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Helium

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Helium
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Helium Atomic Weight 4.002602 Density 0.1785 g/l[note] Melting Point N/A[note] Boiling Point -268.93 °C Full technical data Ordinarily a colorless, inert gas, helium glows pale peach when an electric current runs through it. A glass blower bent a tube to the shape of the letters He and filled it with pure helium. I lit it with high voltage. Example
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Page 1: Helium

Helium

Atomic Weight

4.002602

Density 0.1785 g/l[note]Melting Point N/A[note]Boiling Point -268.93 °C

Full technical dataOrdinarily a colorless, inert gas, helium glows pale peach when an electric current runs through it. A glass blower bent a tube to the shape of the letters He and filled it with pure helium. I lit it with high voltage.

Example

Page 2: Helium

Classic helium balloons.

Three latex balloons inflated with helium.

Source: Walmart

Contributor: Theodore Gray

Acquired: 28 March, 2009

Text Updated: 29 March, 2009

Price: $1

Size: 8"

Purity: 95%

Balloon filling regulator.

This is a common type of regulator used to fill helium balloons from a high-pressure tank. The gauge reads the pressure of the tank itself (notice the scale goes up to 3000psi, a very high pressure). The regulator reduces the pressure to maybe about 50psi (this is not adjustable). To release helium you slip

Page 3: Helium

the balloon over the rubber nozzle and push it to one side or another. This type of regulator works only with latex balloons, not the metalized Mylar type. Those must be filled with a special ultra-low pressure regulator because they have no stretch: They go from being full to bursting over an extremely small range of gas volume, so they must be filled to a measured pressure, not to a certain volume.

Source: eBay seller npappas0013

Contributor: Theodore Gray

Acquired: 28 February, 2009

Text Updated: 1 March, 2009

Price: $20

Size: 6"

Purity: 0%

Model train car.

This is a fairly crude wooden model of what a helium transport train car looks like. Its main advantage over a real helium transport train car is that it fits in my studio.

Source: eBay seller tgalloway123

Contributor: Theodore Gray

Acquired: 7 July, 2006

Text Updated: 8 February, 2009

Price: $17

Size: 4"

Page 4: Helium

Purity: 0%

Museum-grade sample.

In early 2004 Max Whitby and I started selling individual element samples identical or similar to the samples we use in the museum displays we build. These are top-quality samples presented in attractive forms appropriate to the particular element. They are for sale from Max's website and also on eBay where you will find an ever-changing selection of samples (click the link to see the current listings).

This is a lovely hand-made discharge tube, powered by a small high-voltage transformer. The color is characteristic of the noble gas contained in the tube, and of course the shape spells the element's atomic symbol. In our large periodic table displays we use larger versions of these tubes: The ones photographed here are about 3" tall, but the other ones look basically identical, just bigger.

Source: Theodore Gray

Contributor: Theodore Gray

Acquired: 18 April, 2005

Text Updated: 11 August, 2007

Price: See Listing

Size: 4"

Purity: >99%

Sample Group: RGB Samples

Page 5: Helium

Sample from the Everest Set.

Up until the early 1990's a company in Russia sold a periodic table collection with element samples. At some point their American distributor sold off the remaining stock to a man who is now selling them on eBay. The samples (except gases) weigh about 0.25 grams each, and the whole set comes in a very nice

Source: Rob Accurso

Contributor: Rob Accurso

Acquired: 7 February, 2003

Text Updated: 20 November, 2008

Price: Donated

Size: 0.2"

Purity: >99%

Sample from the RGB Set.

Page 6: Helium

The Red Green and Blue Company in England sells a very nice element collection in several versions. Max Whitby, the director of the company, very kindly donated a complete set to the periodic table table.

The picture on the left was taken by me. Here is the company's version (there is some variation between sets, so the pictures sometimes show different variations of the samples):

Source: Max Whitby of RGB

Contributor: Max Whitby of RGB

Acquired: 25 January, 2003

Text Updated: 11 August, 2007

Price: Donated

Size: 0.2"

Mounted arc tube.

