Sodium Burn Process
Disclaimer:The process described in this document is quite dangerous. Sodium is a highly
reactive metal which can spontaneously ignite in air or on contact with water. The Essene and other researchers
claim that radiation is produced during the burn process. Though some researchers have not detected radiation using
a geiger counter, there are some forms of radiation which are very dangerous but are not detectable by a geiger
counter.
Though protective clothing is not being worn by the folks in the pictures, it should always be
worn during every portion of this process.
From: Robert
Subject: Sodium/gold
Date: Sun, 28 Jun 1998 08:57:20 -0500
Dear Friends,
Thanks to help from Barry and D, I have been able to speak directly with the Essene and his daughter and clarify
many important points on the sodium/gold process. I have done several burns using this new information and have
greatly improved both the quality and quantity of precipitate obtained. I have summarized the equipment, materials,
and procedures required below.
1. Vessels: The Essene uses an 8 quart stainless steel stock pot (which can be
purchased from WalMart for about $16) to burn and afterwards boil the sodium/gold. He would like to use a titanium
pot, and contracted with someone to make him one, but they took his money and never delivered the pot. So he has
been using only stainless steel pots, with the top tightly clamped on with 12 small C clamps. After three burns the
pot is totally destroyed due to caustic corrosion. If you use stainless steel, you will get a lot of iron oxide and
iron hydroxide contamination in your results. Thus, you should allow the solid matter to settle out of the solution
overnight, and then pour off the clear liquid on top, before you do your precipitation. It if very difficult to
filter out all of the solid matter, especially at a high pH.
Personally, I have been using a titanium vessel that I had fabricated. There is very little contamination. If
you use stainless steel, you will obtain a dark brown or black liquid after boiling. If you use titanium, the
liquid will be cloudy purple.
2. Torch: The Essene does not use an induction furnace to perform the sodium/gold
work. He uses a homemade propane torch. It is made from a two inch dia. steel pipe, (12 inches long), in which he
has drilled two sets of 1/2 inch air holes circumferentially around the pipe, with each set spaced about 4 inches
apart. To one end of this pipe he has welded a steel plate, through which he inserts a 1/4 inch pipe, sticking
about 2 inches into the interior of the larger pipe. This is welded to the plate. To the interior portion of the
small pipe, he attaches a pipe cap, in which a 1/16th inch hole is drilled. This is the gas jet. The other end of
the 1/4 inch pipe is about 30 inches long, and is screwed into the propane line coming from a small barbecue type
propane tank. It thus serves as a torch handle. No regulator is used. The valve on the propane tank itself is used
to regulate the flame. You should obtain a powerful bushy 8 inch diameter flame from this torch. He then applies an
even heat to the bottom of the pot, with the sodium and gold placed inside, until the steel becomes dull red hot
(which is about 600 C). He does not monitor temperature except by the dull red color. He says the dull red color
should be obtained within one minute, or your flame is too weak. Hold the pot at this temperature (color) for 5 to
ten minutes or until you hear the material start to pop and burn within the vessel. If white smoke comes out, you
need to improve your clamping technique. If a little smoke comes out it is ok. Then remove the heat and allow to
cool.
I am continuing to use my own rosebud propane torch with oxygen accelerator. It is needed to heat up my titanium
vessel, which is made out of 3/16 inch thick material, and my vessel is small enough to be bathed completely in my
flame. I obtain the dull red color in about 30 seconds.
3. Proportions of Materials: The Essene usually does a large sized burn, using one
pound of sodium metal and one to six ounces of gold. That is why he uses a large pot. I usually do a much smaller
burn, consisting of a few grams of gold, and an ounce or two of sodium. The ratio should be around 1 part gold to
10 or 15 parts sodium to make sure that there is enough sodium to react with the gold. The sodium will first react
with everything else, including oxygen, iron, etc.; before the gold, so you need an excess of sodium. This explains
why my earlier burns produced so little yield.
4. Wetting Down: After the materials have cooled, when you open the pot or vessel,
you should see a thin white crust covering the sodium melt. That is sodium oxide or hydroxide. The Essene wets this
material down by setting the pot in his driveway (or on any noncombustible surface) and squirting it with water
ejected from a spray bottle (with a fine mist). When it starts to pop and burn, stop wetting, and allow the
reaction to slow down before continuing. If your vessel is too deep rather than wide, I have found that a pocket of
un-reacted sodium will usually form at the bottom, and towards the end of the wetting process, the water on top
will finally soak through and it will react with explosive force, blowing out everything in your vessel, in a
fireworks display of burning sodium. So be very careful! Wide vessels are much better for wetting down the
material. You want to have as much surface area for the sodium to melt and run horizontally as possible. Sometimes,
during this process you will get a runaway sodium burn, which will melt through the pot and empty all of the
contents onto the ground, so proceed slowly. I had one batch burn right through a thin walled titanium pot and
spill out. If you use stainless steel for the wetting process, the burning sodium will eat up the pot like a
cookie, and a lot of your un-reacted gold will be deposited as a plating on the steel, at which point it is
unrecoverable. I now pour out the contents of my small titanium vessel onto a titanium plate, which is placed
within a stainless pot. Most the reaction occurs on the piece of plate, rather than the stainless surface, and I
thus cut down the amount of crap that goes into the boiling.
5. Boiling the Liquid: After wetting the material thoroughly, and after all the
burning has stopped, add about a half gallon of distilled water to the residue and 4 to 8 ounces of sodium
hydroxide crystals. If you are doing a large burn, use one gallon of water and one cup of crystals. The Essene does
this in the same pot as he used for the burn, and the wetting. I have used either a stainless steel pot, or more
recently, a Scan Pan pot, which has a titanium-ceramic coating impregnated on an aluminum base. After two boilings,
however, the coating is beginning to bubble. So this may not hold up for long. But it really cuts down on the crap
in the solution. Boil the solution for one to two hours. I do a vigorous boil with a top placed on the pot. You
might add a little water after a while if it looks low.
6. Precipitation: After boiling, remove from heat, and add some more water to cut
the caustic nature of the solution, allow to cool, and then place in glass jars for storage overnight. This will
allow the solid matter to settle to the bottom. You can then remove the clear liquid the next day by pouring off,
or using an ear syringe. Pour the clear liquid into a quart jar, about 1/3 full, and fill up to 3/4 full using
distilled water. By diluting the solution in this manner, the ppt will be whiter. If you are getting a ppt that is
yellow or brown, it means that your solution is too strong, and needs to be diluted with more water before adding
the HCl. Bring the pH down to 8.5 using HCl while stirring and then allow to sit for a few minutes. You should
obtain a flocculent white ppt that will settle down to the bottom of the vessel is a big fluffy heap. This is
supposed to be the STUFF. I have only recently begun to obtain this stuff in quantity, and have not really
determined what it is yet. But the Essene and his daughter claim that they have given this away to cancer and aids
patients who have obtained complete cures using it.
To get to this point, I have probably used up and lost about 3 ounces of gold, spent hundreds of hours, and
wasted several thousand dollars on various vessels, and other equipment, so be careful. The white gold bug can be
expensive. :-)
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