A questioner said:
Found in the 80-s inside of an old house. The house was at least 100 years old. Its owner was a rich trader. The stuff inside is liquid and doesn’t freeze in temperatures below Oc. What is it?
Some of the people opinions on it:
1. Possibly a fire grenade-type device filled with carbon tetrachloride?
2. I thought this was simply a common way to store any (dangerous?) chemical. The idea being that whatever you want to store is placed inside a test tube, and the top is then heated and twirled shut.
Edit: Ampoule is the word I’m looking for
3. Based on the color, I agree that tincture of iodine is a possibility, but so is bromine, or some sort of substance with a reddish contaminant in it. But I just
want to mention the ruler — this thing is 30 cm long?
Whatever this liquid is, there is a hell of a lot of it. It’s probably not bromine, but if it is, I think there’s enough there to kill everyone in the room if it breaks, and some of the other things it could be are worse. I suggest you don’t try any more experiments on it like freezing it. Ask a university chemistry department for help identifying it and possibly disposing of it.
4. It could be iodine as well, to be broken into a container to disinfect surgery tools
- Handle this with extreme care if this is carbon tetrachchloride. This stuff is VERY bad for you. It’s so bad that it is outright banned in any workplace by OSHA.
- So due the size its no drug. Maybe some kind of pesticide?
- Looks like the tubes in which liquid brome is stored. Keep in mind that brome reacts with air and could be dangerous if impacted.
- Found something like that in my Mom’s dresser once
- Separate from it’s contents, a sealed glass container is often called an “ampoule.”
- Pope blood
- Could it be possible to derive its content by analysing spectrulm lines?
- Crude oil?
- Does the glass itself contain any visible markings?
What do you think? Let us know in the comment!