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Inquiring Minds

37 Raychelle Burks - Zombie Repellent and Other Awesome Uses for Chemistry

Inquiring Minds

Inquiring Minds

Science, Society & Culture, Neuroscience, Female Host, Interview, Social Sciences, Critical Thinking

4.4 • 848 Ratings

🗓️ 5 June 2014

⏱️ 60 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Remember those stick-figures of chemical compounds you were forced to memorize in high school? Remember how useless it seemed at the time? Can you still articulate the difference between a covalent bond and an ionic one (without checking Wikipedia)? If not, pay attention: You might be caught flat-footed during the zombie apocalypse.The CDC suggests (half-seriously) having a zombie-preparedness kit (after all, it would also be useful in case of pandemics and hurricanes). But chemist and blogger Raychelle Burks has a simpler solution—one that would have greatly de-grossified a famous scene from The Walking Dead, in which Rick and his fellow apocalypse survivors slathered the guts of dead humans all over themselves, to jam the zombies' chemosenses with the smell of rotting flesh and thereby, escape."They used chemical camouflage," explains Burks, to trick the zombies into thinking they were fellow undead. The only problem: Icky and dangerous exposure to blood, guts, and pathogens. Burks has a better idea. "There's a couple of key chemicals that smell really stinky," she explains on this week’s episode. "Two right off the top would be—and they've got great names—cadaverine and putrescine…and they do smell like their names." In fact, these chemicals are used to train cadaver dogs, which search for dead bodies. "You could make up a death cologne," Burks continues. "Kind of use chemical camouflage to your advantage so that you can sneak through a zombie horde."Known as Dr. Rubidium on Twitter—a name she chose because element 37 of the periodic table, Rubidium, has the symbol "RB," the same as her initials—Burks is a self-described "magical unicorn": A black, female, analytical chemist working at Nebraska's Doane College. Professionally, much of her research has focused on how to create quick chemical tests to help law enforcement officials detect the presence of explosives, and particularly those that are peroxide based, which are both extremely dangerous, and also fairly easy to make.On the show this week, we talked to Burks about a wide range of chemistry-related topics, including the widespread confusion over terms like "natural," "organic," and "chemical."This episode also features a discussion of a controversial study concluding that hurricanes with female names are deadlier, as well as new research into how spiders use their webs to detect sound vibrations.iTunes: itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/inquiring-minds/id711675943RSS: feeds.feedburner.com/inquiring-mindsStitcher: stitcher.com/podcast/inquiring-mindsSupport the show: https://www.patreon.com/inquiringminds

Transcript

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0:00.0

It's Friday, June 6th, and you're listening to Inquiring Minds. I'm Chris Mooney. And I'm

0:06.7

Indrae Viscontas. Each week we bring you a new in-depth exploration of the space where science,

0:11.7

politics, and society collide. We endeavor to find out what's true, what's left to discover,

0:16.4

and why it all matters. You can find us on Twitter at Inquiring Show, on Facebook at slash Inquiring Minds podcast,

0:24.6

and you can subscribe to the show on iTunes or on pretty much any other podcasting app.

0:34.4

I also want to let you know that this episode of Inquiring Minds is sponsored by Harry's Razors,

0:40.1

a new company that is disrupting the shaving industry by at last making a high-quality shaving experience eminently affordable.

0:48.9

It just costs 15 bucks to get a Harry's Razor set, and that includes the razor handle, three blades, and shaving

0:55.8

cream, and you get it shipped to your door. There's even a custom engraving option to put your

1:00.5

initials on the razor. And today, a Harry's shaving set costs even less than that, because we have

1:05.2

a special offer for you, our listeners. If you go to harries.com and you use this promo code, Inquiring Minds,

1:13.0

you can save $5 off your first purchase.

1:16.2

So head on over to harries.com now, and we will wait for you.

1:20.5

So today's show is about chemistry, which is one of the drier sciences, arguably.

1:26.8

I have to say that I dust off my chemistry textbooks

1:30.1

far, far, far less frequently than any other book on my shelf. And it's generally ignored by the

1:35.5

media, unless, of course, it's to blame Big Pharma for, you know, all of our problems.

1:40.4

Enter Rachelle Burks. She's a chemist at Done College with a flair for making chemistry cool. She earned her PhD

1:47.7

in chemistry from the University of Nebraska at Lincoln, and she now has a cross-appointment,

1:53.4

both at Donne College and at the Center for Nano- Hybrid Functional Materials at the University

1:58.8

of Nebraska, Lincoln. She also blogs at Scientopia.org with the blog 37, which we'll talk about why it's called

2:06.8

37 and why her Twitter handle is Dr. Rabidium.

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