Christian Little

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Posts Tagged ‘tutorials’

Wherefore Has Google.com Been Hiding This Cash Content Secret To You?

By Christian Little • May 24th, 2010 • Category: ARGH!

It is not often when a system comes out and proves so many people dead wrong. Alex Goad, Brian Johnson, and Jared Croslow have precisely launched their a lot anticipated Auto Content Cash scheme, …and this may be aside far, the near challenging product to bang the marketplace in a patch. The fact is, Google [...]



Common Chemicals In Chemistry

By Christian Little • Feb 8th, 2010 • Category: ARGH!

The science of chemistry, along with chemical engineering have given us many different products based on various chemicals that we use on a daily basis. Many of you are probably not aware that you use some pretty interesting compounds relatively often. Here we will mention two relatively common chemicals: hydrogen peroxide and acetone.
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Materials Science – Self Darkening Materials

By Christian Little • Feb 1st, 2010 • Category: ARGH!

Self darkening glass has been and still is one of the more interesting inventions that came from the domain of chemistry as a science, along with materials science. Although today there are also lenses made of plastic, here we will mention the early versions of lenses used in optics, that were bassed on glass as [...]



The chemistry of detergents

By Christian Little • Jan 19th, 2010 • Category: Uncategorized

General chemistry is a science that is deeply incorporated in our everyday lives, but most of the people probably aren’t even aware of it being so. After reading this article, you will think a bit more about this interesting science the next time you wash your hands, clean the barbecue after a party, or pour [...]



The chemical side of carbon

By Christian Little • Jan 19th, 2010 • Category: Uncategorized

There are many interesting groups of substances in the science of chemistry. The largest group of substances is based on a single element that we know as carbon. Since an entire branch of the science of chemistry, known as organic chemistry is based on this element, in this article we will mostly write about carbon [...]



The chemistry of hard and soft water

By Christian Little • Jan 19th, 2010 • Category: Uncategorized

Water is one of the most important substances known to the science of chemistry. It is a ubiquitous chemical substance that is composed of two atoms of hydrogen and one atom of oxygen, and is essential for all life forms that are known at the moment. Water covers more than 70% of the Earth’s surface, [...]



High explosive chemistry

By Christian Little • Jan 17th, 2010 • Category: Uncategorized

Chemistry as a science is a important part of many engineering branches. Pyrotechnics is one of these branches, and in this article, we will mention and describe some of the basic but interesting facts related to energetic materials. An explosive material is a material that is more or less chemically stable, and can, by initiation, [...]



Silver – the metal of mirrors

By Christian Little • Jan 17th, 2010 • Category: Uncategorized

Mirror is an object with at least one polished, and because of that, specularly reflective sufrace. Mirrors are usually manufactured by applying a reflective coating to a suitable substrate. The most common substrate that is used today is glass, because of its transparency, ease of fabrication and rigidity.
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Alkali metals and their reactivity

By Christian Little • Jan 15th, 2010 • Category: Uncategorized

Alkali metals are truly a very interesting group of elements, that all have relatively similar properties. The chemistry side of these compounds is very similar. Under standard conditions (under temperature of 0°C, and pressure of 100 kPa) they all come in the form of metals with a characteristic silvery-gray coloration and with a very high [...]



Natural versus artificial diamonds

By Christian Little • Jan 12th, 2010 • Category: Uncategorized

Diamonds can be made either in the nature or artificially in chemical laboratories. The natural “laboratory” in fact does not differ significantly from the one used by today’s “alchemists”. Nature and man are both using high temperatures and pressures that are equal to ones present at about 150 km below the Earth’s surface.
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