Difference between revisions of "User:SaccharineChampion/Chemistry Ν"

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Once the plan to make Chemicals their own page would be undertaken, this would be the new Chemistry page - work in progress, because I need to make the "Getting Your Toes Wet (With Acid!)" section and linking to Chemicals
{{delete|it has been moved into mainspace}}
 
Looking for the list of chemicals with their recipes and effects? It has been moved to [[Chemicals]].


This is where [[scientist]]s go to brew up chemicals. Gets set on fire <s>every other</s> twice a round.  
This is where [[scientist]]s go to brew up chemicals. Gets set on fire <s>every other</s> twice a round.  
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Here's a quick look at the devices scattered across the room.
Here's a quick look at the devices scattered across the room.


[[File:ChemDispenser.png]] '''Chem Dispenser''': Dispenses a whole slew of chemicals. Use a [[beaker]] (or any liquid-bearing container) on it to insert it, then use the machine to pick chemicals. You can choose to remove unwanted chemicals (isolate removes all chemicals BUT the selected one). When you're done, eject the beaker from the menu.
===Machines & Storage===


You can also make pre-set chemical groups through the Group button, so that the chem dispenser dispenses certain reagents automatically when you click one of the Group buttons. An example reagent group:
{| class="wikitable sortable"
water=1;chlorine=1;sodium=1
! Name
! class="unsortable" | Image
! class="unsortable" | Description


Notice: no spaces needed, no semi-colon at the end necessary. For fairly obvious reasons, you can't do things like sulfuric_acid=1; the chem dispenser simply doesn't dispense such reagents, just their ingredients. You must do hydrogen=1;oxygen=1;sulfur=1 instead.
|- id="Chem Dispenser"
! Chem Dispenser
| <center>[[File:ChemDispenser.png]]</center>
| Dispenses a whole slew of chemicals. Use a [[beaker]] (or similar liquid-bearing containers - however, you cannot insert some such as drinking glasses) on it to insert it, then use the machine to pick chemicals. You can choose to remove unwanted chemicals (isolate removes all chemicals BUT the selected one). When you're done, eject the beaker from the menu. Can be figured to automatically dispense certain chems using [[#Chem Dispenser Groups: A Chemist's Best Friend|chem groups/bookmarks]].


[[File:ReagentExtractor2.png]] '''Reagent Extractor''': Converts certain items (usually [[Foods and Drinks|food items]] or [[Guide to Botany#Available Crops|plants]] but not always) into chemical reagents that are stored into one of two internal tanks or an inserted container.
|- id="Reagent Extractor"
! Reagent Extractor
| <center>[[File:ReagentExtractor2.png]]</center>
| Converts certain items (usually [[Foods and Drinks|food items]] or [[Guide to Botany#Available Crops|plants]] but not always) into chemical reagents that are stored into one of two internal tanks or an inserted container.


[[File:ChemHeater.png]] '''Heating/Cooling Unit''': Used to chill or heat containers. Use the menu to set a target temperature (Tip: click the number itself to punch in a number instead of clicking + and - over and over again.), and press ''Activate'' to start the heating/cooling process.
|- id="Heating/Cooling Unit"
! Heating/Cooling Unit
| <center>[[File:ChemHeater.png]]</center>
| Used to chill or heat containers. Use the menu to set a target temperature (Tip: click the number itself to punch in a number instead of clicking + and - over and over again.), and press ''Activate'' to start the heating/cooling process.


[[File:CheMaster.png]] '''CheMaster 3000''': Used to turn chemicals into [[Pill|pills]], [[Medical Objects#Medical Patch|medical patches]], [[Medical Objects#Medicine Bottle|medicine bottles]], or [[Medical Objects#Ampoule|ampoules]], though it can also isolate or remove reagents from the inserted beaker. If you need more information, click the Analyze option next to the reagent name, and the CheMaster will briefly describe what it does or at least what it is (which may or may not be helpful). The Analyze option can also conduct blood tests if you lack other tools ([[Science Objects#Reagent Scanner|reagent scanner]], [[Medical Objects#Health Analyzer|upgraded health analyzer]]): draw blood and analyze it with the CheMaster in the pharmacy.
|- id="CheMaster 3000"
! ChemMaster 3000
| <center>[[File:CheMaster.png]]</center>
| Used to turn chemicals into [[Pill|pills]], [[Medical Objects#Medical Patch|medical patches]], [[Medical Objects#Medicine Bottle|medicine bottles]], or [[Medical Objects#Ampoule|ampoules]], though it can also isolate or remove reagents from the inserted beaker. If you need more information, click the Analyze option next to the reagent name, and the CheMaster will briefly describe what it does or at least what it is (which may or may not be helpful). The Analyze option can also conduct blood tests if you lack other tools ([[Science Objects#Reagent Scanner|reagent scanner]], [[Medical Objects#Health Analyzer|upgraded health analyzer]]): draw blood and analyze it with the CheMaster in the pharmacy.


When creating pills, patches, or ampoules, you'll be prompted to choose how many units are in each one (multiple pill/patch options only), as well as the label (which will show up as "<what you wrote> pill/patch" or "ampoule(<what you wrote>)"). Pill bottles and patch boxes work slightly differently from other containers. To get a pill or patch, click on the bottle resp. box with an empty hand while it is in your other hand. Pill bottles can be emptied by clicking the bottle with the hand holding it, dumping all pills on the floor. Patch boxes have to be opened before you can manipulate the contents.
When creating pills, patches, or ampoules, you'll be prompted to choose how many units are in each one (multiple pill/patch options only), as well as the label (which will show up as "<what you wrote> pill/patch" or "ampoule(<what you wrote>)"). Pill bottles and patch boxes work slightly differently from other containers. To get a pill or patch, click on the bottle resp. box with an empty hand while it is in your other hand. Pill bottles can be emptied by clicking the bottle with the hand holding it, dumping all pills on the floor. Patch boxes have to be opened before you can manipulate the contents.


[[Image:ChemiCompilerStationary.png]] '''ChemiCompiler''': See the section below.  
|- id="ChemiCompiler"
! ChemiCompiler
| <center>[[Image:ChemiCompilerStationary.png]]</center>
| A complicated chemistry device, which uses a programming language derived from [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brainfuck Brainfuck]. It features 5 registers, 1024 bytes of RAM and 10 reagent reservoirs - to add beakers, click on the ''r[number]'' slots. The machine generates a pill or vial if they are targeted and can send reagents out an ejection port. For instructions on how to use it, see the [[ChemiCompiler|dedicated ChemiCompiler guide]].


[[Image:LabCounter.png]] '''Lab Counter''': Can hold tons and tons and ''tons'' of beakers, bottles, pills, syringes, tools, and such in its table drawer. Click-drag its sprite onto yours to access it.
|- id="Lab Counter"
! Lab Counter
| <center>[[Image:LabCounter.png]]</center>
| Can hold tons and tons and ''tons'' of beakers, bottles, pills, syringes, tools, and such in its table drawer. Click-drag its sprite onto yours to access it.