Page 7: Helium

In some ways, gases are a pain from a sample point of view. With the exception of chlorine and bromine they all look exactly the same: Like nothing at all. My beautiful set of noble gas flasks is beautiful because of the flasks, not what's in them, which is indistinguishable from plain air or vacuum. (So much so that I got them for a bargain price because the seller thought they were empty.)

But set up an electric current through almost any gas, and things are completely different. The current ionizes the gas, and when the electrons fall back into their orbits, they emit light of very specific frequencies. These spectral lines can easily be seen with even a very cheap pocket spectroscope, and they give the glowing tubes very unusual colors. So unusual in fact that they are basically impossible to photograph. The pictures here simply don't look at all like the real colors of these tubes, which cannot be represented by the limited red, green, and blue mixtures available in computer or printed photographs.

David Franco helped arrange these tubes, which were made by a guy who specializes in noble gas tubes and Geissler tubes (click the source link). I have tubes installed in each of the five stable noble gas spots in the table, hooked up underneath to a high voltage transformer. They are really quite beautiful. On my Noble Rack page I have all the pictures collected, along with pictures of arcs I made in my other collection of noble gas flasks.

Source: Special Effects Neon

Contributor: Theodore Gray

Acquired: 22 November, 2002

Price: $35

Size: 2.5"

Purity: >90%

Antique reagent flask.

Page 8: Helium

I got a set of five different noble gas flasks on eBay for $13.50, which seemed like a good deal even though the seller described them as "probably empty". I very much doubt, however, that they are empty: At the bottom where the flask meets the tube, there is a tiny inner breakaway seal that is completely intact on all five of them. There's no visible way for the gas to have escaped. I've learned that one normally uses a steel ball, held up with a magnet, to break the seal: When you've hooked up and flushed out all the connecting tubes, you pull away the magnet and the ball drops onto the seal, breaking it and releasing the gas.

After many unworkable suggestions for proving whether the gases were still in there, several people came up with the idea of using a high voltage transformer, such as one finds in those now inexpensive plasma ball novelty lights, to try to set up an arc inside the flask, and identify the gas from the color of the discharge. Whether this is possible is sensitive to the pressure of the gas, which is not known.

Fortunately, it worked beautifully on three out of the five, and proved beyond a reasonable doubt that those three at least contain the gas claimed. The others almost certainly failed because the type and pressure of gas in them does not support an arc, not because they are empty. In fact, if they were empty, I would have gotten an arc, because the arc works through up to about half an inch of ordinary air.

You can see pictures of all the arcs along with a picture of the display stand I built for them (between 10PM and midnight of the evening they arrived) a using some of the same Carlson Maple used for the noble gas tiles on the table.

By the way, isn't it a cute oxymoron: Reagent-grade non-reactive gas.

Source: eBay seller tictoxx

Contributor: Theodore Gray

Acquired: 28 August, 2002

Text Updated: 20 November, 2008

Price: $3

Size: 9"

Purity: 99.95%

Page 9: Helium

Disposable party balloon tank.

You can buy these lightweight tanks of helium at Walmart or any party supply store. They are thin-walled steel, not like the heavy gas cylinders used in welding, and only contain enough helium for about 30 balloons. On the plus side, they come with a supply of balloons and ribbon, so you're all set to entertain the kids with elements (at 75 cents a pop, so to speak).

Source: Walmart

Contributor: Theodore Gray

Acquired: 7 August, 2002

Price: $20

Size: 18"

Purity: >90%

Nelium-neon laser pointer.

Page 10: Helium

Sure, you've seen laser pointers before, what are they, maybe $3 at the corner gas station? But those are laser diode pointers, tiny solid state devices that run on a watch battery. This is something far more exotic, a relic of a time before the very existence of laser diodes. Gather 'round children and I will tell you a tale of those times.

