Dry Ice from Sea Shells

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In this video I'm going to turn seashells into dry ice. Sea shells are
mostly made up of limestone - or Calcium Carbonate (CaCO3), which can be
decomposed into Calcium Oxide (CaO) and Carbon Dioxide (CO2) when heated
to around 900C. I used a 500W induction heater i built to heat a sealed
pipe full of sea shells to a hot enough temperature and collected the
CO2 gas into a beach ball by using a vacuum pump to extract it from the
pipe.
For limestone decomposition to occur at a reasonably fast rate, the
temperature really needs to be over ~1000C, so this process took several
hours (even for only ~50 grams of limestone) and required a vacuum pump
to pull off the CO2. I broke down the remainder of my sea shells by
dissolving them in vinnegar, and saved the Calcium Acetate biproduct for
later use as a solid fuel for camping/hiking.
Once I collected a decent volume of CO2, I used a refrigeration
compressor to pump it into a plate-stack heat exchanger and used a
propane-based vapor compression refrigeration system to chill the high
pressure CO2 down to about -30C, so it required only modest pressure to
liquify. The refrigeration system is actually the pre-cooler stage for
my joule-thomson cryocooler, which i borrowed for this video.
Once a decent mass of CO2 has been pumped into the heat exchanger and
liquified, it's discharged through a ~1mm diameter capillary tube into a
thermos with a glass wool baffle to stop high speed gases from carrying
away tiny particles of the ice.
With a little bit of improvement to the limestone furnace temperature,
and some minor tweaks to my refrigeration system, this could be an
extremely cheap way to make dry ice, assuming a limestone source is
available. With the right setup, costs could be as low as a few cents
per pound of ice.
Induction Heater Schematic:
drive.google.com/file/d/1WWGM...
Music Used:
Kevin MacLeod - George Street Shuffle
Kevin MacLeod - Groove Groove
Kevin MacLeod - Lobby Time

Пікірлер: 388

  • @paultucker2027
    @paultucker20275 ай бұрын

    FYI the purple colour of the glowing pipe is your camera picking up infra red emission. An IR cut filter, often used in astrophotography, wil block the IR and remove the purple glow.

  • @lumotroph

    @lumotroph

    5 ай бұрын

    Cool!

  • @StormBurnX

    @StormBurnX

    5 ай бұрын

    Yeah, was gonna say, this is something that I thought most phones solved well over a decade ago, but apparently even flagship androids still don't have IR filters for some reason. Even my old $300 iphone from 7 years ago has an IR filter to ensure the colors are not distorted by overloaded IR sources.... compared against my $900 pixel and still that ugly pinkish purple glow shows up whenever I film things like fireplaces or candles.

  • @JJayzX

    @JJayzX

    5 ай бұрын

    @@StormBurnX All digital cameras have IR filters, except night vision cameras or else colors would be off. Some just have better quality filters.

  • @jimsvideos7201

    @jimsvideos7201

    5 ай бұрын

    You can use this phenomenon to see if your TV remote is working properly or not.

  • @paultucker2027

    @paultucker2027

    5 ай бұрын

    Although most cameras have IR filtering to some extent they usually let some through. An IR cut filter block all of it. I've had the problem and cured it with said filter. I recall it was a cheap svbony IR and UV cut filter from Amazon, which only let's visible light through.

  • @Not.So.WiseGuy
    @Not.So.WiseGuy5 ай бұрын

    Rest in peace to all those brave mosfets.

  • @Erhannis

    @Erhannis

    5 ай бұрын

    I have a cardboard box bearing a 3d printed RIP tombstone, to entomb components fallen in battle

  • @cyantwo936

    @cyantwo936

    5 ай бұрын

    An absolute win for fab wizards adding magic smoke

  • @bobweiram6321

    @bobweiram6321

    5 ай бұрын

    Don't forget bobofet! He took it like a champ.

  • @jamiecurran3544

    @jamiecurran3544

    5 ай бұрын

    Lol!😭😂

  • @Gerov9
    @Gerov95 ай бұрын

    4:11 "camera shows it as slightly pink" Probably because camera capturing infrared light.