[[Image:LargeBeaker.png]] [[Image:Beaker.png]] '''Beakers''': Holds chemicals. Standard ones hold 50 units, large ones 100. Click on another beaker or similar while the beaker is in your hand to transfer up to 10 units of chems into it. Click-drag its sprite into another beaker or similar (neither have to be in your hand) to transfer as many reagents as possible into the receiving beaker.
|- id="Glass Recycler"
! Glass Recycler
| <center>[[Image:KitchenwareRecyclerNew.png]]</center>
| Put glass shards and glassware into it to make other, bigger types of glassware. Most useful for creating large beakers.


*'''Note:''' Generally, the exact contents of beakers and other reagent containers can't be examined directly. A pair of [[Science Objects#Spectroscopic Scanner Goggles|spectroscopic goggles]] or a [[reagent scanner]] (PDA or separate) are recommended.
|- id="ValuChimp"
! ValuChimp
| <center>[[File:MonkeyVendingMachine.png]]</center>
| Dispenses [[monkey]]s, a valuable commodity for the modern scientist.
|}


[[Image:KitchenwareRecyclerNew.png]] '''Glass Recycler''': Put glass shards and glassware into it to make other, bigger types of glassware. Most useful for creating large beakers.
===Tools & Equipment===


[[File:MonkeyVendingMachine.png]] '''ValuChimp''': Dispenses [[monkey]]s, a valuable commodity for the modern scientist.
{| class="wikitable sortable"
! Name
! class="unsortable" | Image
! class="unsortable" | Description


===ChemiCompiler===
|- id="Beaker"
{{main|ChemiCompiler}}
! Beaker
| <center>[[Image:LargeBeaker.png]] [[Image:Beaker.png]]</center>
| Holds chemicals. Standard ones hold 50 units, large ones 100 units. You can make more at a [[#Glass Recycler|glass recycler]] and find them in beaker boxes; you can order more beaker boxes from Cargo through both [[Quartermaster#Chemistry Resupply Crate|general Chemistry Resupply Crates]] and [[Quartermaster#Chemistry Precursors Resupply Crate|precursor Chemistry Resupply Crates]]. Has quite a few interactions:
*Click on another beaker or similar while the beaker is in your hand to transfer up to 10 units of chems into it.
*Click-drag its sprite into another beaker or similar (neither have to be in your hand) to transfer as many reagents as possible into the receiving beaker.
*Click on a person or mob with the beaker in your active hand to pour its contents onto them, applying the chems' TOUCH effects.
*Click on a floor tile with the beaker in your active hand to pour it onto the floor. This'll apply any special on_turf effects, e.g. [[Chemistry#Carbon Tetrachloride|CCl4]] puts out any fires on the tile, [[Chemistry#Cheese|cheese]] can make a wedge of cheese if there's enough, [[Chemistry#Oil|oil]] makes an oil spill. If you pour enough chems, it'll create a fluid puddle.
*Click on the beaker while it's in your hand to loosen or tighten your grip on it. If you have it on loose grip, you'll pour all the chems inside on the mob/tile; if you have it in a tight grip, you'll only pour 10 units from it.
*If you your beaker is empty, clicking on a fluid puddle transfers some of the reagents into it. If it's filled, does the reverse: pours the reagents into the puddle. 
*Click on a mess decal, such as blood stain, fungus growth, or oil stain, to collect its associated reagents. You can generally only do this once per pile.
'''Note:''' Generally, the exact contents of beakers and other reagent containers can't be examined directly. A pair of [[#Spectroscopic Scanner Goggles|spectroscopic goggles]] or a [[#Reagent Scanner|reagent scanner]] (PDA or separate) are recommended.


A complicated chemistry device, which uses a programming language derived from [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brainfuck Brainfuck]. It features 5 registers, 1024 bytes of RAM and 10 reagent reservoirs - to add beakers, click on the ''r[number]'' slots. It also has a pill generator, a vial generator and an ejection port.
|- id="Reagent Scanner"
! Reagent Scanner
| <center>[[Image:ReagentScanner.png]] [[Image:ScientistsPDA.png]]</center>
| Assesses chemical composition of many things. Click on a person, container, fluid puddle or other object with this, and it'll list the chemicals inside it. Only the hand-held version has a memory function (click on it or examine to see the results of the previous scan), but it is otherwise identical to the PDA program.


Registers:
|- id="Spectroscopic Scanner Goggles"
! Spectroscopic Scanner Goggles
| <center>[[Image:SpectroscopicScannerGoggles.png]]</center>
| Assesses chemical composition of containers. Examine a beaker or other reagent container with these on to assess the exact composition and quantity of chemicals inside. Without these, you'll only see a rough estimate and description. These goggles are also available from the [[Quartermaster#Chemistry Resupply Crate|cargo bay]].


* ptr = data pointer (16-bit) (Data is 0-indexed.)
|- id="Syringe"
* iptr = instruction pointer (16-bit) (1-indexed.)
! Syringe
* sx = source register (8-bit) (Valid sources are 1-10 for the 1 through 10 reagent reservoirs.)
| <center>[[File:Syringe2.png]]</center>
* tx = target register (16-bit) (Valid targets are reservoirs as above, or 11 for pill generator, 12 for vial generator, or 13 for ejection port.)
| Transfers chemicals. Click on the syringe while it's in your hand to set to ''inject'' or ''draw'', and click on someone/something to transfer 5 units of chemicals at a time. Drawing from a person will take a blood sample. Neither are instant, unless the recipient is yourself. Total capacity is 15 units.  
* ax = amount register (16-bit)


Commands:
|- id="Dropper"
! Dropper
| <center>[[File:DropperNew.png]]</center>
| Transfers chemicals. Click on a beaker or other container to load it with reagents, click on another container to squeeze the reagents in. You can also drop it on a person to drip reagents onto them. Holds up to 5 units, and drops all of it at once onto its target. Dropping takes about half as much time as injecting with a syringe.


* > = ++ptr
|- id="Mechanical Dropper"
* < = --ptr
! Mechanical Dropper
* + = ++*ptr
| <center>[[Image:MechanicalDropper.png]]</center>
* - = --*ptr
| More precise [[#Dropper|dropper]]. Allows you to transfer reagents (up to 10 units) in increments of 0.1 units. Click on it in-hand to adjust how much is transferred and whether the dropper is in ''dropping'' or ''drawing'' mode. Otherwise used just like the [[#Dropper|dropper]].
* [ = while (*ptr) {
|}
* ] = }
* { = mov sx *ptr
* } = mov *ptr sx
* ( = mov tx *ptr
* ) = mov *ptr tx
* ^ = mov ax *ptr
* ' = mov *ptr ax
* $ = Heat or cool reagent in sx to ((273 - tx) + ax) Kelvin.
* @ = Transfer ax units of reagent from reservoir sx to resevoir tx.
* ~ = "Compile" the code, so it cannot be retrieved again via the load button.
 
