secret
19th Dec 2016
7th Mar 2020
Department of fictional materials (TPT Branch) specialises in reverse engineering, characterisation and stablisation of a variety of exotic materials for various applications and research. Materials from external sources will be acknowledged in comments.
Comments
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(out-universe reason) The pressure generated by the C-5 explosion is too high thus all FRZZ is either converted to snow or melted into FRZW
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Note that the substance in The Labs is called pseudo-Freonium, because (in-universe) unlike Freonium, it is not inert from other sources, though it destablises more readily in exposure to neutrons. In addition, cryogenic snow is being produced instead of FRZZ
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Freonium idea original source: JMBuilder https://powdertoy.co.uk/Discussions/Thread/View.html?Thread=17602
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NB: Native nebulium cannot be stored in the absence of stasis fields. Therefore we deactivate it in order to allow indefinite storage. When reactivated, the nebulium will explode almost like its native counterpart
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Update: Possible reason found: The BCLN of nebulium is not ordinary BCLN, but already broken BCLN. Since Broken BCLN will decrease its life over time, it will disappear naturally. Reverse engineering of nebulium is now in full swing. A separate report on this relatively unknown form of BCLN will be reported shortly.
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Nebulium: (id:2089872) has a curious property in its BCLN in that the BCLN wil be weigh down by other elements and then disappears. The underlying mechanism is still under active investigation
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Storage instruction of Tinateranol in the absence of stasis fields: Flash freeze a raw sample of Tinateranol to subzero temperature. Encase it inside a solid and ensure there are no gaps. Keep the temperature low to keep the pressure within safety levels. The substance can now be stored indefinitely.
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The Xeridide is reversed engineered based on the understanding of experiments in ID:2079185. One can tell it is not a direct copy from its different decoration and also a slightly more unstable graviton cluster formed compared to TheScienceKid's