  • @oshiro1
    @oshiro15 ай бұрын

    I work for a large brewery, and we capture CO2 from fermentation. We run it through a scrubber and liquefy it with an NH3/R717 refrigeration system on an industrial scale. And then we sell that too (next to some buffering and internal usage). If you're looking for CO2 sources and interesting side products... Anyway, thank you for your fun videos! I really enjoy watching them.

  • @PsRohrbaugh

    @PsRohrbaugh

    5 ай бұрын

    This sounds like the perfect, er, home-brew setup!

  • @spaceminions

    @spaceminions

    5 ай бұрын

    Oh, that sounds like just the thing to recommend, only need groceries and no high temperatures.

  • @among-us-99999

    @among-us-99999

    5 ай бұрын

    can turn the ethanol into ethylene

  • @johnladuke6475

    @johnladuke6475

    4 ай бұрын

    @@among-us-99999 Or turn the ethanol into stacks of cash, fabulous parties and lots of friends.

  • @mrgumbook
    @mrgumbook5 ай бұрын

    This man is finding new and creative ways to avoid going to a store while burning electronics and I'm all for it. Where I'm from dry ice is a bit of a pain to buy but I can buy a 20kg cylinder of CO2 off of eBay and have it posted to my door. Should really practice my braising / plumbing because your skill is truly astonishing.

  • @johnladuke6475

    @johnladuke6475

    4 ай бұрын

    There's a good chance that you can take your own red cylinder and have the local firefighters fill it with CO2 for free. They'll probably get suspicious if you come back for a top-up more than once or twice a year, though.

  • @gsuberland
    @gsuberland5 ай бұрын

    Regarding the ZVS circuit, you can increase the efficiency a bunch by altering the gate driver topology slightly. As you've built it, the BJTs will operate in the linear region, which means you've got a voltage drop between the gate and the rail (0V or your gate drive voltage), on top of your 10Ω series resistor (minus the momentary impedance of the two caps). You may also be operating closer to the SOA limits during switching due to the Miller effect, which is likely to be quite significant in the context of ZVS. There's a better option - look up the video "Revisiting MOSFET push pull gate driver" by Sam Ben-Yaakov. He shows a MOSFET push-pull driver design that works by adding split gate resistance (higher resistance to gate drive voltage, lower to ground) and using small MOSFETs instead of the BJTs. That gets you the best of all worlds - no voltage drop in the driver transistors, optimised for reducing Miller effect and avoiding self-turn-on issues, and any push-pull driver shoot-through will go through the gate resistors and heavily reduce the current. I've used it to great effect in scenarios where I can't use a dedicated gate driver IC. It's very fast and super efficient. One thing to note, though, is that all of these gate drivers are sensitive to parasitic inductance, because the drive current is a few amps and the switching time is very short (nanoseconds). Avoid stripboard, go for a proper PCB, ideally 4 layers with a sig/gnd/gnd/sig stackup (JLCPCB do them laughably cheap these days). You want a really small current loop between your drivers and your gate, ideally with a solid ground plane underneath and local capacitance sat as close to the driver FETs as you can get it. That keeps all the dI/dt in a small area, with a really low impedance power delivery network.

  • @thesentientneuron6550
    @thesentientneuron65505 ай бұрын

    I think I figured out why your induction furnace might be temperature limited. Hysteresis loss in the ferromagnetic iron pipe you're using allows it absorbs the circuit's energy really well. So, one could conjecture that the iron pipe you're using significantly loses it's ability to absorb energy from the circuit above its curie temperature (770C for carbon steel and just over a 1000C for pure iron), leading to the temperature "stalling" at 900C. Heating does occur above that temperature, just nowhere near as efficiently as before since it's now solely driven by eddy currents. Circuit redesign time I guess?

  • @ThisTrenton

    @ThisTrenton

    2 ай бұрын

    I agree with this. You can see this demonstration in induction forging where the iron billet will fall through the magnetic field after it becomes cherry red.

  • @Runescope
    @Runescope5 ай бұрын

    I had a thought for constructing your firebrick surroundings for the pipe furnace. There is a really cheap type of cement you can get for constructing custom firebrick shapes. I've used it for making ornaments for sitting in campfires for collecting and reflecting heat. I found it on Amazon as Castable Refractory Cement.

