The mark of the Chemist

Recommended Videos

Kinguendo

New member
Apr 10, 2009
4,267
0
0
Hmm, I never got into an accident in Chemistry... however I did turn off gravity in Physics. :D
 

darth gditch

Dark Gamer of the Sith
Jun 3, 2009
332
0
0
Someone spilled their unknown chemical compound that they were trying to identify all over my hands and arms and torso. I went to wash it off, excruciating pain, I then positively identified the compound as NaOH, had burns for more than a week. XD
 

thethingthatlurks

New member
Feb 16, 2010
2,102
0
0
The worst that has happened in my university was somebody putting organic stuff into the nitric acid waste (for the uninitiated, nitric acid + organic things + time = bang). I'm pretty sure you can still see the result in the lab somewhere...

The worst that I ever did was last spring. I was using microwave digestion, and was about to open the first container. I forgot that the 16M nitric acid inside was still boiling, and managed to get a drop of it on my arm, about 2cm above the glove. Didn't notice it until later that night when it turned bright red and itched like crazy. Left a cool scar though...
 

Ramaziel

New member
Apr 14, 2009
4
0
0
Now, I can't say that my biggest screw up in chemistry was because of me, rather say it was because of the teacher.

I had a project during my last year of high-school where I travelled to diffrent schools on the island I live on to teach chemistry and some of the experiments involved showing that some minerals make the fire burn with a diffrent colour when thrown into the mix and another was a experiment where you put a piece of paper in a mixture of water and ethanol (the paper catches fire but the heat from the fire is just enough to evaporate the water, thus leaving the paper unharmed).

When performing (wouldn't say teaching, was more of a show than a lesson) me and my assistance poured some of the remaining ethanol mix into a aluminum container, lit it on fire and added som simple salt to show that simpel table salt burnt with a yellow colour. The teacher, who was also enjoying/supervising the show thought "Well, that heat can burn the table" so he decided he'd pick it up with a small tong. He grabbed one end, lifted and spilled the burning ethanol all over the table.

Now, knowing that the ethanol was mixed with enough water it would just burn up and leave a bunch of water I did not panic. What did freak me out though was the fact that the flaming liquid was inches away from a butane container.

Explosion risk anyone?

Also, I got most of these ideas from my chemistry teacher, that guy was fucking insane xD. We used to do improvised experiments all the time, still have some of the shrapnel from one of them xD

(PS. If anyone is gonna try that water/ethanol thing you want 70% water in the case of normal paper)
 

Reep

New member
Jul 23, 2008
677
0
0
Putting matches in the bunsen burners, dissecting body parts as part of an experiment, and finding a condom under the desk.

Science was an interesting class.
 

Miffmoff

New member
Aug 31, 2009
285
0
0
summerof2010 said:
Miffmoff said:
*Picking up a crucible after I'd made some glass in said crucible, I wanted a closer look and only realised after about ten seconds that it was really, really hot.
I'm sure you're exaggerating, but how did you hold something for a whole ten seconds without realizing it was burning you?

But OT!: I don't remember the exact proceedings, but we put some black iron in a big bucket and were trying to make melt by lighting the strip of magnesium we'd stuck in it. Of course it wouldn't light, so we broke out the blow torch ("we" being my teacher, mind you). Oh, that worked just fine, nice and contained. Then we ("we" being the class and myself, mind you) decided it wasn't "pretty" enough. So we stuck a couple pennies in it, thinking "OOOH!! Green fire! Neat!" Here's how it went:

Magnesium lights.
Black Iron reacts, heating to 400 C almost instantly.
Pennies don't heat to 400 C almost instantly.
Iron expands, pennies sink to the bottom.
Pennies melt, expanding rapidly under a cap of molten iron.
I backpedal wildly, making up swears as I go.

This all in the space of about 4, maybe 5 seconds. It was basically a frag grenade made of molten iron -- there was a nice half-circle of soot and melted paint on the side of the building for weeks. On the bright side, no one got hurt, I had a sweet video to show to my friends on my phone for a while, and I got to keep one of the cooled nuggets of iron, which I still have. And it was prettier.
On thinking about it, yes I probably am exaggerating. I'm not that sure how long it was but it definetly wasn't instant
 

Beartrucci

New member
Jun 19, 2009
1,758
0
0
Nothing too major, I purposely lit up an entire box of matches at once over a bunsen burner though. That was fucking awesome.

I do know a kid that accidentally set a girls sleeve on fire though in the lab.
 

Betancore

New member
Apr 23, 2010
1,857
0
0
I set myself on fire once. We were doing something about combustion, I don't really remember because I don't learn anything in science. But anyway, we had this kerosene container and I lit it and I didn't expect the flame to be so huge.

Once, one of our beakers exploded and we had to stay behind after class to clean it up. Most of my science class accidents end in detention.
 

TjoxYorro

New member
Sep 2, 2009
90
0
0
I don't know what stuff it was but i wasn't supposed to light it with a match. The result was ALOT of smoke, causing the fire alarm to go off. And this resulted in every class running outside.

