this post was submitted on 07 Feb 2025
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Chemistry

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It's not really "professional" but you can look at the process, see the results and come to your own conclusion about it's viability.

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[โ€“] TUVIMEN@programming.dev 1 points 2 weeks ago (1 children)

At temperatures where iron II oxide oxidizes to III state, any iron hydroxide would decompose. Any other impurities but carbon can be washed off.

About chlorine i couldn't even smell any throughout the process.

Nonetheless it works great for thermite.

[โ€“] alzymologist@sopuli.xyz 2 points 2 weeks ago

Just to be safe you might consider replasing chloride with sulfate.

Sure this is great way to make thermite or anything that does not exactly care about oxidation state, that part I can confirm.

Furthermore, you are close to iron(6) synthesis here using drain cleaner. Yield would be even lower, but fun is worth it. Be careful though, when literature states it blows up, they mean it.