Both the heating and transferring steps are delayed. Heating takes as long as the chemistry lab heater would take. Transferring reagents takes 1/4 * amount seconds. The machine generates a pill or vial if they are targeted, or sends reagents out the ejection port.
 
'''Note:''' The [[Syndicate Items#ChemiCompiler|portable version]] of the ChemiCompiler only has 6 reagent reservoirs.


==Ok so how do I make napalm?==
==Ok so how do I make napalm?==
Line 143: Line 179:
===Discount Dan's Quik-Tips for Getting Acquainted with Chemistry===
===Discount Dan's Quik-Tips for Getting Acquainted with Chemistry===


So, turns out [[Chemistry#Napalm Goo|making napalm]] isn't terribly complex at all. But there's more to chemistry than just making napalm--so much more! It's almost overwhelming. Where does an aspiring chemist start?
So, turns out [[Chemicals#Napalm Goo|making napalm]] isn't terribly complex at all. But there's more to chemistry than just making napalm--so much more! It's almost overwhelming. Where does an aspiring chemist start?


* '''Begin with the basics.''' Start with the stuff in [[Chemistry#Basic compounds|basic compounds table]]. Know each one by heart, for they are at the heart of many recipes. Luckily, there aren't many to learn.  
* '''Begin with the basics.''' Start with the stuff in [[Chemicals#Basic compounds|basic compounds table]]. Know each one by heart, for they are at the heart of many recipes. Luckily, there aren't many to learn.  
* '''Don't start with deadly recipes.''' One of the primary benefits of learning the recipes for healing chemicals first is that when you DO start to learn harmful recipes, you'll be able to heal yourself when you fuck up.
* '''Don't start with deadly recipes.''' One of the primary benefits of learning the recipes for healing chemicals first is that when you DO start to learn harmful recipes, you'll be able to heal yourself when you fuck up.
* '''Don't over-think the recipes.'''  
* '''Don't over-think the recipes.'''  
**The recipes for chems from real-life generally follow a comfortably simplified version of the actual process; for example, [[#Methamphetamine|methamphetamine]] is based on the [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_and_culture_of_substituted_amphetamines#Illegal_synthesis Nagai route], while [[#Sulfuric Acid|sulfuric acid]] is just the elements that make up the molecule.  
**The recipes for chems from real-life generally follow a comfortably simplified version of the actual process; for example, [[Chemicals#Methamphetamine|methamphetamine]] is based on the [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_and_culture_of_substituted_amphetamines#Illegal_synthesis Nagai route], while [[Chemicals#Sulfuric Acid|sulfuric acid]] is just the elements that make up the molecule.  
**The ones for entirely fictional chems tend be somewhat arbitrary, but for some, there's some simple logic linking them, e.g. [[#Glitter|glitter]] needs shiny stuff and a paper base for it, while [[#Flaptonium|flaptonium]] involves bird-related things. Even some of said arbitrary ones often use plasma for that "magical sci-fi chemical that can do anything".
**The ones for entirely fictional chems tend be somewhat arbitrary, but for some, there's some simple logic linking them, e.g. [[Chemicals#Glitter|glitter]] needs shiny stuff and a paper base for it, while [[Chemicals#Flaptonium|flaptonium]] involves bird-related things. Even some of said arbitrary ones often use plasma for that "magical sci-fi chemical that can do anything".
**This holds particularly true for the [[#SECRET CHEMS|secret chems]]:  
**This holds particularly true for the [[Chemicals#SECRET CHEMS|secret chems]]:  
***For ones that are based on real life, such as [[#Nitroglycerin Hint|nitroglycerin]], study the general process and try to replicate it in SS13 with "equivalents"; for most, you usually don't have to go further than a Wikipedia page.  
***For ones that are based on real life, such as [[Chemicals#Nitroglycerin Hint|nitroglycerin]], study the general process and try to replicate it in SS13 with "equivalents"; for most, you usually don't have to go further than a Wikipedia page.  
***For fictional chems, such as [[#Mutini Hint|mutini]], think about which chems can best replicate their effects. Some, like [[#Crabby Party Secret Formula Hint|Crabby Party Secret Formula]], are just jokes, where the hint is the punchline linking the ingredients together.   
***For fictional chems, such as [[Chemicals#Mutini Hint|mutini]], think about which chems can best replicate their effects. Some, like [[Chemicals#Crabby Party Secret Formula Hint|Crabby Party Secret Formula]], are just jokes, where the hint is the punchline linking the ingredients together.   
***If you get stuck, don't be afraid to ask for hints. In fact, there's even a [[Spacebux#Purchasable Items|Spacebux item]] called a "Chem Hint Scroll" that provides a clue for a random ingredient for a random chem.
***If you get stuck, don't be afraid to ask for hints. In fact, there's even a [[Spacebux#Purchasable Items|Spacebux item]] called a "Chem Hint Scroll" that provides a clue for a random ingredient for a random chem.
* '''Look beyond the chem dispenser!'''  
* '''Look beyond the chem dispenser!'''  
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|- id="Sulfuric Acid"
|- id="Sulfuric Acid"
! [[Chemicals#Sulfuric_Acid|Sulfuric Acid]]
! [[Chemicals#Sulfuric_Acid|Sulfuric Acid]]
| Sulfur (1) + Hydrogen (1) + Oxygen (1) => Sulfuric Acid (2)
| (1) Sulfur + (1) Hydrogen + (1) Oxygen -> (2) Sulfuric Acid
| Deals decent damage scaling with quantity. Sometimes melts items. Used in some other chems' recipes!
| Deals decent damage scaling with quantity. Sometimes melts items. Used in some other chems' recipes!


|- id="Fluorosulfuric Acid"
|- id="Fluorosulfuric Acid"
! [[Chemicals#Fluorosulfuric_Acid|Fluorosulfuric Acid]]
! [[Chemicals#Fluorosulfuric_Acid|Fluorosulfuric Acid]]
| [[Chemicals#Sulfuric_Acid|Sulfuric Acid]] (1) + Fluorine (1) + Hydrogen (1) + Potassium (1) @ 374 K => Fluorosulfuric Acid (3)
| (1) [[Chemicals#Sulfuric_Acid|Sulfuric Acid]] + (1) Fluorine + (1) Hydrogen + (1) Potassium @ 374 K -> (3) Fluorosulfuric Acid
| Deals even more damage, again scaling with quantity. Always melts items upon application, and melts headgear if 9 or more units are splashed on a person.
| Deals even more damage, again scaling with quantity. Always melts items upon application, and melts headgear if 9 or more units are splashed on a person.
|}
|}
Line 197: Line 233:
|- id="Styptic Powder"
|- id="Styptic Powder"
! [[Chemicals#Styptic_Powder|Styptic Powder]]
! [[Chemicals#Styptic_Powder|Styptic Powder]]
| Aluminium (1) + Oxygen (1) + Hydrogen (1) + [[Chemicals#Sulfuric_Acid|Sulfuric Acid]] (1) => Styptic Powder (4)
| (1) Aluminium + (1) Oxygen + (1) Hydrogen + (1) [[Chemicals#Sulfuric_Acid|Sulfuric Acid]] -> (4) Styptic Powder
| Slows down bleeding and heals {{BRUTE}} damage. Only apply topically, such as with patches - ingestion in pill or drink form poisons the patient!
| Slows down bleeding and heals {{BRUTE}} damage. Only apply topically, such as with patches - ingestion in pill or drink form poisons the patient!


