Ph0en1x
12th Jul 2016
26th Jul 2016
Dioxygen difluoride sounds harmless, right? Just 2 of what you breathe and 2 of what's in your toothpaste. But that's not the case. 'Foof' is the most powerful oxidizer known to man - it even causes ice to burst into flame.
chemistry
foof
science
fooferrific
dangerous
f2o2
billnye
oxidizer
fooftastic
Comments
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I looked up "foof" on the Wiki and I saw a picture that was nearly identical to this. Great job replicating it! +1
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just joking, its super unstable :(
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lol with this we can make bombs of ice and everything :D +1
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@Brickrail Sure, if you don't mind the rocket being in multiple places around the world at once!
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@KitchenParty are you asking me?
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but why?
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I read about foof in a "What If" :D And @Brickrail782, you couldn't, it's much much too unstable.
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Could it be used as oxidizer in rocket fuel?
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It melts at a really low temperature, but is described as a solid?
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Ah yes, "Satan's Kimchi." Now you just need its comrade in terrifying chemicals, chlorine trifluoride.