  • @andersjjensen

    @andersjjensen

    5 ай бұрын

    To the top you go! Even hyperspace pirates need info on low tech practical solutions!

  • @johnladuke6475

    @johnladuke6475

    4 ай бұрын

    You can make your own castable refractory cement quite cheaply. Take unscented kitty litter and grind it to a fine powder (wear a mask). Kitty litter is bentonite clay, and the unscented stuff is pure clay because there's no perfume. Mix the fine powder with water, and it can be cast as a solid brick, used as a mortar, or used as a surface coating. Plaster of paris can also work for the purpose.

  • @chemistryofquestionablequa6252
    @chemistryofquestionablequa62525 ай бұрын

    Love projects like this. It’s not terribly useful, economical or quick, but it’s COOL. I enjoy doing this type of stuff because I can, and I find it relaxing. Awesome video!

  • @cherylm2C6671

    @cherylm2C6671

    5 ай бұрын

    One day it will be good to have done this homework, it's just a matter of where and when. Go HP!

  • @chemistryofquestionablequa6252

    @chemistryofquestionablequa6252

    5 ай бұрын

    @@cherylm2C6671 absolutely! My main hobby is collecting skills and information that would be useful if someday the supply chain fails and we can’t rely on foreign industry for essential products. Even if something isn’t economically viable now it may well be in the future.

  • @cherylm2C6671

    @cherylm2C6671

    5 ай бұрын

    @@chemistryofquestionablequa6252 Not sure if it's more about local economics or getting a waste product into the Hydrogen economy. Mass quantities have to keep ships running to all the global emergencies.

  • @Pawsome_Opossum
    @Pawsome_Opossum5 ай бұрын

    My college capstone project was designing a cement mine and I was in charge of the aggregate and processing (I’m not a chemical engineer or a chemist so I had no clue what was going on). Modern Portland cement is still basically lime and some other fun additives. Particle size is very important at every step, which is what I was focusing on (due to an issue with our data, we could not get accurate mineral estimations and thus couldn’t do anything with the chemistry). All the research I had done discussed the importance of the additives and mineralogical makeup of the rock but not the basics of the chemistry. But despite days of research, your tiny blurb about limestone and mortar made everything click. The rest of the video was good too I guess.

  • @doughnut1107
    @doughnut11075 ай бұрын

    I think you might be running into the curie temperature for steel/iron. I would be willing to bet that your max temp is right around 770c

  • @MrHubert1710
    @MrHubert17105 ай бұрын

    Seashell decomposition is also reversible, after you convert CaCO3 to CaO, make Ca(OH)2 in water and pass air through it. Hydroxide will trap CO2 from air turning it back into limestone. After evaporating water CaCO3 should be left ready to another batch of decomposition closing cycle. This way basic CO2 scrubber can be made.

  • @istopedthewuhanlabfunding6351

    @istopedthewuhanlabfunding6351

    5 ай бұрын

    Just how my expencive ROCK CRAKING EXPANDO lime oxide has gon off . To much air co2 sucking .

  • @thomasrogers8239
    @thomasrogers82395 ай бұрын

    The calcium oxide or quick lime will absorb CO2 from the atmosphere if you spread it out thinly and let it dry, the cementation process is literally driven by absorbing CO2, it can then go through the process of being burnt again to capture more CO2. I don't know if there's any losses but I'm fairly confident that it's mostly a lossless process in terms of the lime.

  • @istopedthewuhanlabfunding6351

    @istopedthewuhanlabfunding6351

    5 ай бұрын

    If u dont burn the lime stone at over 900 deg c.

  • @staviq
    @staviq5 ай бұрын

    4:10 Camera sensor is sensitive to a wider spectrum than just the visible light, and they typically have a wavelength band pass filter on the sensor itself or on the lenses, but that filter only gets you so far. If you have a source of broad spectrum light strong enough, some of IR and UV makes it to the camera sensor and gets registered, and IR triggering red plus UV triggering blue, makes magenta.