That was great.
 

Sebass

New member
Jul 13, 2009
189
0
0
Girl: "I accidently inhaled some concentrated ammonia, it smells so horrible it gave me a headache"

In my head: "Hm I wonder if it really smells that bad .. "

It didn't gave me a headache, but I still regretted smelling it. Made me actually learn to appreciate those fumehoods.
 

Billion Backs

New member
Apr 20, 2010
1,431
0
0
Quaxar said:
Billion Backs said:
My meth lab once blew up! Haha, jokes aside, I haven't taken high level chemistry classes in school, and after school I'm mostly into programming although chemistry always amused me.

So, I didn't have a chance to fuck up anything that could actually hurt you - no acid, no hot anything, and so on. So, no mark of the chemist for me. Although I've got my share of burns and cuts in robotics.
Woah, woah, robotics... is that normal school or university? Because I'm going to take that as my uni study, but I've never heard they teach it in other schools too.
Different continent of course, but still.

OT: We had pussy chemistry. Only 0,1 mol acids if ever, I had to light the bunsen burner all the time because the two girls I worked with were apparently afraid of fire... it wasn't very interesting. And most of the time we were either copying from the blackboard or doing chemistry I can do at home with ease.
I don't know about other high schools in Toronto or Canada in general, but ours (and, based no hear-say evidence, at least a couple of others) had pretty strong tech program. I didn't take the grade 12 robotics course, but these courses started like in grade 10 (9 if you count introduction stuff) for us and while we didn't really do much in grade 10 aside from fairly simple wiring and pneumatics, culminating in having a robot battle as a final project, in grade 11 and 12 there's programming involved.

But, yeah, it was a normal public school. Nothing fancy.
 

Quaxar

New member
Sep 21, 2009
3,949
0
0
Billion Backs said:
Quaxar said:
Billion Backs said:
My meth lab once blew up! Haha, jokes aside, I haven't taken high level chemistry classes in school, and after school I'm mostly into programming although chemistry always amused me.

So, I didn't have a chance to fuck up anything that could actually hurt you - no acid, no hot anything, and so on. So, no mark of the chemist for me. Although I've got my share of burns and cuts in robotics.
Woah, woah, robotics... is that normal school or university? Because I'm going to take that as my uni study, but I've never heard they teach it in other schools too.
Different continent of course, but still.

OT: We had pussy chemistry. Only 0,1 mol acids if ever, I had to light the bunsen burner all the time because the two girls I worked with were apparently afraid of fire... it wasn't very interesting. And most of the time we were either copying from the blackboard or doing chemistry I can do at home with ease.
I don't know about other high schools in Toronto or Canada in general, but ours (and, based no hear-say evidence, at least a couple of others) had pretty strong tech program. I didn't take the grade 12 robotics course, but these courses started like in grade 10 (9 if you count introduction stuff) for us and while we didn't really do much in grade 10 aside from fairly simple wiring and pneumatics, culminating in having a robot battle as a final project, in grade 11 and 12 there's programming involved.

But, yeah, it was a normal public school. Nothing fancy.
Interesting, you seem to have a far superior educational system. Or maybe it's just envy that you have a public school that teaches robotics while I have to wait for uni to do it. Of course I can and do it privately a bit, but it's just not the same.
 

Jack_Uzi

New member
Mar 18, 2009
1,414
0
0
My parents bought me a amature home chemistry set. But all that whent into that test tubes, most of it wasn't coming from what was delivered with it. Sometimes my windows were wide open in the winter because of the smell and what not.
 

ThePinkAcidSmurf

New member
Mar 30, 2010
100
0
0
Pharmacy student here. No accidents but it's not rare that one or two people from that year manage to set part of themselves on fire during a semester.
 

Linakrbcs

New member
Jul 29, 2010
67
0
0
Well, there was the time I had a few pellets of sodium in my cupboard in the lab, I thought theyd already reacted with moisture from the air and turned into NaOH, so poured some water over it to dilute it and the n throw it away. Turns out most of the sodium hadn't reacted after all and caught fire. It looked pretty though.

Then were was all the usual stuff with peroxide and nictric acid spilled over hands and clothes, which always looked vaguely cool, although nothing beats the guy who managed to get boiling nictric acid on his face.

One of the less pleasant moments was a lung full of bromine, and the day we found out that somebody had put a cyanide solution (the clear, colourless variety!) into a Colabottle and left it in the corridor. And of course all the SO3 fumes....
 

RN7

New member
Oct 27, 2009
824
0
0
None, I maxed my science skill so things like this wouldn't happen. Didn't even need a cleverly-engraved bobblehead to do it either.
 

Queen Michael

has read 4,010 manga books
Jun 9, 2009
10,400
0
0
That thing with the acid and my friend's face. Definitely an accident. The cops believed me, so you should, too.
 

Sneaky llama

New member
May 28, 2010
136
0
0
I spilled fahaldamide or however you spell it all over my hands and ended up half paralyzing them. also in physics i made a powerpack explode as well as 5 bulbs (they shattered)