I don't want to derail this thread any further. The full article about Marie-Paule Pileni is in this thread, we can continue there if you want: http://www.internationalskeptics.com/forums/showthread.php?t=141353
fe -nope
al- nope
o- nope
c- maybe its a diamond!!!!!!
si- ? duh
and who are apparently too chicken**** to use their real names.
Silicon rich means nothing. Iron rich means nothing. The word rich is stupid because it does not describe quantity nor does it allude to any other element in the composition. It's so ambiguous as to be meaningless, which is why you truthers love to jump all over it with silly iron-rich quotes when you could just as easily say oxygen rich and be more correct. See figs 25-27 in Harrit et al.got a question for ya. some people think that laclede is the primer paint that jones and crew tested. how do you think those silicon rich microspheres were formed when they did the dsc test? millette heated his to 400C and in the ash found kaolin plates. if one does think that jones' chips are laclede, how does the silicon from the kaolin form into silicon rich microspheres which appeared "transparent or translucent when viewed with white light" according to the bentham paper????
Dehydroxylation is a reaction of decomposition of
kaolinite crystals to a partially disordered structure.
Stop being so childish. It's pathetic and makes you look stupid.fe -nope
al- nope
o- nope
c- maybe its a diamond!!!!!!
si- ? duh
Again - silicon rich. It means nothing. So where is the analysis? Where are the figures for the composition of these translucent spheres? Oh that's right there isn't one.4. Observation of Iron-Rich Sphere Formation Upon
Ignition of Chips in a Differential Scanning Calorimeter
In the post-DSC residue, charred-porous material and
numerous microspheres and spheroids were observed. Many
of these were analyzed, and it was found that some were
iron-rich, which appear shiny and silvery in the optical microscope,
and some were silicon-rich, which appear transparent or translucent when viewed with white light; see photographs
taken using a Nikon microscope (Fig. 20).
... We also know calcium silicates were present in the Tnemec paint ...
Thanks to you, Ivan, for engaging Poseidon on the FTIR issue in my blog, and for being open and honest about the possible problems for our theory that he raises....
Poseidon pointed in Oystein's blog, that in epoxy resins cured with amines, no IR band of carbonyl groups (at ca 1670 to 1680 cm-1 should be present. ...
About the second question "(how did) Jim Millette identified epoxy in red chips?" I'd propose that his equipment has software that does the matching with database. If so, I propose that such software not only provides the best match, but also provides some numerical/statistical measure of how good the match is. If this is so, details and a bit of explanation would be great (such as: "software identified epoxy plus kaolin with 94% confidence, second best match is X+Ywith 37% confidence" or "correlation coefficient from method Z is 0.71, generally a value above 0.50 is considered probable, above 0.6 good, above 0.75 definitive").Still, I would have some questions to Jim Millette (if you read it, Chris):
- Is a formulation (especially curing agent) of epoxy coating in Appendix C known?
- In which way Jim Millette identified epoxy in red chips? Using just this comparison of FTIR spectra, or using some additional info from some FTIR database?
"... Iron rich means nothing. The word rich is stupid because it does not describe quantity nor does it allude to any other element in the composition. It's so ambiguous as to be meaningless, which is why you truthers love to jump all over it with silly iron-rich quotes when you could just as easily say oxygen rich and be more correct ..."
Yes. If you disagree, perhaps you could give us some quantitative idea of how precise that term is?So if I am to understand your reasoning correctly, the word rich fails because it is too imprecise?
Would be, yes, if anybody used the term. Does anybody? Where?And that with that reasoning, iron poor would be understood as meaningless, stupid, needing quantification, incomplete, and ambiguous beyond meaningless?
Care to explain what that meaning is?Iron-rich conveys significant meaning.
Can you point out which "high-purity iron microspheres" you are talking about? Can't find any in the Harrit-paper.The conditions necessary to form those high-purity iron microspheres,
No.requires temperatures high enough to melt iron.
Iron-rich conveys significant meaning.