  • @H3wastooshort

    @H3wastooshort

    5 ай бұрын

    I dont think there is any substantial amount of UV produced, as the spectrum does not even contain enough blue yet to appear white. It would need to be way hotter than that. Also: so far, every camera i've seen picked up IR as pink

  • @TurnerXei

    @TurnerXei

    5 ай бұрын

    The human eye has a frequency response bump for the "red" cones high up in the violet area, which is why red+blue appears as purple. I suspect something like that happens with camera sensors, which is why strong IR appears as fuchsia instead of just red. But in their case the blue filters are letting in a little IR.

  • @staviq

    @staviq

    5 ай бұрын

    As far as I understand, this is generally true, except, red pixels in a display wouldn't be able to reproduce more "red" red, which means, even if the camera picks it up, a screen wouldn't be able to reproduce it without usilising blue component. So maybe it's a quirk of the inner workings of a camera sensor, that more "red" red, is processed as magenta, and the electronics part of it actually convert "very red" as red with some blue.

  • @geordonworley5618
    @geordonworley56185 ай бұрын

    So, I would highly suggest using potassium carbonate/bicarbonate to concentrate CO2. This is often used in direct air capture, and you don't need to reach such high temperatures. You can collect CO2 from the air at sub 90C by letting the potassium carbonate turn into potassium bicarbonate. You then heat it above 90C to release the CO2. Search online to find the vapor pressures, some recent papers cover this. With this method you can concentrate CO2 from the air a lot more easily than via calcination since much lower temperatures are possible. Unfortunately, it can take some time for CO2 to be reabsorbed and to extract all the CO2 you want, but you can speed these processes up with agitation. Good luck!

  • @jacobb7608

    @jacobb7608

    4 ай бұрын

    This is a good idea, although since you'd be decomposing the bicarbonate, you would need to account for the water produced. You could add an inline drying tube packed with pellets of a dessicant in order to dry the CO2. I'd recommend using calcium chloride as the drying agent because it does not react with CO2, comes in pellet form, and has excellent drying power even at low % humidity.

  • @thaphreak
    @thaphreak5 ай бұрын

    The only creator who's commercials I don't skip lol

  • @robinc.5077
    @robinc.50775 ай бұрын

    Nichrome wire for heating is extremely cheap, and I hit 1050C with it easily. Lookup diy electric forges. Naked brass screw terminals are very convenient for connecting to nichrome wire.

  • @gamerpaddy
    @gamerpaddy5 ай бұрын

    you might try a graphite crucible in the induction coil instead, it goes way hotter. or straight up a arc furnace with gouging rods they are insane at converting electrical energy to heat but might cause contamination due to its copper coating

  • @PsRohrbaugh
    @PsRohrbaugh5 ай бұрын

    I hope you mean the new "MAPP" gas. The old stuff (which was even hotter) was banned around 10-20 years ago (time flies), and is basically impossible to find, except sitting in people's garages. I don't remember the details, just the general story.

  • @ejtono1582
    @ejtono15825 ай бұрын

    You can also absorb co2 using sodium carbonate and decompose the bicarbonate in boiling water (or faster at a higher temperature ) this can be automated you can just get a barrel of it with a air pump and feed it into a heater or heat exchanger with co2 capture (or just brew some beer to get the co2)

  • @FirstLast-oe2jm
    @FirstLast-oe2jm5 ай бұрын

    Your entire compressed gas series has been great fun, asI've been looking into a system by which gasses could be collected differentially after a pyrolysis, and this might just be the method to use honestly. Feel free to steal that idea and try it with a mixture of gasses, I'm curious if/how well they could be cold distilled so to speak.

  • @urgon6321
    @urgon63215 ай бұрын

    Drop pressure in the pipe - according to graph you've shown that also drops the required temperature. More powerful induction heater might also help...

  • @D43vil
    @D43vil5 ай бұрын

    I wonder if the ethylene reactor from the cryocooler series could be retrofitted with the induction heater for more precise control of the reaction temperature

  • @TheLophius
    @TheLophius5 ай бұрын

    backyard scientist does have a video about super height temp induction heater, maybe more powerful induction heater could bake seashells rip mosfets.

  • @roboman2444
    @roboman24445 ай бұрын

    Camera shows slightly pink because most camera sensors can pick up a bit of near infrared. This shows up as a pink/purple. You can see this by pointing a TV remote at the camera and watching the IR led flicker.

