Dave Rogers
Bandaged ice that stampedes inexpensively through
There's a general point about thermite reactions and EDAX chemical signatures that, it seems to me, hasn't actually been made in this or any other thread. Thermite depends entirely for its reaction on the oxidation state of the constituent metals, and EDAX traces give no information whatsoever about this. For example, a mixture of aluminium oxide and iron oxide will produce no oxidation reaction at all, and could only be distinguished from thermite by a larger ratio of oxygen to iron/aluminium peaks; this would of course be a perfectly safe and fairly commonplace set of ingredients in a paint formulation. Even more damningly for EDAX, a mixture of aluminium oxide and pure iron would be equivalent in composition to the end-point of a thermite reaction, and hence wouldn't function as thermite, yet EDAX wouldn't be able to distinguish between this and thermite at all. Therefore, claiming that a substance is thermite on the basis of EDAX traces is ignoring the most important property of thermite: that the iron is oxidised and the aluminium is not.
Paint, in general, contains inflammable substances unrelated to any thermite reaction. Claiming, as Steven Jones does, that a chip will ignite when heated and therefore contains thermite, is therefore no more than a wild guess. To determine whether the chips contain thermite, it would be necessary to perform some kind of calorimetry experiment, to see whether the heat of combustion is too high for paint and requires a thermite reaction. As a trained physicist, Steven Jones has no excuse for not knowing this, so I'm sure we can look forward to seeing his calorimetry results some time soon.
Dave
Paint, in general, contains inflammable substances unrelated to any thermite reaction. Claiming, as Steven Jones does, that a chip will ignite when heated and therefore contains thermite, is therefore no more than a wild guess. To determine whether the chips contain thermite, it would be necessary to perform some kind of calorimetry experiment, to see whether the heat of combustion is too high for paint and requires a thermite reaction. As a trained physicist, Steven Jones has no excuse for not knowing this, so I'm sure we can look forward to seeing his calorimetry results some time soon.
Dave