biopharmacopeia
Well-Known Member
Is there any reason not to use high-purity copper in vaporizers? Does use of copper adversely affects the taste or odor of vaporized herbal material?
I am considering making for myself a desk-top, 120 volt (hot box-type) vaporizer using a high-end passive (no fan) computer CPU heat sink/cooler as my vaporizer heat exchanger (a ceramic heater pumping heat into this heat sink mounted in castable ceramic insulation). For some cheaper examples, see
http://www.dynatron-corp.com/products/cpucooler/cpucooler_model.asp?id=139 and http://www.dynatron-corp.com/products/cpucooler/cpucooler_model.asp?id=123. With their many heat exchanging fins (usually min. of about 50) attached to a solid copper base (to which the heating element is attached), these heat sinks/coolers should be very efficient for heating air. These products, particularly high-performance models, are by neccessity made of the highest purity (no or insignificant lead or any other metal), oxygen-free copper, since the presence of anything but copper (including use of alloys) detracts from copper?s very high heat conduction (much the same as impurities detract from its electrical conduction). Many people are familiar with use of such high-purity, oxygen-free copper in high-end stereo/video cables, speaker wire, etc.
So,
1) Is copper used in any marketed vaporizers?
2) Does anyone otherwise have any experience with copper in vaporizers (parts that get hot)?
3) Most important -- Will/does use of copper in a vaporizer heater affect the taste of inhaled vapors? Is use of copper detectable by users?
4) Does anyone have experience using a copper bowl for smoking herbal material? Is the taste affected?
5) Will copper oxidize/corrode at vaporizer heater temperatures, and does this affect the taste/odor of heated air?
I've done enough preliminary research (I used to work as a chemical/toxicology information specialist) to conclude that air inhaled after passing over high purity copper heated to 500-600?F (or hotter) is not a safety hazard. In fact, copper is used in expensive cookware, which gets way hotter than the 500-600?F that might be needed for a vaporizer heater. And copper is the main component of brass, which is widely used for pipes (smoking, not plumbing), with combustion heating the metal way hotter than needed in a vaporizer heater. Yes, copper fumes are toxic, but temp. over 1000?F or inhalation of powders are required.
Thank you.
I am considering making for myself a desk-top, 120 volt (hot box-type) vaporizer using a high-end passive (no fan) computer CPU heat sink/cooler as my vaporizer heat exchanger (a ceramic heater pumping heat into this heat sink mounted in castable ceramic insulation). For some cheaper examples, see
http://www.dynatron-corp.com/products/cpucooler/cpucooler_model.asp?id=139 and http://www.dynatron-corp.com/products/cpucooler/cpucooler_model.asp?id=123. With their many heat exchanging fins (usually min. of about 50) attached to a solid copper base (to which the heating element is attached), these heat sinks/coolers should be very efficient for heating air. These products, particularly high-performance models, are by neccessity made of the highest purity (no or insignificant lead or any other metal), oxygen-free copper, since the presence of anything but copper (including use of alloys) detracts from copper?s very high heat conduction (much the same as impurities detract from its electrical conduction). Many people are familiar with use of such high-purity, oxygen-free copper in high-end stereo/video cables, speaker wire, etc.
So,
1) Is copper used in any marketed vaporizers?
2) Does anyone otherwise have any experience with copper in vaporizers (parts that get hot)?
3) Most important -- Will/does use of copper in a vaporizer heater affect the taste of inhaled vapors? Is use of copper detectable by users?
4) Does anyone have experience using a copper bowl for smoking herbal material? Is the taste affected?
5) Will copper oxidize/corrode at vaporizer heater temperatures, and does this affect the taste/odor of heated air?
I've done enough preliminary research (I used to work as a chemical/toxicology information specialist) to conclude that air inhaled after passing over high purity copper heated to 500-600?F (or hotter) is not a safety hazard. In fact, copper is used in expensive cookware, which gets way hotter than the 500-600?F that might be needed for a vaporizer heater. And copper is the main component of brass, which is widely used for pipes (smoking, not plumbing), with combustion heating the metal way hotter than needed in a vaporizer heater. Yes, copper fumes are toxic, but temp. over 1000?F or inhalation of powders are required.
Thank you.