  • @not_a_therapist
    @not_a_therapist5 ай бұрын

    Honestly one of my favorite channels. Your delivery and pace is so fun to sit back and enjoy. Bro makes some of the coolest shit on youtube

  • @MakerMadness

    @MakerMadness

    5 ай бұрын

    Agree. Dudes a stud

  • @leechjim8023
    @leechjim80235 ай бұрын

    The lime decomposition is similar to how calcium carbide is formed. That stuff was used in early car headlights and in mining/caving lamps.

  • @Jp-ue8xz
    @Jp-ue8xz5 ай бұрын

    04:12 - IR light looks "pink" in most digital cameras. This is specially true of very cheap ones when you remove the IR filter from the lens OR even good cameras with a decent filter, if the source is hot enough. It's actually kinda cool you can make the cheap version (active illumination) of night-vision with just some IR leds and a cheap webcam

  • @ericlotze7724
    @ericlotze77245 ай бұрын

    7:50 A Ballmill would work GREAT, and be a great OS Project to help others. Could even make the process for this (Semi-) Automated! (Dump shells into bin+feeder, or just into the mill, it does the rest and spits out powder + has a co2 line/compressor!)

  • @baux5515
    @baux55155 ай бұрын

    never been happier to see a creator get a sponsor

  • @Scrogan
    @Scrogan5 ай бұрын

    Why not make a mains voltage ZVS driver? That way you don’t have to worry about your 12V PSU only being rated to 12A. Though you might need to have a lot more output windings, if not a step-down transformer. I’d look into using dedicated gate drive ICs too, get ones rated for 1-2A, and put totem-poles after them to drive 10A in and out of the gates with a nice square wave to minimise switching losses.

  • @sammy5576
    @sammy55765 ай бұрын

    I had no ide there was such interesting chemistry around sea shells

  • @andersjjensen
    @andersjjensen5 ай бұрын

    LOL! That forth wall breakage as a segue to the sponsor spot got me good! :P

  • @freaky5453
    @freaky54535 ай бұрын

    You could build something like an enclosure with 1 or 2 magnetrons, inside of it a silicium carbid bowl (there some good videos on how to make it from sic powder and water glass). It needs to be covered in insulating materials, alot of people use that high temp wool thingy i think made from ceramic fibers. It gets very hot, people use it to fuse glass or melt metals inside a microwave. Maybe outside one you can even improve the effectiveness of it, for example i read that people take the glass plate out and it heats up faster cause there. But at the same time if the microwave kiln is not spinning it doesnt get even heated.

  • @Erhannis
    @Erhannis5 ай бұрын

    6:35 I howled baboon laughter for over a minute after the "all the worst people on earth seem to be hanging out in my living room" remark

  • @noblewatcher5732
    @noblewatcher57325 ай бұрын

    I love this stuff, make more!

  • @chemicalvamp
    @chemicalvamp5 ай бұрын

    I bet it glowed pink on camera because of how much infra red it was emitting. It looks to me as the same color you see when you point your phone camera at the TV remote or an IR night vision camera's light. Some camera's have an IR filter though

  • @mrmatt2525able
    @mrmatt2525able5 ай бұрын

    Awesome video!! I love them! So good

  • @dannyneumann4547
    @dannyneumann45475 ай бұрын

    Seriously underrated channel

  • @dastatiks6182
    @dastatiks61825 ай бұрын

    So cool ! Really interesting, thanks !

  • @jesscorbin5981
    @jesscorbin59815 ай бұрын

    God bless you and thanx. Genius

  • @TheBoshy
    @TheBoshy5 ай бұрын

    Floridaman empties beaches of seashells to fund his funny snow collection

  • @p.0-npcg.248
    @p.0-npcg.2485 ай бұрын

    For higher temps try a microwave kiln

  • @lumotroph
    @lumotroph5 ай бұрын

    What a neat concept!

  • @DJMANDY467
    @DJMANDY4675 ай бұрын

    Yo dude, I love your videos so much. They so educational but so interesting.

  • @Richardj410
    @Richardj4105 ай бұрын

    I really enjoy these projects. Fun at home with the Pirate.