|- id="Silver Sulfadiazine"
|- id="Silver Sulfadiazine"
! [[Chemicals#Silver_Sulfadiazine|Silver Sulfadiazine]]
! [[Chemicals#Silver_Sulfadiazine|Silver Sulfadiazine]]
| [[Chemicals#Ammonia|Ammonia]] (1) + Silver (1) + Sulfur (1) + Oxygen (1) + Chlorine (1) => Silver Sulfadiazine (5)
| (1) [[Chemicals#Ammonia|Ammonia]] + (1) Silver + (1) Sulfur + (1) Oxygen + (1) Chlorine -> (5) Silver Sulfadiazine
| Heals {{BURN}} damage. Just like styptic powder, apply it topically or it will poison whoever ingests it!
| Heals {{BURN}} damage. Just like styptic powder, apply it topically or it will poison whoever ingests it!
|}
|}
Line 215: Line 251:
|- id="Ammonia"
|- id="Ammonia"
! [[Chemicals#Ammonia|Ammonia]]
! [[Chemicals#Ammonia|Ammonia]]
| Hydrogen (3) + Nitrogen (1) => Ammonia (3)
| (3) Hydrogen + (1) Nitrogen -> (3) Ammonia
| Doesn't actually do much on its own besides help the [[Botanist|Botanists']] plants - it does get used in a lot of recipes, though!
| Doesn't actually do much on its own besides help the [[Botanist|Botanists']] plants - it does get used in a lot of recipes, though!
|}
|}
Line 223: Line 259:
Those two chemicals alone can make medbay pretty happy when supplies run low. They can also be used by yourself if you don't trust doctors to patch you up, such as when you're an [[Antagonist|antagonist]] on the run from the law, or in the middle of a busy fight such as with [[Nuclear Operative]]s.
Those two chemicals alone can make medbay pretty happy when supplies run low. They can also be used by yourself if you don't trust doctors to patch you up, such as when you're an [[Antagonist|antagonist]] on the run from the law, or in the middle of a busy fight such as with [[Nuclear Operative]]s.


There are a couple of medical chems that medbay doesn't even start with, so making them will make the doctors there extra happy. See the following.
There are a couple of medical chems that medbay either doesn't start with or has a very low starting supply of, so making them will make the doctors there extra happy. See the following.


{| class="wikitable sortable"
{| class="wikitable sortable"
Line 232: Line 268:
|- id="Synthflesh"
|- id="Synthflesh"
! [[Chemicals#Synthflesh|Synthflesh]]
! [[Chemicals#Synthflesh|Synthflesh]]
|  
| (1) [[Chemicals#Blood|Blood]] + (1) Carbon + (1) [[Chemicals#Styptic_Powder|Styptic Powder]] -> (3) Synthflesh
|  
| Heals both {{BRUTE}} and {{BURN}} on application - even better than styptic powder and silver sulfadiazine individually do!


|- id="Perfluorodecalin"
|- id="Perfluorodecalin"
! [[Chemicals#Perfluorodecalin|Perfluorodecalin]]
! [[Chemicals#Perfluorodecalin|Perfluorodecalin]]
|  
| (1) Hydrogen + (1) Fluorine + (1) [[Chemicals#Oil|Oil]] @ 374 K -> (2) Perfluorodecalin
|  
| Heals {{OXY}} by a LOT and both raises and caps the breathloss amount - meaning you will only be able to talk in whispers while it's in you.


|- id="Cryoxadone"
|- id="Cryoxadone"
! [[Chemicals#Cryoxadone|Cryoxadone]]
! [[Chemicals#Cryoxadone|Cryoxadone]]
|  
| (1) [[Chemicals#Cryostylane|Cryostylane]] + (1) Plasma + (1) [[Chemicals#Acetone|Acetone]] + (1) [[Chemicals#Unstable Mutagen|Unstable Mutagen]] -> (3) Cryoxadone
|  
| Does a bit of everything, as long as your body temperature is below 260K; heals {{BRUTE}}, {{BURN}}, {{TOX}}, and {{OXY}} by significant amounts.
|}
 
Synthflesh is pretty simple, though you can't get blood out of any sort of dispenser - instead, you'll want to use a syringe on yourself or a monkey to extract blood, then deposit it into the beaker with the other ingredients. Another popular option is to ask medbay for a spare bloodbag and a scalpel - if you use the scalpel on the bloodbag, you can pour its blood directly into a beaker!
 
Perfluorodecalin and Cryoxadone require a few other yet-unexplained chemicals, laid out below.
 
{| class="wikitable sortable"
! Chemical Name
! class="unsortable" | Recipe
! class="unsortable" | Effects
 
|- id="Oil"
! [[Chemicals#Oil|Oil]]
| (1) Carbon + (1) Hydrogen + (1) [[Chemicals#Welding_Fuel|Welding Fuel]] -> (3) Oil
| A bit of a jack of all trades - if heated up enough it makes a fireball which both burns and produces [[Chemicals#Ash|ash]], if applied to a floor it makes it slippery, if splashed on a borg it speeds it up, and it gets used in a lot of recipes! Wow!
 
|- id="Cryostylane"
! [[Chemicals#Cryostylane|Cryostylane]]
| (1) Water + (1) Plasma + (1) Nitrogen -> (3) Cryostylane
| When ingested or splashed on someone, it freezes them in an ice cube. It can also be used on floors to make them slippery, and if you add some oxygen to a beaker with cryostylane, both will be gradually consumed to cool down the beaker's contents.
 
|- id="Acetone"
! [[Chemicals#Acetone|Acetone]]
| (1) [[Chemicals#Oil|Oil]] + (1) [[Chemicals#Welding_Fuel|Welding Fuel]] + (1) Oxygen -> (3) Acetone
| Fairly poisonous when ingested, and is used in several other recipes.
 
