Christopher7
Philosopher
- Joined
- Aug 18, 2006
- Messages
- 6,538
C7 said:There is no president or scientific data to support the claim that organic materials can mix with molten aluminum.
Silliness. These things are not the "furniture, carpets, partitions and computers" NIST was talking about.Liquid aluminium readily absorbs atmospheric gases especially hydrogen which can cause problems in casting.
Al4C3 forms during the Hall–Héroult process due to liquid aluminium reacting with graphite electrodes. Just the high temperature will be enough to melt plastics. Liquid Al would be reacting with the concrete and steel in the building too.
If you really want to prove that organic materials can't mix with liquid aluminium
Dude, It's not up to me or anyone else to prove they can't mix, It's up to NIST to prove they can.More silliness. Instruments don't make assumptions. An EDS spectrograph shows what the instrument detects.The Almond said:Fly ash is traditionally analyzed using X-ray Fluorescence (XRF). Most XRF instruments do not measure oxygen directly, but they make the simplyfing assumption that all inorganic compounds found in the samples are oxidized to their most common oxidation states. Thus, if iron is found, it is assumed to be stoichiometric Fe2O3.
A horse is not a cow and iron oxide is not iron - they are two different things.
Justin,
We both missed a source of aluminum. Escalator treads. I have already conceded the point but some people here are a bit slow on the uptake.
I'm responding to you because you are the only one who came up with reasonable possibilities.
ETA:
The RJ Lee Group report clearly says that iron was melted during the WTC event and lead was vaporized during the collapse. Denial by anonymous posters notwithstanding.
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