  • @koenthiessen-qz1ez
    @koenthiessen-qz1ez5 ай бұрын

    you could get the furnace hotter by buying or making a forge

  • @sorryfornoname2157
    @sorryfornoname21574 ай бұрын

    In my country we call CaO of cal and is/was used in the interior south region to paint houses. It's called caiar.

  • @gardenguy357
    @gardenguy3575 ай бұрын

    a lot of hobby assay furnaces can get up to around 900c and higher and can be found for around 400-500 for a okay model, they can be used as a resistive heater as well cause a lot of them have a opening in the top to allow for gases to escape, or you can always drill one in and run a copper pipe through

  • @arpeggi2999
    @arpeggi29995 ай бұрын

    Im always inspired by these videos

  • @jimg3466
    @jimg34665 ай бұрын

    Thanks that was neat

  • @moo123wat
    @moo123wat5 ай бұрын

    Thank you for producing this video and sharing your knowledge, even if I end up never needing this 😆. Also like the nice bass in the background.

  • @sethapex9670
    @sethapex96705 ай бұрын

    Your slaked lime will then reabsorb CO2 from the air to make limestone again, which you can then drive off again.

  • @zenmark42
    @zenmark425 ай бұрын

    My 15kw induction forge definitely gets up to white hot for steel; I'm not sure what else they do to get that but it'll melt steel if I leave it in too long, so I definitely think you can get your induction system up to the point you need. I think you might also be having trouble with heat transfer in it; maybe something to rotate the shells inside so they can contact the walls better?

  • @ErikPelyukhno
    @ErikPelyukhno2 күн бұрын

    4:12 the reason your camera picks up the orange glow as pink is the infrared radiation isn’t getting filtered by your camera’s sensor

  • @MrHubert1710
    @MrHubert17105 ай бұрын

    NASA uses LiOH to scrub CO2 into Li2CO3 which decomposes into Li2O +CO2 in 600-900C which could enable your process in lower temperature. Most price effective would be buying carbonate because others are only available in "super pure" versions

  • @bencapobianco2045
    @bencapobianco20455 ай бұрын

    I love all of your projects!! Very cool very inspiring….. now I want to make a fuel source from seashells lol Keep up the amazing content!!!!!!

  • @n0nyab1znezbutyoucancallme89
    @n0nyab1znezbutyoucancallme89Ай бұрын

    loving your videos.

  • @bladej4323
    @bladej43235 ай бұрын

    One possible cheap method to increase your gaseous CO2 storage would be to purchase a larger pool inflatable or more simply an air mattress. With additional props of the air mattress beings it’s slightly more accommodating fill valve.

  • @MakerMadness
    @MakerMadness5 ай бұрын

    Best Add/Commercial skit, ever. Hilarious

  • @kirilivanov5852
    @kirilivanov58523 ай бұрын

    Most of your videos are 15+ minutes and I can watch them from start to finish..😂 You're doing some interesting content. I appreciate it, keep it up 🎉

  • @AkPK369
    @AkPK3695 ай бұрын

    Very easy and safe

  • @Axel_Andersen
    @Axel_Andersen5 ай бұрын

    Siporex would, I think, be a great material for this sort of relatively low temp furnace. It is a Swedish invention and is basically foamy concrete. It is surprisingly light, the density is about half that of water, so it's actually concrete that floats! Siporex is easy to shape and work with hand tools like wood saws and drills. It has great insulation properties, the thermal conductivity is 0.144 W/m °C compared to high density refractor materials which have a K factor in the ball park of 1.2 - 1.4 W/m °C. It has a melting point of 1600 °C and it is cheap as chips so if it does not last long it does not matter.

  • @kreynolds1123
    @kreynolds11235 ай бұрын

    Kao wool would make a better insulator for the reactor tube abd will be far easyer to work with needing only an exactoknife to cut it. The brick was far too dense.