|- id="Unstable Mutagen"
! [[Chemicals#Unstable Mutagen|Unstable Mutagen]]
| (1) Radium + (1) Plasma + (1) Chlorine -> (3) Unstable Mutagen
| Mutates and does radiation damage by the truckload to whoever ingests it. Handle with care!
|}
|}
To make the oil, you'll need to get some welding fuel - chemistry usually either has a fuel tank in a storage room nearby, which you can hit with a beaker to fill it, or chemistry will have some small, handheld red welding fuel tanks in a crate in the chemistry room. Whichever way you get it, make sure to watch how much of each reagent you have in your beakers - managing chemical amounts is a big part of chemistry!
Cryoxadone requires three other recipes - the simple cryostylane, the slightly more time consuming acetone, and unstable mutagen. This recipe will be your greatest challenge in balancing beaker amounts - either you'll need to waste some of the components or move them around other beakers. With practice you'll figure out your best way of doing things - and cryoxadone is a very worthwhile chemical to practice making!
A small usage note with cryoxadone - since you need to be quite cold for it to work, it's usually best to make pills of a mixture of cryoxadone and cryostylane. This pills, commonly referred to as "chill pills", freeze the patient upon ingestion, allowing the cryoxadone to do its stuff as well as provide a defensive layer.
===Boom Bada Bing: A Few Explosives===
Explosives are one of the best-known and most visible products of a chemistry lab. That being said, '''be careful with these if you are not an antagonist.''' Use the test chamber liberally when you a new, and use it even more when you're experienced and trying out new and unusual explosive mixes. Warnings considered, try out these two basic explosives.
{| class="wikitable sortable"
! Chemical Name
! class="unsortable" | Recipe
! class="unsortable" | Effects
|- id="Flash Powder"
! [[Chemicals#Flash Powder|Flash Powder]]
| (1) Aluminium + (1) Potassium + (1) Sulfur + (1) Chlorine (+ (1) [[Chemicals#Stabilizing Agent|Stabilizing Agent]]) -> (5) Flash Powder
| '''MAKE SURE TO INCLUDE STABILISING AGENT BEFORE PUTTING ALL FOUR CHEMS IN ONE BEAKER.''' Flashbangs the nearby area upon activation, causing stuns and eye damage.
|- id="Magnesium Explosion"
! [[Chemicals#Magnesium Explosion|Magnesium Explosion]]
| (1) Magnesium + (1) Copper + (1) Oxygen -> BOOM!
| Unlike the other recipes, this one actually doesn't create a chem - only a reaction. This also means it's dangerous to mix - it can hurt you and the chemical dispenser you're making it in!
|}
The first one, Flash Powder, has a common trait of several explosives - if you have enough stabilizing agent in the beaker before you finish the mix, instead of immediately detonating, you will get a chemical which will detonate once heated enough. In flash powder's case, it explodes at 374 degrees Kelvin. If you are a crime-doing antagonist, you can leave a beaker lying around and put a welding tool underneath the beaker to create a sort of timebomb.
{| class="wikitable sortable"
! Chemical Name
! class="unsortable" | Recipe
! class="unsortable" | Effects
|- id="Stabilizing Agent"
! [[Chemicals#Stabilizing Agent|Stabilizing Agent]]
| (1) Iron + (1) Hydrogen + (1) Oxygen -> (2) Stabilizing Agent
| Prevents some - but not all! - explosives from detonating upon synthesis. Make sure you have enough for how much explosive you're making!
|}
It has a slightly odd ratio, so be careful when mixing it all together!
The other explosive above cannot be stabilized, and can thus never be found in a heatable chemical form. It's a bit simpler to put together, but the challenge comes to finding some way to mix it far away from yourself - else you'll get the brunt of your own explosive! Get creative, and you will become a master of chemistry in no time.
==All the Chemicals==
Once you're ready to cannonball into the deep end - or are trying to find out the recipe of one specific chemical - your next stop is [[Chemicals]]. The sheer size of the page may be intimidating, but if you keep in mind the procedures above, you can tackle any of the regular chems - and potentially start on your journey to figuring out [[Chemicals#SECRET_CHEMS|secret chems!]]
==Chemical Warfare==
Syndicate scientists are widely regarded as one of the most, if not THE most, dangerous threats in the game, and chemistry is the main reason for it. Burning the station to a crisp, spraying toxic goo everywhere, lethal injections... this is all just another day in the office for a regular chemist, so I'm sure you can imagine that a traitorous one is infinitely worse as it's a free ticket to do all those nasty things you couldn't do while you were an actual crew member!
Simply put, any and every method of applying chemicals to people is now a weapon. Spray bottles and emagged hyposprays are quick, quiet and painless (for you) chem application tools. Beakers and [[Construction#Beaker_assembly|beaker assemblies]] make cheap-yet-fantastic gas bombs. The traitor-granted [[Syndicate_Items#Grenade Kit|chemistry grenade kit]] allows you to construct devastating chemical bombs. [[Construction#Flamethrower|Flamethrowers]] are even more horrible; they convert chemicals into a spray that lets all included reagents penetrate skin (up to a little over five injected per shot), ignore biosuits/internals/gas masks ''and'' can hit multiple targets at once if aimed carefully, '''and''' the flamethrower can activate most heat-reactant chems in the spray by turning its igniter on.
Of course, you're far from invincible, so stocking up on beneficial chems to use for yourself is highly recommended - throwing poison and fire all over the place will have an angry mob out for your blood rather quickly, you know! Once you learn how to jump over this hurdle, the only limit to the destruction you can cause (other than BYOND, of course) is your imagination.
==Supplementary Video==
<youtube>pJ83kt4a2-A</youtube>
==Gallery==
[[Image:HellmixWarnings.jpg]]
----
{{Department Guides}}
[[Category: Locations]]

Latest revision as of 02:33, 10 March 2020

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Looking for the list of chemicals with their recipes and effects? It has been moved to Chemicals.

This is where scientists go to brew up chemicals. Gets set on fire every other twice a round.

SaccharineChampion/Chemistry Ν
Location

ChemistryLab.png

Breeding ground for weapons of mass destruction and urine-infused smoke clouds alike.

Access

Research Director, Scientist


SaccharineChampion/Chemistry Ν
Location

CogmapChemistry.png

Breeding ground for weapons of mass destruction and urine-infused smoke clouds alike.

Access

Research Director, Scientist


SaccharineChampion/Chemistry Ν
Location

DestinyChemistry.png

Breeding ground for weapons of mass destruction and urine-infused smoke clouds alike.

Access

Research Director, Scientist


SaccharineChampion/Chemistry Ν
Location

ClarionChemistry.png

Breeding ground for weapons of mass destruction and urine-infused smoke clouds alike.

Access

Research Director, Scientist


SaccharineChampion/Chemistry Ν
Location

OshanChemistry.png

Breeding ground for weapons of mass destruction and urine-infused smoke clouds alike.

Access

Research Director, Scientist


SaccharineChampion/Chemistry Ν
Location

HorizonChemistry.png

Breeding ground for weapons of mass destruction and urine-infused smoke clouds alike.

Access

Research Director, Scientist


SaccharineChampion/Chemistry Ν
Location

AtlasChemistry.png

Breeding ground for weapons of mass destruction and urine-infused smoke clouds alike.

Access

Research Director, Scientist


SaccharineChampion/Chemistry Ν
Location

MantaChemistry.png

Breeding ground for weapons of mass destruction and urine-infused smoke clouds alike.

