Simple Aluminum Powder
#1
Posted 13 November 2003 - 03:10 AM
Now, put enough soluble material (I use NaCl) into the blender and turn it on. You want enough so the blender doesnt throw everything around, but instead sets up a kind of cycle where the stuff comes up from the bottom and gets replaced by the stuff on top, so it plunges down the middle of the blender like a sinkhole.
Now, get some aluminium foil, and rip it into smallish pieces, about 1-2" square roughly. Place these into the blender, and manually shake it a bit to mix the foil in with the NaCl or whatever. Now, turn on the blender and use it in short bursts so as not to overheat it.
The foil gets finely ground up and has no escape from the blades as there is salt all around it!
Now, add the ground up mixture to water, the salt dissolves, and now filter the Al powder and there you go.
Source: Sonny Jim
#2
Posted 13 November 2003 - 08:11 AM
#4
Posted 13 November 2003 - 04:48 PM
what seems to be a dust is only 150 mesh, ball milling aluminium filler 300 mesh or using aluminium spray sounds good
#5
Posted 13 November 2003 - 04:50 PM
#6
Posted 13 November 2003 - 05:10 PM
I disagree. I have seen a home made grinding machine and it produced about a pound every 24 hours - with a variety of flakes, many pass 400#no such thing as simple aluminium powder, just read all the rec.pyrotechnics threads on it for a few hours and you'll learn you're wasting your time. electroylsis is the only promising method, but you need nitric acid or magnesium
what seems to be a dust is only 150 mesh, ball milling aluminium filler 300 mesh or using aluminium spray sounds good
#7
Posted 13 November 2003 - 05:46 PM
Stuart
#8
Posted 14 November 2003 - 01:27 AM
#9
Posted 14 November 2003 - 10:04 AM
I did not build one myself. Two left hands I also know that someone posted pictures on some site ? but this site is down for quite a while.How did you build it or do you know where I could get the plans?
Stuart
The basic idea is to have a rotating axial (using a 1/2hp motor or above) covered with a sand paper (one of those oxide sand papers ? like piranha 80). Under the axial, is a large bowl of water, where the axial bottom half rotates through, while above the axial is sort of a press. The aluminium block is attached to the press using a vice and is pressed down onto the sand paper. The ?press? can also be a simple arm that has a building block attached to it to is will lay heavy on the axial. When you start the motor, the sand paper sands the aluminium block and the powder is washed into the bowl of water when the axial rotate through it.
I hope this is a clear description ? I can try to post a drawing or something.
#10
Posted 14 November 2003 - 04:40 PM
Stuart
#11
Posted 14 November 2003 - 05:01 PM
Is this what it looks like and how fast does the motor spin?
Stuart
Edited by Stuart, 14 November 2003 - 05:10 PM.
#12
Posted 14 November 2003 - 07:04 PM
#13
Posted 14 November 2003 - 09:38 PM
Well, yes, the picture is not bad ? although the one I seen used a sort of an ?arm? instead of a press, and then vice a brick on the arm (to put weight on the arm) and an aluminium tube under it. The rotation speed was not extreme. I don?t think he had more then 500-600 rpm going, but it was long time ago?Have uploaded a picture based on the description you gave me and the one on the other site to Here. If it doesnt work, type http://www.geocities...urpyrotechnics/ and then add "grinder.JPG"onto the end
Is this what it looks like and how fast does the motor spin?
Stuart
As for hydrogen gas ? well, you should not have a problem with hydrogen gas ? unless your water contains nitrates ? and I don?t see why you would add nitrates to your water. If you want to be on the safe side ? add 1% boric acid and this will naturalize this reaction.
BTW Stuart ? this ?ball 24 hours to get something good? is not totally wrong. Lloyds already showed that it is hard to get commercial quality BP unless you ball mill for at least 24 hours?
#14
Posted 14 November 2003 - 09:47 PM
2Al + 2H2O -------> 2AlOH + H2
Hence Hydrogen.
Tris
#15
Posted 14 November 2003 - 10:19 PM
Stuart
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