  • @karicowo
    @karicowo5 ай бұрын

    In theory you should be able to disolve the calcium oxide in water forming a calcium hydroxide solution. Then bubble air though that solution to carbonate the hydroxide again causing it to participate out as calcium carbonate again. So you could recycle all the product removing the need to collect seashells or aquire it otherwise. I don't know how long it takes to carbonate the hydroxide with the comparatively low partial pressure of co2 in our atmosphere but it would essentially be free. The high solubility of co2 in water should help capture it from the air to make it faster than just leaving the hydroxide to air-carbonate. Great Video 👍

  • @kennedy67951
    @kennedy679515 ай бұрын

    I really like your work mate. Very good channel. Thank you for sharing your experience and hard earned knowledge with me.🎉😊

  • @dvhx
    @dvhx5 ай бұрын

    You said firebrick is invisible to magnetic field but when I made a metal detector (~30kHz) it could detect ceramic mug. Maybe there are some losses in ceramic at higher frequencies.

  • @neodimium
    @neodimium5 ай бұрын

    That was very COOL.

  • @allepiccondor1166
    @allepiccondor11665 ай бұрын

    Love your channel man keep this up

  • @First2ner
    @First2ner5 ай бұрын

    give me 15min, I have to rewatch it again, your content is all that I need to watch! until next video then!

  • @peter360adventures9
    @peter360adventures95 ай бұрын

    Awesome.

  • @skylerlehmkuhl135
    @skylerlehmkuhl1355 ай бұрын

    Resistive heating is definitely the way to go. Kanthal wire is not expensive and can go up to 1400 C which should be plenty for that reaction. And you don't even need a special driver circuit, just a coil of the appropriate length which can then be plugged directly into the mains.

  • @ianchan2624
    @ianchan26245 ай бұрын

    Very cool!

  • @GillyTech
    @GillyTech5 ай бұрын

    What you can do with seashells and heat is blowing my mind.

  • @spaceminions
    @spaceminions5 ай бұрын

    I would point out that you can buy big bags of slaked lime for a few dollars, and it has other uses. Or buy limestone of course.Though the bulk price of baking soda is not that bad for minimal effort and you can use low heat instead of vinegar. Or if you split water you could just use the pure oxygen to burn carbon with minimal water or nitrogen involved. But hey, I guess seashells are more interesting. Just not universally common.

  • @ZeroPlayerGame

    @ZeroPlayerGame

    5 ай бұрын

    Slaked lime is useless for CO2 production, though. It's more of a byproduct of this method.

  • @spaceminions

    @spaceminions

    5 ай бұрын

    @@ZeroPlayerGame It's a cycle. You burn limestone to emit CO2 and get quicklime, you slake it with water to get slaked lime, and you let the wet slaked lime absorb atmospheric co2 over time to get back to the beginning.

  • @ZeroPlayerGame

    @ZeroPlayerGame

    5 ай бұрын

    @@spaceminions ...I suppose, but you could also just use eggshells, or even rock if you live in a limestone geological area.

  • @bobweiram6321

    @bobweiram6321

    5 ай бұрын

    @@spaceminions You just designed a new form of CO2 sequestration.

  • @sneediumminer

    @sneediumminer

    5 ай бұрын

    the lime process is regenerable because slaked lime in water will pull co2 out of the air to reform calcium carbonate, which you can crush and re-heat. he doesn't need to continuously obtain lime.

  • @gragaloth6237
    @gragaloth62375 ай бұрын

    The glowing metal looks pink on your camera because almost all cameras can see a bit of infrared. Only when it's really bright IR that it becomes apparent in video, and something really hot would of course release a lot of IR

  • @cphVlwYa
    @cphVlwYa5 ай бұрын

    How slow would it be to set up a membrane electrolysis cell and toss the shells on the side with the anode. The anode will produce acid which will react with the carbonate to make CO2. The issue is that you'd then also get O2 contaminating your CO2. If you're just freezing it, that doesn't really matter tho.

  • @christopher.m.dickinson0315
    @christopher.m.dickinson03154 ай бұрын

    Just found your channel but love it

  • @subhasishbhaduri2938
    @subhasishbhaduri29385 ай бұрын

    Putting MOSFETs in parallel on a large heatsink will definitely help you...

  • @roboterson
    @roboterson5 ай бұрын

    If you want to stick with electric heating you could use microwaves to heat the pipe. I have a small microwave kiln use for firing pottery and melting glass, not sure what modification you would need as my kiln has a layer of tungsten carbide for capturing the waves.

  • @googacct
    @googacct5 ай бұрын

    Could you get a better dry ice yield if you redirected the co2 gas from the jar back into the beachball?