Access

Research Director, Scientist, Medical Director, Medical Doctor, Roboticist, Geneticist, Head of Security, Security Officer, Detective, Janitor


Oh boy I can't wait to melt my eyebrows off!

Here's a quick look at the devices scattered across the room.

Machines & Storage

Name Image Description
Chem Dispenser
ChemDispenser.png
Dispenses a whole slew of chemicals. Use a beaker (or similar liquid-bearing containers - however, you cannot insert some such as drinking glasses) on it to insert it, then use the machine to pick chemicals. You can choose to remove unwanted chemicals (isolate removes all chemicals BUT the selected one). When you're done, eject the beaker from the menu. Can be figured to automatically dispense certain chems using chem groups/bookmarks.
Reagent Extractor
ReagentExtractor2.png
Converts certain items (usually food items or plants but not always) into chemical reagents that are stored into one of two internal tanks or an inserted container.
Heating/Cooling Unit
ChemHeater.png
Used to chill or heat containers. Use the menu to set a target temperature (Tip: click the number itself to punch in a number instead of clicking + and - over and over again.), and press Activate to start the heating/cooling process.
ChemMaster 3000
CheMaster.png
Used to turn chemicals into pills, medical patches, medicine bottles, or ampoules, though it can also isolate or remove reagents from the inserted beaker. If you need more information, click the Analyze option next to the reagent name, and the CheMaster will briefly describe what it does or at least what it is (which may or may not be helpful). The Analyze option can also conduct blood tests if you lack other tools (reagent scanner, upgraded health analyzer): draw blood and analyze it with the CheMaster in the pharmacy.

When creating pills, patches, or ampoules, you'll be prompted to choose how many units are in each one (multiple pill/patch options only), as well as the label (which will show up as "<what you wrote> pill/patch" or "ampoule(<what you wrote>)"). Pill bottles and patch boxes work slightly differently from other containers. To get a pill or patch, click on the bottle resp. box with an empty hand while it is in your other hand. Pill bottles can be emptied by clicking the bottle with the hand holding it, dumping all pills on the floor. Patch boxes have to be opened before you can manipulate the contents.

ChemiCompiler
ChemiCompilerStationary.png
A complicated chemistry device, which uses a programming language derived from Brainfuck. It features 5 registers, 1024 bytes of RAM and 10 reagent reservoirs - to add beakers, click on the r[number] slots. The machine generates a pill or vial if they are targeted and can send reagents out an ejection port. For instructions on how to use it, see the dedicated ChemiCompiler guide.
Lab Counter
LabCounter.png
Can hold tons and tons and tons of beakers, bottles, pills, syringes, tools, and such in its table drawer. Click-drag its sprite onto yours to access it.
Glass Recycler
KitchenwareRecyclerNew.png
Put glass shards and glassware into it to make other, bigger types of glassware. Most useful for creating large beakers.
ValuChimp
MonkeyVendingMachine.png
Dispenses monkeys, a valuable commodity for the modern scientist.

Tools & Equipment

Name Image Description
Beaker
LargeBeaker.png Beaker.png
Holds chemicals. Standard ones hold 50 units, large ones 100 units. You can make more at a glass recycler and find them in beaker boxes; you can order more beaker boxes from Cargo through both general Chemistry Resupply Crates and precursor Chemistry Resupply Crates. Has quite a few interactions:
  • Click on another beaker or similar while the beaker is in your hand to transfer up to 10 units of chems into it.
  • Click-drag its sprite into another beaker or similar (neither have to be in your hand) to transfer as many reagents as possible into the receiving beaker.
  • Click on a person or mob with the beaker in your active hand to pour its contents onto them, applying the chems' TOUCH effects.
  • Click on a floor tile with the beaker in your active hand to pour it onto the floor. This'll apply any special on_turf effects, e.g. CCl4 puts out any fires on the tile, cheese can make a wedge of cheese if there's enough, oil makes an oil spill. If you pour enough chems, it'll create a fluid puddle.
  • Click on the beaker while it's in your hand to loosen or tighten your grip on it. If you have it on loose grip, you'll pour all the chems inside on the mob/tile; if you have it in a tight grip, you'll only pour 10 units from it.
  • If you your beaker is empty, clicking on a fluid puddle transfers some of the reagents into it. If it's filled, does the reverse: pours the reagents into the puddle.
  • Click on a mess decal, such as blood stain, fungus growth, or oil stain, to collect its associated reagents. You can generally only do this once per pile.

Note: Generally, the exact contents of beakers and other reagent containers can't be examined directly. A pair of spectroscopic goggles or a reagent scanner (PDA or separate) are recommended.

Reagent Scanner
ReagentScanner.png ScientistsPDA.png
Assesses chemical composition of many things. Click on a person, container, fluid puddle or other object with this, and it'll list the chemicals inside it. Only the hand-held version has a memory function (click on it or examine to see the results of the previous scan), but it is otherwise identical to the PDA program.
Spectroscopic Scanner Goggles
SpectroscopicScannerGoggles.png
Assesses chemical composition of containers. Examine a beaker or other reagent container with these on to assess the exact composition and quantity of chemicals inside. Without these, you'll only see a rough estimate and description. These goggles are also available from the cargo bay.
Syringe
Syringe2.png
Transfers chemicals. Click on the syringe while it's in your hand to set to inject or draw, and click on someone/something to transfer 5 units of chemicals at a time. Drawing from a person will take a blood sample. Neither are instant, unless the recipient is yourself. Total capacity is 15 units.
Dropper
DropperNew.png
Transfers chemicals. Click on a beaker or other container to load it with reagents, click on another container to squeeze the reagents in. You can also drop it on a person to drip reagents onto them. Holds up to 5 units, and drops all of it at once onto its target. Dropping takes about half as much time as injecting with a syringe.
Mechanical Dropper
MechanicalDropper.png
More precise dropper. Allows you to transfer reagents (up to 10 units) in increments of 0.1 units. Click on it in-hand to adjust how much is transferred and whether the dropper is in dropping or drawing mode. Otherwise used just like the dropper.

Ok so how do I make napalm?

