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How to make Nitroglycerin or Dynamite


Materials Required:

-nitric acid (there is some in your piss)

-ice (made possible by the freezer)

-sulfuric acid (can get it on market place)

-thermometer

-sodium bicarbonate (baking soda)


Procedure:

1-Cool 13 mL of nitric acid using the ice created by the

refrigerator.

2-After it has cooled, add to 39mL sulfuric acid (99% h2so4),

mixing very slowly.

4-Cool the new mixture to 10-15°C, which we can measure with

the thermometer already “invented.”

5-Slowly add enough glycerin to cover the entire surface of

the acid.

6-Keep the solution below 30°C.

7-Stir gently for ten minutes, then the nitroglycerin will

form as a layer on top of the acid solution, while the

sulfuric acid will absorb the excess water.

8-Filter out the nitroglycerin and place it in sodium

bicarbonate, which will neutralize much of the acid remaining.

This will help to stabilize it.

10-Now slowly and carefully remove the nitroglycerin from the

bicarbonate. The usual test to see if nitration has been

successful is to place one drop of the nitroglycerin on metal

and ignite it. If it is true nitroglycerin it will burn with

a clear blue flame.



The chemical reaction going on here is:

C3H5(OH)3 + 3HNO3 + H2SO4 = C3H5(NO3)3 + 3H20 + H2SO4
How to make Nitroglycerin or Dynamite


Materials Required:

-nitric acid (there is some in your piss)

-ice (made possible by the freezer)

-sulfuric acid (can get it on market place)

-thermometer

-sodium bicarbonate (baking soda)


Procedure:

1-Cool 13 mL of nitric acid using the ice created by the

refrigerator.

2-After it has cooled, add to 39mL sulfuric acid (99% h2so4),

mixing very slowly.

4-Cool the new mixture to 10-15°C, which we can measure with

the thermometer already “invented.”

5-Slowly add enough glycerin to cover the entire surface of

the acid.

6-Keep the solution below 30°C.

7-Stir gently for ten minutes, then the nitroglycerin will

form as a layer on top of the acid solution, while the

sulfuric acid will absorb the excess water.

8-Filter out the nitroglycerin and place it in sodium

bicarbonate, which will neutralize much of the acid remaining.

This will help to stabilize it.

10-Now slowly and carefully remove the nitroglycerin from the

bicarbonate. The usual test to see if nitration has been

successful is to place one drop of the nitroglycerin on metal

and ignite it. If it is true nitroglycerin it will burn with

a clear blue flame.



The chemical reaction going on here is:

C3H5(OH)3 + 3HNO3 + H2SO4 = C3H5(NO3)3 + 3H20 + H2SO4
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