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We're not even entirely sure hydrogen CAN become a solid...
And technically, Hydrogen isn't a metal. It is classified as being non-metallic. Alkaline Metals applies only to Lithium and below. This is why Hydrogen is classically seperated from the rest of the Periodic Table, because it doesn't really fit with anything else we know. Aka, it could be literally anything if/when it becomes a solid.
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But he that sows lies in the end shall not lack of a harvest, and soon he may rest from toil indeed while others reap and sow in his stead. -J.R.R. Tolkien, The Silmarillion |
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I'm guessing, OK? Even though I'm a chemist by training and profession, I'm no expert on metallic hydrogen.....
But if you had optics that could see inside a pressure cell strong enough to confine metallic hydrogen, it would look like mercury (if liquid) or silver (if solid.) A part of the reason that metals like those look, ... well, metallic...is that they consist of a bunch of ions sitting in a sea of swarming electrons, which (somehow....remember, chemist, not physicist) bounce photons off in a shiny, metallic sort of way. As for properties, likely very similar to molten sodium or lithium: good thermal and electrical conductor, maybe very "runny" if liquid. Really, really flammable near oxygen. My $0.02, anyway. |
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http://www-phys.llnl.gov/H_Div/GG/metalhydrofact.html
Apparently we HAVE succeeded in making solid hydrogen. Still hasn't been determined if its actually a metal or not. http://www.webelements.com/webelemen...ext/H/key.html Lists Hydrogen as being Non-Metallic.
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But he that sows lies in the end shall not lack of a harvest, and soon he may rest from toil indeed while others reap and sow in his stead. -J.R.R. Tolkien, The Silmarillion |
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Maybe those with bigger brains than mine can help out? ![]() |
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Yeah, I've definitely read that under *HUGE* pressures - we're talking the cores of Jupiter and Saturn here - Hydrogen starts acting like a metal. I'm not sure if it's been produced on Earth yet, or if its purely theoretical based on observations of the planets.
And if it is a metal, the safe money is on it being grey and shiny. :wink: |
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Solid hydrogen has been made in diamond anvil cells. To my knowledge, no one has made metallic hydrogen. I would agree with others that it should be metallic - good conductor of electricity and heat, etc.
This phase diagram is in temperature and density: http://militzer.gl.ciw.edu/diss/node5.html I also found this talk which has a fair amount of phase diagram info. The main subject of the talk was actually speculation on using metallic hydrogen as rocket fuel! http://www.spacetransportation.com/a...f/1b_silve.pdf I suspect that Jupiter and Saturn don't have anything like we would call a surface - i.e. a sharp transition from gas to liquid or solid. It may be a gradual densification. Not all phase diagrams have sharp boundaries. We are probably also not dealing with pure hydrogen in their atmospheres.
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At night the stars put on a show for free (Carole King) |
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Doesn't astrophysics consider everything past Helium to be a metal anyway? :wink:
You crazy, crazy astro-men! Anyway, serious time. You don't need a metallic material to get a shiny effect (there are some great semiconductor polymers that are shiny), so it might be possible to get the inverse- something metallic that doesn't look shiny. I think. I gassed myself with HCl fumes on Monday morning and I've been a bit off-kilter since.
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No kidding!!! What do you say at this point? |
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I might be wrong, but I can't think of a mechanism where something would be shiny and not be a metal, with one exception (that has nothing I think to do with Jupiter). A very finely divided metalic powder does not necessarily look metallic, it often looks black. I suspect this is because it can absorb the visible light (tiny bandgap), though I'm not competely sure why it doesn't look shiny, maybe something to do with the morphology of the surface. Sorry about the HCl.
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At night the stars put on a show for free (Carole King) |
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Hey, give us the tale of gore!
I burned myself on a ring stand monday. I figured the wing nut that was holding the thing in place wouldn't get hot, and I figured wrong. My thumb looks really cool now. ops:
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Anyone who believes in the warning of the bible (prophecies concerning the end time which is now) shall be benefited from my invention. Because they won't be stupid enough to pass this! -Alex Chiu |
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Neither love nor money makes the world go round. Unfortunately, we're down to about 17 ounces of the highly unstable stuff that does. |
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In my case I dumpted about 10ml of thionyl sulphate into the chlorinated wastes bottle instead of the thionyl sulphate bottle.
Cue hydrolysis and a load of HCl. Whoomp! I also recrystallised about a tenth of my product material on my hands today, through several small spillages. And there's a yellow stain on my finger that refuses to go away. C'est la vie! Thanks for the metallic shininess explaination there, Swift!
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No kidding!!! What do you say at this point? |
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My chemistry professor got his nickname (Kaboom) when his reference material was off by a factor of 10 on the solubility of azoic acid. He wound up with a 2mm layer of it on top of the solvent. He wasn't hurt since the glassware was pulverized (no large shards), but the explosion was heard throughout the 6 story building.
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Any day you wake up on "the right side of the dirt" is a good day. T. Anderson |
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Great googley moogley. Sounds like a lot of fun. It's a pity that safety rules are so strict these days, you've got to count on your fellow students to do silly things and cause calamity.
One of our Prof.s told us about an experiment that combined two great errors. The first was that someone poured an organic solvent (an ether, IIRC) into the sink, which because of the plumbing, went around the room filling all the sinks with vapour. Someone then dumped a bit of sodium down one of the sinks. Cue a fireball racing around the room. Shame it was before I was born, it would've been quite a spectacle.
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No kidding!!! What do you say at this point? |