The conditions necessary to form those high-purity iron microspheres...
Silicon rich means nothing. Iron rich means nothing. The word rich is stupid because it does not describe quantity nor does it allude to any other element in the composition. It's so ambiguous as to be meaningless, which is why you truthers love to jump all over it with silly iron-rich quotes when you could just as easily say oxygen rich and be more correct. See figs 25-27 in Harrit et al.
i dont know that. as you and i and everyone knows, the chips vary from chip to chip and from site to site on the chips.you and oystein can say whatever you want but the point is they jones chips reacted around 430C and procuced iron and silicon rich microspheres. has he ever done a dsc and came up with NO iron and silicon microspheres???? i cant answer that question. jones chips might contain a silicon matrix whereas millettes contain kaolin. some belive jones chips are laclede, then those silicon rich spheres must have come from kaolin.How do you know the silicon was from kaolin? We already know that the samples tested in the DSC where not characterised. Oystein showed this. There is no correlation between what was tested in the DSC and samples a)-d). We also know calcium silicates were present in the Tnemec paint.
A disordered structure is a glass.

yeah, did millette find any at 400C. i know jones went up to 700C.You also think that anything spherical must have been produced by a melting process. This is incorrect. In fact there are many papers that describe the manufacture of iron-oxide nano-sized round particles from non-spherical material way below the melting point of iron oxide for example.

sure..Millette did low temperature ashing with the express purpose of NOT destroying the hexagonal platelet particles. He didn't want to destroy them because he wanted to analyse their crystal structure in order to characterise them. A far more sensible method than DSC.
im confused? are you saying the chips contain feooh particles before reacting? oystein says they are hematite. fe2o3 not feooh? again note jones' email to greening above and see fig 21 in the bentam paper when you speak about the spheres contain large proportions of si/al/ca and sometimes ti/s/k.I have an idea with regard to the Harrit et al DSC curves and the formation of the spheres produced.
FeOOH undergoes calcination and subsequent mass loss upto 270°C due to removal of water which could explain the rise to around 270°C. The exothermic peak is likely to be burning of epoxy or other organic material. There's also an endotherm that starts at 520°C for two of the curves which is potentially a phase change. Phase changes will easily account for spheroidisation of particles below the melting point of the material. Annealing of FeOOH and the transformation to Fe2O3 is a mechanism that will produce spheres at temperatures observed in the DSC. If you couple that with the fact that these spherical particles contain large proportions of Si/Al/Ca and sometimes Ti/S/K along with their respective sizes then there is no way that anyone can say that to produce spheres you need temperatures of 1500°C plus.
You do not need to melt a sample to produce spheres.
If you look up powder metallurgy you can see that you can form nearly fully dense metals from powder without melting using a sintering process with temperatures well below the melting point of the material.
If the sample had experienced 1500°C then there wouldn't be any sample left. We can clearly see from the Harrit et al paper that large proportions of the red layer remain even after reaching 700°C. (but the gray layer doesn't) Not very efficient thermite if not all of it reacts at the claimed 430°C is it?
Stop being so childish. It's pathetic and makes you look stupid.
Again - silicon rich. It means nothing. So where is the analysis? Where are the figures for the composition of these translucent spheres? Oh that's right there isn't one.
So Africanus was correct and you were wrong - wrong as usual. Grow up.
So if I am to understand your reasoning correctly, the word rich fails because it is too imprecise?
And that with that reasoning, iron poor would be understood as meaningless, stupid, needing quantification, incomplete, and ambiguous beyond meaningless?
Iron-rich conveys significant meaning.
Source? Citation? And no don't bother with any truther crap I want a proper source that says only melting causes spherical particles to form preferably from a scientific paper.The conditions necessary to form those high-purity iron microspheres, requires temperatures high enough to melt iron.
