Dissolving Arrowheads with Hydrofluoric Acid

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Published 2022-11-01

All Comments (21)
  • I love arrowheads, especially obsidian ones...in 7th grade we went to a Native American historical preservation, there was an older man sitting at a table making an arrowhead out of obsidian with a couple pieces of leather and antler. Me and a bunch of kids started watching him, and they all eventually went to look at other things, but I stood there and watched him the entire time...I dont remember either of us saying a word to each other other than hello. He was finishing it as our field trip was ending, he glanced around, wrapped it in a piece of paper and handed it to me and just said 'shhh'. I gently stuffed it in my pocket and proceeded to hold the biggest secret of my life the entire bus ride back to school, the last hour of school, and the bus ride home before I could have a little freak out about him giving it to me. I pulled it out of my pocket, unwrapped it and marveled at it, it was huge, and sharp, and you could see right through it, totally blew my mind. That was nearly 30 years ago, I still have it, wrapped up safely in a box that I open occasionally when nostalgia gets the better of me. ...now if you'll excuse me, theres a box I need to look at...
  • @666kaamos666
    Every chemistry teacher in the history of mankind: "Always pour acid into water" Cody: "Don't tell me how to live my life"
  • @duncanfox7871
    Other comments talking about how dangerous 50% HF is. Me over here just glad he wore gloves when pouring it this time
  • @dwaynezilla
    Cody is exactly the kind of person I would expect to have a (maybe) 14-year-old bottle of HF just lying around like it's no big deal.
  • @rockbutcher
    We used to use HF to dissolve quartz that held lode gold nuggets to improve the specimens. Scary stuff even for a Geochemist. We didn't dilute ours though so it worked faster and we could direct it where we wanted rather than just dunking the whole chunk. In regard to your results, you need to remember that while Chert and Agate are primarily composed of quartz (a silicate mineral), Obsidian is simply rapidly cooled lava which contains many minerals other than silicates and those would resist the acid.
  • @Fabi33677
    they do something similar for fishing hooks. Sometimes you will find written on the packaging "chemically sharpened"
  • Hydrofluoric acid is high on my list of things that I don't want to play with.
  • @sean..L
    Dipping miscellaneous things into strong acid is a simple yet fascinating idea for experiments. So many possibilities!
  • Cody Don — this is some of the most absolutely TERRIFYING chemistry I’ve seen you do so far… This is Styropyro territory, but with Fluorine
  • Cody really likes playing with the most dangerous chemicals possible LOL
  • @chambon818
    A before and after weighing would have been interesting to see how much mass the acid removed.
  • @lxlotl
    I was just about to eat lunch, after being sat in front of an instrument at work for 6 hrs straight, looking for something to watch while I eat. Seeing a new Cody's Lab video made me feel a lot better 😊
  • As an archaeology student, this is both horrific and fascinating
  • @Grandwigg
    Loved this video. The sharpening was not what I expected. Very fascinating.
  • @aRandomFish1
    I really appreciate the uploads Cody! I don't care what you upload, it's always interesting and I'll always enjoy!
  • I have a feeling we are watching the training videos of a super villain. Step 1: extract all the precious metals Step 2: disolve the 'hero' in acid Step 3: escape to Mars and live peacefully
  • @newq
    The balls on this guy. Hydrofluoric acid scares my pants off! My chemistry lab TA in college would scold us if we even do much as wrote fluorine ions in our notes. She'd say "You should NEVER be making this ion!" and then told us some horror stories about HF. Then there's the geology grad students. I remember walking past the geology lab once and I saw a grad student in there nonchalantly eating her lunch on a table below a shelf with a bottle labeled "hydrofluoric acid, contact poison" and a skull and crossbones. Only geologists have the balls for such shenanigans. Hey... isn't Cody a geologist? See? I told you. They fear nothing!
  • I love seeing videos like this from you Cody. I can feel your genuine curiosity about this experiment and it feels like you did this work to figure something out for yourself as opposed to for your audience. If you ever find yourself thinking "im the only one that would ever watch this", when conceptualizing a video, please dont shelve it. Thats exactly ankles the kind of stuff we love from codyslab. Thank you for being you.
  • You and NileRed were the people who made me have interest in Chemistry in high school... Thanks for the videos...