieder movie "Sorcerer" Leaky Dynamite to the max!
@Jo-Heike3 ай бұрын
Fritz Haber is another interesting scientist that I don't see being talked about that much.
@shivamkumarshrivastava51822 ай бұрын
This is the first time ever that I've heard Einstein's voice.
@adamchurvis13 ай бұрын
"Now Alfred, I want you to eat something! You don't eat like you should to stay healthy." "In a minute, Sophie. I'm doing some very sensitive work with my new invention: Nitroglycerin." Four minutes later... "ALFRED!!!" "AARRGHH!!! Don't DO that! One wrong move and we all go up in a flash! What do you want?" "I'm making you a sandwich. Would you like ham and Gruyere with salad cream, or would you like French dip?" "Uh, the ham and Gruyere. By the way, would you please find out the town where Professor Kravowicz is holding the symposium on organic chemistry next month?" "Of course. I shall be right back." Four minutes later... "**BANG**or, Maine!!!" "AARRGHH!!! Don't DO that! It's one thing to soil myself; it's another thing entirely to turn this estate into a pile of toothpicks! What do you mean, 'Bangor, Maine'?" "The symposium is being held there." "Ah! Very good. Now, if you don't mind, please play something soothing. Something soft." Thirty seconds later... "GET UP, COME ON GET DOWN WITH THE SICKNESS!!! GET UP, COME ON GET DOWN WITH THE SICKNESS!!! GET UP, COME ON GET DOWN WITH THE SICKNESS!!!..." "Disturbed? Really, Sophie...?"
@wayneyadams3 ай бұрын
Nitrate groups are common to many explosives, such as TNT (trinitrotoluene) a toluene molecule with three (3) nitrate groups at positions, 2 (ortho), 4 (para), and 6 (ortho) around the benzene ring. Likewise, a key ingredient in gun powder is Potassium Nitrate (KNO3). Unfortunately, Nitroglycerine is easy to make with chemicals that are easily obtained, especially the Glycerin which can be bought anyplace in gallon jugs. Many pool stores sell Sulfuric acid in place of Hydrochloric acid for pools because it does not emit fumes. All that's left is buying Nitric Acid and that is easily done. The dangerous part is carrying out the nitration, then the handing of the shock sensitive product. Amateur kitchen chemists trying this are in danger because they do not know what they are doing but have the cocky egotistical notion that they do. I have had a couple of reactions in the lab almost (keyword, almost) go out of control and had i not been paying attention and known what to do, they would have.
@chemistryofquestionablequa62523 ай бұрын
Are you aware that "hobby" chemists are ahead of those in industry and academia when it comes to energetic materials? Many of us either have extensive chemistry education or have taught themselves to the same or higher levels? There are always going to be idiots but chemistry has a strong history of "hobbyists" making major discoveries.
@wayneyadams3 ай бұрын
@@chemistryofquestionablequa6252 That is your takeaway from the long and detailed comment?! Your response supports my thesis about amateurs being cocky and egotistical. Thanks for providing a real-life example. I stand by what i said. Amateur Chemists should not be fooling around with dangerous materials especially explosives. Okay name those major discoveries made by "hobbyists." You don't get to make claims without evidence them.
@chemistryofquestionablequa62523 ай бұрын
@@wayneyadams I put the term "hobbyists" in quotes because I and most of my friends in this area have chemistry educations. You completely misunderstood and took away exactly what you wanted to see. Congratulations, you're the cocky, egotistical person you so clearly disdain. All I was saying was that the bleeding edge of this research and technology isn't being done by industry or academia. There's Klapotke's lab but other than that it's not currently profitable and therefore not worth the time for industry. "Hobbyists" have discovered, adapted and optimized far safer primaries than used in any industrial or military product. You decided to see exactly what you wanted, you come off as an egotistical, elitist asshole. I hope that's what you intend to show the world, otherwise well...
@chemistryofquestionablequa62523 ай бұрын
@@wayneyadams seems KZbin erased my comment. I and most of the people I know who do research in this area have extensive chemistry education and laboratory experience. You're the only one sounding egotistical and cocky. The fact that research is happening outside of industry or academia doesn't mean it's not considerably ahead of what most of them are doing with the exception of Klapotke's lab. My comment was trying to point this out but you saw what you wanted to. Congratulations, you sound like an elitist, egotistical, fool.
@orionsimerl65393 ай бұрын
Nuclear weapons have ended war between those nations who have nuclear weapons.
@trevorzealley729Ай бұрын
Equal but opposite reaction . Guilt followed by remorse doesn`t cut it .
@Woodsmasher3 ай бұрын
Was dynamite ever used for something different than a explosive? Like something powered by dynamite?
@knuckle123563 ай бұрын
Automobiles. Y'know when a car backfires and sounds like a shot..? Those are older autos that required a decent amount of glycerin to lubricate poorer fitting moving parts before the interchangeable assembly line was ubiquitous. Add to that large volumes of nitric stabilizers in the fuel, and you'd get occasional micro volumes of these explosive compounds. Over time, that's why you started to hear ppl refer to really cherry rides as being "dynamite!" Source: -Gentleman Panda 🎩🤏🏻 🐼 ~ Cheers!