MM
Which means what? 43% Silicon? 90% Bearing in mind how truthers wrongly refer to iron-rich spheres as I have proven using Harrit's own data (see above post) then claiming Silicon rich for another unknown particle with no data is silly.
what is the makeup of those chips.... predominately iron, carbon, aluminum, oxygen, and silicon. so what is the most likely candidtate for a translucent or transparent microsphere. you dont have to think too scientifically here. silicon rich does mean something. it means its silicon rich.
No he doesn't...your right, i would like to see a fig for the compostion of these spheres. jones thinks his chips contain a silicon matrix whereas millete's matrix is carbon and oxygen and is an epoxy resin. im not wrong, i just ruled out the obvious....
Page 15It is also shown that within the red layer there is an intimate mixing of the Fe-rich grains and Al/Si plate-like particles and that these particles
are embedded in a carbon-rich matrix.
Page 25.We make no attempt to specify the particular form of nano-thermite present
until more is learned about the red material and especially about the nature of the organic material it contains.
I'm not even going to bother with this nonsense. You are all over the place. Your contradicting yourself in the same post regarding Millette's ashing at 400°C. Write coherent sentences.iron rich means iron rich and it does mean someting. for example when jones spoke with greening concerning the iron microspheres:
"Dr. Farrer and Danny and I have looked at many of these post-DSC spheres, many do NOT contain Al. See for example Fig 21 in our paper....."
"Look again at the data (fig 21) -- there is no Al in evidence. Furthermore, the amounts of Si and Ca and especially S here is trivial. The melting points of iron and of iron oxide are both above 1200 C, yet the DSC reached only 700 C, insufficient to cause melting of iron or iron oxide."
i dont know that. as you and i and everyone knows, the chips vary from chip to chip and from site to site on the chips.you and oystein can say whatever you want but the point is they jones chips reacted around 430C and procuced iron and silicon rich microspheres. has he ever done a dsc and came up with NO iron and silicon microspheres???? i cant answer that question. jones chips might contain a silicon matrix whereas millettes contain kaolin. some belive jones chips are laclede, then those silicon rich spheres must have come from kaolin.
this sure looks like spheres and glass to me:
[qimg]http://www.internationalskeptics.com/forums/imagehosting/thum_285444fccc98889ee0.jpg[/qimg]
yeah, did millette find any at 400C. i know jones went up to 700C.
now do you think the kaolin plates that were around 40nm by 1 micron reacted to produce transparent and translucent microspheres that look to be around 10 microns? do the plates come together when they turn to metakaolin or would the plates independantly turn to metakaolin?
from the bentham paper: the line represents 50 microns. the microspheres in question are the ones at the bottom right.
[/url][qimg]http://www.internationalskeptics.com/forums/imagehosting/thum_285444fcccc08a5e9d.jpg[/qimg]
sure..
im confused? are you saying the chips contain feooh particles before reacting? oystein says they are hematite. fe2o3 not feooh? again note jones' email to greening above and see fig 21 in the bentam paper when you speak about the spheres contain large proportions of si/al/ca and sometimes ti/s/k.
the dsc is NOTHING like the sintering process.....
you know exactly what was tested with small variation from chip to chip and from location to location on those chips. your just saying that to get out from trying to explain how kaolin transformed into those silicon rich microspheres if you believe it is laclede primer.Which means what? 43% Silicon? 90% Bearing in mind how truthers wrongly refer to iron-rich spheres as I have proven using Harrit's own data (see above post) then claiming Silicon rich for another unknown particle with no data is silly.
Yes such a transparent particle is likely to contain silica but you've moved the goalposts because you know that Oystein has shown that no truther can show where that silicon comes from because no one including Farrer knew what material was tested in the DSC.
from the bentham paper:No he doesn't...
jones is silicon with carbon and millette's is epoxy.So yes Millette's findings correspond with the data in the Harrit et al paper and the authors of that paper state the material is organic.
that would be nice. what non sense are you referring too?Instead of posting nonsense here why don't you ask the paper's authors why they didn't characterize the organic material? Why don't they release the FTIR data which would characterize this material.