Note the time on bottom scale... |
We figure that the OQ was either a middle-schooler studying earth science or a college student on an athletic scholarship struggling through "Rocks for Jocks," probably someone studying for a test that included chemical weathering. Either way, Brauener's approach – designing an "experiment" – probably didn't provide the intended answer...
Shellie, in spite of her MEd, blew this one. Oh, she started off more or less OK with a correct-ish, though clumsy, introduction to silicates. We aren't really sure that this line,
"Silicon combines with other elements, such as calcium, iron, potassium and magnesium to form a wide range of silicate material..."
- Crush 10 grams of aspirin
- Dissolve the powdered aspirin in 500 ml of deionized water
- Add 1 tsp quartz sand
- Watch the sand dissolve [according to Brauener, it should happen overnight].
We have no earthly idea where Shellie came up with this doofus experimental design, but we can assure you that a teaspoon of quartz sand will not dissolve overnight in dilute salicylic acid (maybe in hydrofluoric acid...). The experiments that Brauener cites as references all dealt with micromoles of silicate minerals – minerals with metallic cations such as microcline and amphiboles – and the experimental design called for thousands of hours of observation. Shellie confused quartz with higher-temperature (and therefore less chemically stable) minerals, confused thousands of hours with "overnight," and made up the whole aspirin thing out of whole cloth. See now why Brauener is our Dumbass of the Day? |
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SI - CHEMISTRY
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