Experimenting with Fire and Liquid Oxygen: My Fun Discovery

AI Thread Summary
The experiment involved using liquid nitrogen to condense atmospheric oxygen, resulting in small spurts of burning paper towel. The setup allowed for the creation of an oxygen-rich liquid, as oxygen condenses at a higher temperature than nitrogen. Despite challenges in maintaining the flame due to cold nitrogen vapors, the experiment was deemed enjoyable and successful. Suggestions were made for measuring the oxygen concentration, indicating that this process is simpler and more cost-effective than measuring nitrogen. The discussion concluded with ideas on how to collect and analyze the condensed oxygen.
flatmaster
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Earlier, I had posted that I thought that I had made liquid oxygen. People seemed skeptical that it would work, but I did an experiment to prove the concept.

On a ring stand, I had some burning paper towel. I put some liquid nitrogen in a pie tin and allowed atmosphere to condense on the outside. Allowing this cold liquid to fall on the burning paper produced small spurts of burning paper. It was a bit difficult to keep the cold nitrogen vapors from blowing out the fire, but if the pie tin was held high enough, this was not an issue.

I know this isn't any ground-breaking science, but it sure was fun! Should I write a paper?
 
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Hi flatmaster. What you saw was slightly concentrated oxygen. Oxygen condenses preferentially on the liquid nitrogen pan you had, producing an oxygen rich liquid because oxygen condenses at a slightly higher temperature.
 
That's what I figured. It seems quite amazing that the cold nitrogen that's in there doesn't blow out the flame when it expands. I suppose the next step is to collect some and measure the relative concentrations. How can I do that?
 
Measuring oxygen concentration is much easier & less expensive than measuring nitrogen. See what's available to measure O2 concentration. Perhaps you could collect the drops off the pan by sucking them into an evacuated container.
 
So I know that electrons are fundamental, there's no 'material' that makes them up, it's like talking about a colour itself rather than a car or a flower. Now protons and neutrons and quarks and whatever other stuff is there fundamentally, I want someone to kind of teach me these, I have a lot of questions that books might not give the answer in the way I understand. Thanks
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