@marks16383 ай бұрын
Nitro is one of the most unstable and dangerous explosives ever made. In dynamite it was much more stable and easier to handle. But when it got old, hot, or unstable that was a different story. I know of several incidents where people blew themselves up handling old or leaking dynamite. In one case a kid found an abandoned storage shed (at least 40 years old according to investigators) near an old, registered coal mine and inside was dynamite (they had to guess how much from the blast radius) which vaporized him, the shed, and collapsed the mine (really a hole dug in the side of a hill). It may have been an illegal coal mine (sometimes during the Great Depression, out of work miners would cut shafts in coal rich areas to dig out and sell coal to make money or heat their homes.)
@oml81mm13 күн бұрын
It really depends on what you mean by "nitro". Ammerican craft breweries quite often make draught beer which is powered by nitrogen and call it "nitro".
@aletrip64221 күн бұрын
If black powder is able to detonate dynamite why modern blasting caps use the more dangerous primary explosives sensible to shock?
@jamesthornton93992 ай бұрын
I like that scare people not to use it. A same or similar phrase used for A Bombs.
@ianmckenzie86853 ай бұрын
Fritz Haber would be an interesting subject. He figured out how to make ammonia from atmospheric nitrogen, so facilitating Germany's explosives production for WW1, and fertiliser production to enable Earth to sustain a larger population. A conflicted man indeed.
@chemistryofquestionablequa62523 ай бұрын
Nerve gasses too.
@LarrySimon-lz7ky3 ай бұрын
👍 Two thumbs up 👍
@TadashiKitsune3 ай бұрын
"Petrol is not explosive." * laughs in Otto cycle engine *
@MrEelwentworth3 ай бұрын
Did anyone here first learn of nitro glycerin from that one episode of "Little House on the Prairie"?
@thedeadbatterydepot4 ай бұрын
I will be a Nobel prize winner, I invented 200 year electric vehicle batteries.
@faricus273 ай бұрын
dynamite have transformed oil production too
@joeymurdazalotmore63553 ай бұрын
Nobel prize same guy as made dynamite , good public relations
@EdMcF13 ай бұрын
Static sea mines were also initially called 'torpedos' (a type of electric fish) before the name appended to the underwater 'rockets' we know today.
@Naidu-k8mКүн бұрын
Long before modern man discovered explosive materials ancients had already started using them. But as always major explosive incidents occured and they abandoned it unless they were mostly annihilated. Hence the writings in Hindu scriptures about vimanas.
@alext88283 ай бұрын
3:30, showing stronger, more stable bonds, but they seem to be made up of double and triple bonds which are less stable.
@davidhall65653 ай бұрын
Considering Nobel worked with Nitroglycerin, explosives were literally in his blood at some point, assuming he probably inhaled the stuff from time to time.
@thejamesieboy3 ай бұрын
Interesting, but surprised that when you mentioned where he had factories you missed out his one Ardeer in Ayrshire Scotland. Which was at one point reputed to be the largest explosives factory in the world. Nobel also stayed there for a while.
@IMHip-rq3elАй бұрын
According to The Three Stooges, dynamite doesn't blow UP, it blows DOWN. LOLL.
@robertharvey67254 күн бұрын
Ironically, high explosives are essential in triggering nuclear detonations.
@DocoKD7OCO3 ай бұрын
Why is there no Nobel prize foŕ Mathematics?
@SetTheCurveАй бұрын
Because it’s not a math prize.
@Naidu-k8mКүн бұрын
And how man used some corrosive materials to break down solid matter and recreate bricks and concrete blocks in situ at work sites. Dont forget, if you break it up with corrosives you can remake them with other types of material.
@barnesthomas693 ай бұрын
What is it mixed with?
@incrediblemichael3 ай бұрын
the only problem with dynamite sticks is sometimes they would sweat nitroglycerin out and yu have the old problem back with it
@onkelkleno54083 ай бұрын
What is with these scientists thinking they can end wars alltogether? First, Mr. Gatling creating the gatling gun saying „It’s so devastating, my invention will end wars and fighting“ Then Alfred Nobel saying the same, And then everyone on the nuke teams saying the same! We live in a fallen world! War will NEVER end.
@Sugar3Glider4 ай бұрын
I cant believe the 1900s version of a subtweet was the domino that lead to the celebration of human progress.
@8765-g3e4 ай бұрын
You should make a video about the discovery of black powder and smokeless powder too
@PeterGannon-x3b13 күн бұрын
That’s all dynamite was: just nitroglycerin and diatomaceous earth!
@AndrewJarvis-hn7cc3 ай бұрын
Very nice but I do wish people wouldn't keep saying. THE HMS something. Never,ever used to happen! It's just HMS.
@aniksamiurrahman6365Ай бұрын
Almost every cutting edge achievement of science and technology are always used in war. Military are always some of the first to adopter a new technology, often partner to their development (computer chip or touchscreen anyone?). The fact that a large portion of scientists working in Manhattan projects were either already nobel lauriate or went to win a nobel prize tells us that Science will never ensure peace. If Alfred Nobel established Nobel prize to ensure peace, he failed. May be he established that to preserve his legacy only. After all, that's what it resulted.