Safety First

Hold your horses, pyromaniacs. First things first, we need to discuss some important... *groan* safety tips:

  • Mix potentially-explosive chemicals in the Test Chamber. One is the tiny room in the page image and another is due north of the lab, both with reinforced floors and walls that can tank explosions better. Keeping other scientists and the mixing lab out of the collateral damage is one less reason for them to murder you leave you to fry from your own fireball for potentially ruining their round. And if you can't mix the explosive stuff in another room, at the very least warn your colleagues before you do it.
  • Always wear your standard-issue gas mask and a biosuit + bio hood from the closets. This can't be stressed enough; some chemicals are accompanied with a "The solution generates a strong vapor!" message upon successful mixing, giving everyone adjacent to the tile a big whiff of the chemical that was just mixed on it. The full gas mask/biosuit set immunizes you to this and most chemical smokes and TOUCH reactions, protecting you from your colleagues' shenanigans as well as your own. There is no reason not to do this unless you're trying to choke on your own poisons.
  • Don't mix random chemicals Similar to real life, if you aren't careful, you might cause a fire, explosion, implosion, and/or flash or catch a whiff of some toxic fumes. This is why it's important to have a gas mask and a biosuit + bio hood if you don't know what you're doing.
  • Pay attention to what other scientists are doing and don't get in their way. For example, if someone places a beaker into a reagent heater and runs away from it, he's probably anticipating a fireball or smoke of some degree and it's wise not to go look at, lest you get a face-full of it.
  • Make liberal use of stabilizing agent. If you see a recipe that mentions stabilizing agent, always use it when mixing the recipe in question so it doesn't literally blow up in your face. It's a good practice to do this for recipes you're unfamiliar with. Be wary, however, that stabilizing agent doesn't work with everything - these cases should be mixed in the aforementioned test chamber.
  • Test harmful or unknown chemicals on monkeys, NOT other people. This is why you have the ValuChimp. Monkeys are NPCs with damage counters just like that of a human's, so they'll provide an accurate representation of what would happen if you use that chemical mix on a human. This is doubly important if you're a round antagonist, as you will need to make sure your deathchems actually cause death instead of just provoking your target into toolboxing you.

Got all that? Good. Now we can get started with making napalm.

Discount Dan's Quik-Tips for Getting Acquainted with Chemistry

So, turns out making napalm isn't terribly complex at all. But there's more to chemistry than just making napalm--so much more! It's almost overwhelming. Where does an aspiring chemist start?

  • Begin with the basics. Start with the stuff in basic compounds table. Know each one by heart, for they are at the heart of many recipes. Luckily, there aren't many to learn.
  • Don't start with deadly recipes. One of the primary benefits of learning the recipes for healing chemicals first is that when you DO start to learn harmful recipes, you'll be able to heal yourself when you fuck up.
  • Don't over-think the recipes.
    • The recipes for chems from real-life generally follow a comfortably simplified version of the actual process; for example, methamphetamine is based on the Nagai route, while sulfuric acid is just the elements that make up the molecule.
    • The ones for entirely fictional chems tend be somewhat arbitrary, but for some, there's some simple logic linking them, e.g. glitter needs shiny stuff and a paper base for it, while flaptonium involves bird-related things. Even some of said arbitrary ones often use plasma for that "magical sci-fi chemical that can do anything".
    • This holds particularly true for the secret chems:
      • For ones that are based on real life, such as nitroglycerin, study the general process and try to replicate it in SS13 with "equivalents"; for most, you usually don't have to go further than a Wikipedia page.
      • For fictional chems, such as mutini, think about which chems can best replicate their effects. Some, like Crabby Party Secret Formula, are just jokes, where the hint is the punchline linking the ingredients together.
      • If you get stuck, don't be afraid to ask for hints. In fact, there's even a Spacebux item called a "Chem Hint Scroll" that provides a clue for a random ingredient for a random chem.
  • Look beyond the chem dispenser!
    • The Botanists can mass-produce certain chems through the power of botany, significantly easing your workload. There are even a few chems that only obtained from certain plants. Don't be afraid to ask them to grow a few things.
    • You can insert certain items into the Reagent Extractor, usually food and plant products, to get certain chems; many chems can only be obtained this way. Learn it and love it; neither are too hard to do. You'll use it a lot in your chemistry career; just look at all the places in the tables below that go "Extract from...".
    • Discount Dan's products from red snack machines contain a true smorgasbord of chemicals. You might surprised (and maybe a little queasy) at what's in those noodle cups!
    • There are many "designer drug" pills scattered in random places on the station/ship and elsewhere, often in pill bottles named in-game as "pill bottle (????)". Who knows what magical toxic treasures they contain!?

Getting Your Toes Wet

Need a bit more direction before heading off into the dangerous world of chemistry? This section describes a few specific commonly used and requested chems in ascending order of difficulty.

Acid (Not the Fun Kind)

Acids happen to simultaneously have some of the simplest recipes, the most obvious harmful effects, and somewhat high usage. You'll be particularly using your good friend Sulfuric Acid for a couple of recipes.

Chemical Name Recipe Effects
Sulfuric Acid (1) Sulfur + (1) Hydrogen + (1) Oxygen -> (2) Sulfuric Acid Deals decent damage scaling with quantity. Sometimes melts items. Used in some other chems' recipes!
Fluorosulfuric Acid (1) Sulfuric Acid + (1) Fluorine + (1) Hydrogen + (1) Potassium @ 374 K -> (3) Fluorosulfuric Acid Deals even more damage, again scaling with quantity. Always melts items upon application, and melts headgear if 9 or more units are splashed on a person.

Since Sulfuric Acid is made entirely of chemicals in the chem dispenser, you only need to put a beaker in and hit each of those chemicals once. Simple! Once you have some sulfuric acid, you can add the fluorine, hydrogen, and potassium - again, all found in the dispenser - but then you will need to heat up the beaker. Put it in the Heating/Cooling unit and set the temperature really high - just setting it to the required temperature of 374K is slow and won't cut it compared to setting it to the maximum temperature and just removing it once it reacts. And once it does react - congratulations, you have a beaker of Wizard-busting, day-ruining acid!

Getting Medbay to Love You

If you have a more pacifistic slant, you can make most of the medicines which medbay enjoys using. Two of the most commonly used medical chems are the following; they're fortunately pretty simple.

Chemical Name Recipe Effects
Styptic Powder (1) Aluminium + (1) Oxygen + (1) Hydrogen + (1) Sulfuric Acid -> (4) Styptic Powder Slows down bleeding and heals BRUTE damage. Only apply topically, such as with patches - ingestion in pill or drink form poisons the patient!
Silver Sulfadiazine (1) Ammonia + (1) Silver + (1) Sulfur + (1) Oxygen + (1) Chlorine -> (5) Silver Sulfadiazine Heals BURN damage. Just like styptic powder, apply it topically or it will poison whoever ingests it!

Similarly to Fluorosulfuric Acid above, to make styptic powder, you first need to brew up some sulfuric acid and add some other chemicals from the dispenser. Unlike the acid, it doesn't require any heating, making it quick and easy. Silver sulfadiazine is a bit more involved because it uses Ammonia, which has the following recipe:

Chemical Name Recipe Effects
Ammonia (3) Hydrogen + (1) Nitrogen -> (3) Ammonia Doesn't actually do much on its own besides help the Botanists' plants - it does get used in a lot of recipes, though!

This is an example of a chemical with a non-balanced recipe; pay careful attention to the ratios, or you may end up with leftover unwanted reagents! You'll also likely need to remove some of the resulting ammonia from the beaker to fit in silver sulfadiazine; you can't fit 30 each of ammonia, silver, sulfur, oxygen, and chlorine in a typical 100u beaker, much less a 50u one.

Those two chemicals alone can make medbay pretty happy when supplies run low. They can also be used by yourself if you don't trust doctors to patch you up, such as when you're an antagonist on the run from the law, or in the middle of a busy fight such as with Nuclear Operatives.