Back in the Stone Age, I'm talking here about maybe 1990, lasers were big things made of glass tubes or ruby rods, fed by high voltage power supplies. There were definitively not things you held in your hand. Then one day I see this astounding device in a catalog for the bargain price of only about $300. Having no children or other responsibilities, it seemed like a reasonable thing to buy at the time, and I am now very glad that I did, because I cannot find any evidence of this product ever having existed, not even on eBay. But I have one, and it still works.

It is a hand-held helium neon gas discharge laser that runs on two 9V batteries, for about 15 minutes. What you're looking at is the laser tube in operation with the side cover taken off. Notice the bit of foam stuck between the battery and the circuit board with a round blue capacitor on it? I stuck that in there because otherwise the miniature high voltage power supply arcs over to the battery case.

You really need to watch the spin video of this sample (click the Spin link on the left) to see the tube from all directions: We shot the rotation with the device turned on, and when the laser beam points directly at the camera, it hits the CCD and creates a lovely diffraction pattern as it reflects back from the inside surfaces of the lens. (No, it didn't damage the CCD.)

One very interesting thing to note: The color of the glow you see inside the tube is different from the color of the light coming out of the laser end. The light coming out the end is the neon red emission line, while the color coming out the side of the tube is the helium lavender/pink glow. Think about it: This is a completely uniform, isotropic gas, yet it's glowing in two different colors depending on what direction you look at it from. How can this be? That is the magic of the laser: The cavity mirrors organize the light from the neon line and stimulate (the S in LASER) it to be emitted only in line with the beam. The helium emission occurs in all directions randomly.

I thought I had lost thing thin, and when it turned up in my office I was overjoyed, it is one of my favorite gadgets, quite a marvel of miniaturization even if it is a hundred times bigger and a hundred times more expensive than the current model.

Source: Theodore Gray

Contributor: Theodore Gray

Acquired: 28 February, 2009

Text Updated: 1 March, 2009

Price: $300

Size: 6"

Page 11: Helium

Composition: HeNe

Photo Card Deck of the Elements.

In late 2006 I published a photo periodic table and it's been selling well enough to encourage me to make new products. This one is a particularly neat one: A complete card deck of the elements with one big five-inch (12.7cm) square card for every element. If you like this site and all the pictures on it, you'll love this card deck. And of course if you're wondering what pays for all the pictures and the internet bandwidth to let you look at them, the answer is people buying my posters and cards decks. Hint hint.

Source: Theodore Gray

Contributor: Theodore Gray

Acquired: 19 November, 2008

Text Updated: 21 November, 2008

Price: $35

Size: 5"

Composition: HHeLiBeBCNOFNeNaMg AlSiPSClArKCaScTiVCrMn FeCoNiCuZnGaGeAsSeBrKr RbSrYZrNbMoTcRuRhPdAg CdInSnSbTeIXeCsBaLaCePr NdPmSmEuGdTbDyHoErTm YbLuHfTaWReOsIrPtAuHgTl PbBiPoAtRnFrRaAcThPaUNp PuAmCmBkCfEsFmMdNoLrRf DbSgBhHsMtDsRgUubUutUuq UupUuhUusUuo

Page 12: Helium

Little bottle. (External Sample)

This is the little bottle of helium (who are they kidding?) that gave me the idea for the above sample of the universe.

Location: The Boston Museum of Science

Photographed: 3 October, 2002

Size: 2"

Purity: 90%

The Universe. (External Sample)

The universe is only about 10% helium, but that's better than some of our other samples, and it's getting more pure with every passing billion years. As an external sample, this one is not physically located within the table, but rather in its complement. (This is the famous Hubble Deep Field image.)

Location: The Universe

Page 13: Helium

Photographed: 3 October, 2002

Size: 6000000000000000000000000000"

Purity: 10%


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