Bleser magnesium stars
#1
Posted 07 October 2016 - 10:43 AM
I was thinking of making some of the Bleser green magnesium stars (barium nitrate based) and have seen that using strontium nitrate would produce red. Anyway I was wondering if using say sodium nitrate (yellow) and copper nitrate (blue) and other nitrates for different colours would work.
Thanks ๐
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#2
Posted 07 October 2016 - 11:14 AM
I'm not sure on the specific comp you refer too but bear in mind that strontium nitrate and sodium nitrate are hydroscopic. The point being magnesium and water don't like each other and could become very dangerous if wet.
Perhaps you could post the comp?
Rod
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#4
Posted 07 October 2016 - 01:32 PM
Do you press them dry? or what binder / solvent will you use?
Rod
#5
Posted 07 October 2016 - 03:23 PM
#6
Posted 07 October 2016 - 04:11 PM
Yes bind with acetone only! NOT water. Keep water and moisture away from stars containing magnesium. The parlon helps protect the magnesium. Bleser #7 red mag is 55 strontium nitrate 7 PVC 10 parlon 28 100-200 mesh magnesium so seems ok to use strontium in place of barium nitrate.
#9 yellow mag is 45 potassium perchlorate 13 cryolite 30 magnesium 10 PVC 2 charcoal
I think I would stay away from sodium nitrate where magnesium is used. Though yellow sunrise looks interesting to make maybe
55 Sodium nitrate 5 charcoal 10 sulphur 25 MgAl 5 dextrin see sweet dreams rocket
It is possible to dry press 55.5 sodium nitrate 17 magnesium 27.5 PVC as per Lancaster but you need to treat the magnesium with linseed oil first and they have a limited shelf life.
Rod
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#8
Posted 11 October 2016 - 09:05 AM
Nobody has yet commented on the suggestion that copper nitrate could be substituted, to give a blue colour.
That is not a good idea for several reasons. Firstly, copper nitrate crystals contain water of crystallisation that canโt be removed by heating; the copper nitrate will start to decompose before the water is driven off. Secondly, copper nitrate is deliquescent โ given the opportunity, it will absorb water from the atmosphere until it turns into a solution. Finally, and most importantly, a mixture of a reactive metal like magnesium with copper nitrate is chemically unstable; given the slightest trace of moisture, they will react. In the worst case, the reaction might generate enough heat for the mix to spontaneously ignite.
This type of reaction can occur with any copper compound that is soluble in water, which is why most blue star compositions use insoluble substances such as copper metal, copper oxide, basic copper carbonate or Paris Green (copper acetoarsenite). There are a few older formulations that include copper sulphate but I wouldnโt care to try them.
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