  • @PixlRainbow
    @PixlRainbow5 ай бұрын

    Microwave heaters can get hotter, as long as either the workpiece itself or the crucible are absorbent and not transparent or reflective to microwave frequencies. I do not know whether calcium carbonate would be susceptible

  • @AlessioSangalli
    @AlessioSangalli5 ай бұрын

    Thanks for the upload, I’m a big fan. Congrats on the sponsorship, it’s a big milestone! For camping I like to dissolve styrofoam into gasoline and use the resulting paste to more easily start campfires.

  • @JohnMullee

    @JohnMullee

    5 ай бұрын

    Redneck napalm !

  • @senorjp21
    @senorjp215 ай бұрын

    If you put that carbon dioxide snow in a sock you can put on some gloves and squeeze it like a snowball or step on it to get harder denser ice

  • @unmanaged
    @unmanaged5 ай бұрын

    rewire a mot for high current low voltage, get some 6v batts and get re rods and build an furnace....

  • @benmcreynolds8581
    @benmcreynolds85815 ай бұрын

    I loved your video playing around with the concept of making a portable microwave using rechargeable batteries in a metal lunch box. If done right, that could be a really useful item to have in outdoor/ camping situations. I hope to see further future versions of it. There are a lot of useful things someone could use something like that for when stuck out in the wilderness or just during emergencies where you'd have that option in tandem with some charging sources. Such as back up power banks, or running your car, or maybe even a solar power setup? Idk just seems like a handy survival creation. (BTW I'm not going to try to make one. Don't worry. I know I'm not capable and i respect the risks that are there if someone doesn't know what they are doing)

  • @HkSx12
    @HkSx125 ай бұрын

    The camera shows pink because of the infrared light being emitted from the heat source. The infrared light gets picked up by the camera sensor and is displayed purple on the monitor.

  • @lizardkeeper100
    @lizardkeeper1005 ай бұрын

    I am surprised you couldn't get the inductor heater hot enough and that it killed the mosfets. I hope you can come up with a way to make the induction heating work because I really like induction heating.

  • @Ammoniummetavanadate
    @Ammoniummetavanadate4 ай бұрын

    Just use Kanthal heating elements. 1100C is easy peasy with Kanthal A1.

  • @anotherguy9402
    @anotherguy94025 ай бұрын

    You need to make a dry ice collection chamber with an output to collect the excess gas that isn't frozen

  • @noahpaulette1490
    @noahpaulette14905 ай бұрын

    I wonder if yeast fermentation could provide sufficient co2 from a reasonable volume.

  • @AnalogDude_
    @AnalogDude_5 ай бұрын

    5:40 these 100K resistors nor the 1k pull-up aren't needed and probably neither are the diodes as the totem pole transistors arrangement strangle themselves on the base witch is kinda cool. Without knowing i have send you the Weighbridge oscillator, using a hi power opamp and a inverting config to drive the mosfets and also less parts.

  • @SmoinsLP
    @SmoinsLP5 ай бұрын

    How about yeast to produce CO2, just gotta feed it regularly?

  • @drzandlcp
    @drzandlcp5 ай бұрын

    Just trying to throw in a vote for the hho torch as a heat source....just wanna see it happen thanks love your channel

  • @aeris-mo
    @aeris-mo5 ай бұрын

    Nice progress

  • @orangeflavoredmf
    @orangeflavoredmf5 ай бұрын

    Would multiple small diameter tubes connected at the top as the furnace work perhaps? It's more surface area for the shells to heat up

  • @jasongarland3165
    @jasongarland31655 ай бұрын

    Look at one of the import bench top foundry furnaces that people use to melt small amount of gold and silver. That may work better than the homebrew induction heater. Alternatively, source some Kanthal wire and wind your own.

  • @gustaveluna9349
    @gustaveluna93495 ай бұрын

    Soon, new antartica will be made by seashells and oil! Always a pleasure to read you Hyperspace Pirate. Always a pleasure to see pure public utility.

  • @thanks3150
    @thanks31505 ай бұрын

    incredible

  • @TheOpticalFreak
    @TheOpticalFreak5 ай бұрын

    Props on the surfshark intro 🤣🤣🤣👍