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Is there any chance of you settling down an working out what you are talking about?Have you forgotten that your original point was that dimethyl sulphate is carcinogenic?It is, but since there's none of it present, that doesn't matter.
It's true that sulphates in air promote aerosol formation- but there's no reason to leap from that to the idea that anyone is actually deliberately doing geoengineering with them on anything but an experimental scale.
And, for what it's worth, even the article you cite says that using high sulphur (cheap) fuel in jets would be the easy way to do it.Who would pay for energy needed to get powdered rock into the air when you can do the same thing- better- for free?
It's not a credible assertion- even if there's a paper about it- because the stuff would boil or burn off during the process of making ash.If you can find a full version of the paper I will have a look to see where the mistake is.Seriously- that ash is red hot when it's made and the sulphate esters boil a good couple of hundred degrees lower than that.How is it possible?
Lots of things were considered as chemical weapons- including nitric acid- which is naturally present in rain water.Nobody is saying that dimethyl sulphate is anything but a very nasty carcinogen.But since there's no credible source of it in fly-ash and even if there were it would be destroyed by water, there's no need to worry about it.
" Geoengineering is far beyond the experimental scale. It is considered a "clandestine" operation since its use has been officially prohibited by the UN biodiversity treaty, except by the U.S."Ah! that explains everything- it's a "secret"OKFirst question- how do you know about it if it's such a secret?It's obviously not your field of expertise so it can't be because you are some government scientist breaking the wall of silence.Secondly, why are they doing it at all?As you say, the international consensus is that it's a bad idea."Geoengineering is a profitable way to reuse coal fly ash."Who pays?As I have said, it would be much easier to just relax the requirements for flue gas stripping.
"Coal fly ash is a dried powder. The burning process of coal is different from the process of tropospheric injection which uses a nozzle to spray the aerosol as a vapor."Yes it's pretty dry.That's because any water that might have been there will have boiled off in the furnace.And yet you seem to say that dimethyl sulphate will magically avoid boiling off.How is that possible?
"The burning process of coal is different from the process of tropospheric injection which uses a nozzle to spray the aerosol as a vapor."Yes they are differentBurning coal actually happens.They make the ash into cement.There is no credible reason to believe that they spray it round.And you need to learn the difference between a vapour and an aerosol.
"The toxicity of dimethyl sulfate exposure require further research. "Why?Everyone knows that it's very toxic- and a known carcinogen."The presence of dimethyl sulfate in coal fly ash is a hard evidence that dms is a chemical agent in airborne particulate matter."Well, no.At best it's debatable evidence because they strip the ash out and don't send much of it into the air.Then there's the questionable presence of dimethyl sulphate in that ash,Then there's the fact that dimethyl sulphate has probably never been used in anger as a chemical weapon.
"There's no boiling which occurs with ultrasonic nozzles. "nobody said it did.Were you deliberately missing the point?
"Chemtrails actually happens whether you like it or not. The evidences are directly observable and verifiable through scientific literature."prove it
"DMS was first used by the Germans during WW1. "that's interesting; can you provide a reference?
Also, this may seem like a silly question, but do you understand that fire is hot?OK,let me know when you get lost.If you have something like water or dimethyl sulphate- which is rather volatile, and you put it in a fire- which is hot- the material boils away.In the case of dimethyl sulphate the vapour that forms is combustible.So the ash that is left behind does not contain dimethyl sulphateSo coal fly ash does not contain dimethyl sulphate.
Quote from: Bored chemist on 17/04/2016 21:43:19Also, this may seem like a silly question, but do you understand that fire is hot?OK,let me know when you get lost.If you have something like water or dimethyl sulphate- which is rather volatile, and you put it in a fire- which is hot- the material boils away.In the case of dimethyl sulphate the vapour that forms is combustible.So the ash that is left behind does not contain dimethyl sulphateSo coal fly ash does not contain dimethyl sulphate.This is a bogus analysis of how coal fly ash gets vaporised. Theres no heat or burning occuring with ultrasonication. It would be unsafe in my opinion to burn coal to obtain fly ash in flight. I believe the compound used for geoengineering is coal fly ash powder. The dimethyl sulfate is produced once the aerosol condense with water to form a gas. DMS is a by-product of coal fly ash reacting with water vapor.
Since water destroys DMS, it doesn't make it.
Dimethyl sulfate hydrolyzes slowly in cold water but rapidly in warm water and acidic solutions. The hydrolysis occurs stepwise, initially forming methyl sulfuric acid, then sulfuric acid and methanol.
Quote from: Bored chemist on 20/04/2016 20:25:25Since water destroys DMS, it doesn't make it.Not true. monomethyl sulfate (methyl sulfuric acid) is produced from the hydrolysis of DMS.QuoteDimethyl sulfate hydrolyzes slowly in cold water but rapidly in warm water and acidic solutions. The hydrolysis occurs stepwise, initially forming methyl sulfuric acid, then sulfuric acid and methanol.https://www.chemours.com/Dimethyl_Sulfate/en_US/tech_info/chem_properties.htmlI think you're acting plain silly in ignoring the fact that DMS is a sulfate aerosol precursor.
Why does geoengineering/chemtrails topics keeps getting moderated or blocked on this forum?
How do you expect them to burn a hydrocarbon like jet fuel without producing water vapour?This has been pointed out to you before.It's not that I don't understand stratospheric injection: the problem is that you have provided no evidence that it takes place on anything but a minuscule research scale.
Quote from: Bored chemist on 17/10/2016 14:25:45How do you expect them to burn a hydrocarbon like jet fuel without producing water vapour?This has been pointed out to you before.It's not that I don't understand stratospheric injection: the problem is that you have provided no evidence that it takes place on anything but a minuscule research scale.A persistent aerosol emitted from a nozzle has nothing to do with commercial jet engine combustion. So either the military use a nozzle to inject aerosols or the nanoparticles are mixed with the military jet fuel.