There are a couple of medical chems that medbay either doesn't start with or has a very low starting supply of, so making them will make the doctors there extra happy. See the following.

Chemical Name Recipe Effects
Synthflesh (1) Blood + (1) Carbon + (1) Styptic Powder -> (3) Synthflesh Heals both BRUTE and BURN on application - even better than styptic powder and silver sulfadiazine individually do!
Perfluorodecalin (1) Hydrogen + (1) Fluorine + (1) Oil @ 374 K -> (2) Perfluorodecalin Heals OXY by a LOT and both raises and caps the breathloss amount - meaning you will only be able to talk in whispers while it's in you.
Cryoxadone (1) Cryostylane + (1) Plasma + (1) Acetone + (1) Unstable Mutagen -> (3) Cryoxadone Does a bit of everything, as long as your body temperature is below 260K; heals BRUTE, BURN, TOX, and OXY by significant amounts.

Synthflesh is pretty simple, though you can't get blood out of any sort of dispenser - instead, you'll want to use a syringe on yourself or a monkey to extract blood, then deposit it into the beaker with the other ingredients. Another popular option is to ask medbay for a spare bloodbag and a scalpel - if you use the scalpel on the bloodbag, you can pour its blood directly into a beaker!

Perfluorodecalin and Cryoxadone require a few other yet-unexplained chemicals, laid out below.

Chemical Name Recipe Effects
Oil (1) Carbon + (1) Hydrogen + (1) Welding Fuel -> (3) Oil A bit of a jack of all trades - if heated up enough it makes a fireball which both burns and produces ash, if applied to a floor it makes it slippery, if splashed on a borg it speeds it up, and it gets used in a lot of recipes! Wow!
Cryostylane (1) Water + (1) Plasma + (1) Nitrogen -> (3) Cryostylane When ingested or splashed on someone, it freezes them in an ice cube. It can also be used on floors to make them slippery, and if you add some oxygen to a beaker with cryostylane, both will be gradually consumed to cool down the beaker's contents.
Acetone (1) Oil + (1) Welding Fuel + (1) Oxygen -> (3) Acetone Fairly poisonous when ingested, and is used in several other recipes.
Unstable Mutagen (1) Radium + (1) Plasma + (1) Chlorine -> (3) Unstable Mutagen Mutates and does radiation damage by the truckload to whoever ingests it. Handle with care!

To make the oil, you'll need to get some welding fuel - chemistry usually either has a fuel tank in a storage room nearby, which you can hit with a beaker to fill it, or chemistry will have some small, handheld red welding fuel tanks in a crate in the chemistry room. Whichever way you get it, make sure to watch how much of each reagent you have in your beakers - managing chemical amounts is a big part of chemistry!

Cryoxadone requires three other recipes - the simple cryostylane, the slightly more time consuming acetone, and unstable mutagen. This recipe will be your greatest challenge in balancing beaker amounts - either you'll need to waste some of the components or move them around other beakers. With practice you'll figure out your best way of doing things - and cryoxadone is a very worthwhile chemical to practice making!

A small usage note with cryoxadone - since you need to be quite cold for it to work, it's usually best to make pills of a mixture of cryoxadone and cryostylane. This pills, commonly referred to as "chill pills", freeze the patient upon ingestion, allowing the cryoxadone to do its stuff as well as provide a defensive layer.

Boom Bada Bing: A Few Explosives

Explosives are one of the best-known and most visible products of a chemistry lab. That being said, be careful with these if you are not an antagonist. Use the test chamber liberally when you a new, and use it even more when you're experienced and trying out new and unusual explosive mixes. Warnings considered, try out these two basic explosives.


Chemical Name Recipe Effects
Flash Powder (1) Aluminium + (1) Potassium + (1) Sulfur + (1) Chlorine (+ (1) Stabilizing Agent) -> (5) Flash Powder MAKE SURE TO INCLUDE STABILISING AGENT BEFORE PUTTING ALL FOUR CHEMS IN ONE BEAKER. Flashbangs the nearby area upon activation, causing stuns and eye damage.
Magnesium Explosion (1) Magnesium + (1) Copper + (1) Oxygen -> BOOM! Unlike the other recipes, this one actually doesn't create a chem - only a reaction. This also means it's dangerous to mix - it can hurt you and the chemical dispenser you're making it in!

The first one, Flash Powder, has a common trait of several explosives - if you have enough stabilizing agent in the beaker before you finish the mix, instead of immediately detonating, you will get a chemical which will detonate once heated enough. In flash powder's case, it explodes at 374 degrees Kelvin. If you are a crime-doing antagonist, you can leave a beaker lying around and put a welding tool underneath the beaker to create a sort of timebomb.


Chemical Name Recipe Effects
Stabilizing Agent (1) Iron + (1) Hydrogen + (1) Oxygen -> (2) Stabilizing Agent Prevents some - but not all! - explosives from detonating upon synthesis. Make sure you have enough for how much explosive you're making!

It has a slightly odd ratio, so be careful when mixing it all together!

The other explosive above cannot be stabilized, and can thus never be found in a heatable chemical form. It's a bit simpler to put together, but the challenge comes to finding some way to mix it far away from yourself - else you'll get the brunt of your own explosive! Get creative, and you will become a master of chemistry in no time.

All the Chemicals

Once you're ready to cannonball into the deep end - or are trying to find out the recipe of one specific chemical - your next stop is Chemicals. The sheer size of the page may be intimidating, but if you keep in mind the procedures above, you can tackle any of the regular chems - and potentially start on your journey to figuring out secret chems!

Chemical Warfare

Syndicate scientists are widely regarded as one of the most, if not THE most, dangerous threats in the game, and chemistry is the main reason for it. Burning the station to a crisp, spraying toxic goo everywhere, lethal injections... this is all just another day in the office for a regular chemist, so I'm sure you can imagine that a traitorous one is infinitely worse as it's a free ticket to do all those nasty things you couldn't do while you were an actual crew member!

Simply put, any and every method of applying chemicals to people is now a weapon. Spray bottles and emagged hyposprays are quick, quiet and painless (for you) chem application tools. Beakers and beaker assemblies make cheap-yet-fantastic gas bombs. The traitor-granted chemistry grenade kit allows you to construct devastating chemical bombs. Flamethrowers are even more horrible; they convert chemicals into a spray that lets all included reagents penetrate skin (up to a little over five injected per shot), ignore biosuits/internals/gas masks and can hit multiple targets at once if aimed carefully, and the flamethrower can activate most heat-reactant chems in the spray by turning its igniter on.

Of course, you're far from invincible, so stocking up on beneficial chems to use for yourself is highly recommended - throwing poison and fire all over the place will have an angry mob out for your blood rather quickly, you know! Once you learn how to jump over this hurdle, the only limit to the destruction you can cause (other than BYOND, of course) is your imagination.

Supplementary Video

Gallery

HellmixWarnings.jpg


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