@joejacksonriley I have tested the material using a more traditional flame test method (putting powder on nichrome wire and directly into flame) and it is certainly barium. The results here are some kind of interaction with the alcohol and the alcohol itself burning being the main color of the flame you see. Also see my other replies below.
That is DEFINITELY barium. Its color is supposed to be the color on the right side of the flame at 0:32. A good thing to try would be put it in a solution, about .5-1M, and burn it into an open flame, using HCl to sterilize the thing youre using to get the solution into the fire
f you wait until ):48 and look on theright there is a color change that is the barium. It then becomes more visible after that, I have always described barium as a dirty yellow or yellow-green. The yellow-green matches the literature. Having said all of that what I see here on "film" doesn't look as colorful as what I'v seen live, so it might be a shortcoming of my camera.
There is no way that is barium.
joejacksonriley 10 months ago
@joejacksonriley I have tested the material using a more traditional flame test method (putting powder on nichrome wire and directly into flame) and it is certainly barium. The results here are some kind of interaction with the alcohol and the alcohol itself burning being the main color of the flame you see. Also see my other replies below.
mrericsully 10 months ago
Barium is actually pale yellowish green color, so it is completely possible for it to be more on the yellow-side than the green.
qrais 10 months ago
That is DEFINITELY barium. Its color is supposed to be the color on the right side of the flame at 0:32. A good thing to try would be put it in a solution, about .5-1M, and burn it into an open flame, using HCl to sterilize the thing youre using to get the solution into the fire
rpraza4 1 year ago
theres no way thats barium it most be polluted by natrium
zkvattram 2 years ago
It is not polluted by sodium (Na), but the alcohol here really masks the flame.
mrericsully 2 years ago
f you wait until ):48 and look on theright there is a color change that is the barium. It then becomes more visible after that, I have always described barium as a dirty yellow or yellow-green. The yellow-green matches the literature. Having said all of that what I see here on "film" doesn't look as colorful as what I'v seen live, so it might be a shortcoming of my camera.
mrericsully 2 years ago