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Minecraft:Material Reducer

From SAS Gaming Wiki

Template:Education feature Template:Infobox block The material reducer is a Minecraft:block used in chemistry to learn about the natural world, by reducing Minecraft:Minecraft blocks to their component Minecraft:elements.

Obtaining

Material reducers can be obtained from the Minecraft:Creative inventory. They cannot be obtained in Minecraft:Survival without Minecraft:commands. Template:IN, the world must also have the "Education Edition" setting enabled.

Breaking

A material reducer can be mined with any tool, but Minecraft:pickaxes are faster.

Template:Breaking row

Usage

Using the material reducer opens an interface of 10 Minecraft:inventory slots. The central slot at the top is the input, where blocks can be placed in order to break them down into their component parts. When this happens, the output slots fill up with the percentage of Minecraft:elements found in the broken down material.

Certain blocks such as Minecraft:soul sand and Minecraft:netherrack contain mysterious elements yet to be discovered. These are represented by an unknown element that displays as other elements, but with a question mark in place of a periodic table symbol. If you take out a few elements, but keep some in too, then the block you placed will have the missing model item, which you cannot place in the inventory.

When an element is taken from one of the output slots, the input slot gets cleared, and if there are elements in other output slots, the input slot becomes red and does not accept further input until all of the outputs are cleared.

Any block broken down in the material reducer gives out 100 different elements.

Products
Block/item Components Notes

Template:BlockLink prior to the Wild Update
Template:BlockLink prior to the Wild Update
Template:BlockLink prior to the Wild Update
Template:BlockLink prior to the Wild Update
Template:BlockLink prior to the Wild Update
Template:BlockLink prior to the Wild Update
Template:BlockLink prior to the Wild Update

Template:BlockLink x49
Template:BlockLink x6
Template:BlockLink x44
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The formula mirrors the chemical compositions of cellulose, hemicellulose, and lignin, the three main components of wood.

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Template:BlockLink x15
Template:BlockLink x70
Template:BlockLink x8
Template:BlockLink x7

These four elements are found in all life forms on Earth.

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Template:BlockLink x21
Template:BlockLink x8
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Template:BlockLink x3
Template:BlockLink x13
Template:BlockLink x6
Template:BlockLink x2
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Template:BlockLink x42

The results depict dirt as a mixture of inorganic rocks and decaying organic material, although there is too little oxygen to form the compounds found in real-life dirt such as calcium carbonate.

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Template:BlockLink, all variants
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Template:BlockLink, all variants
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Template:BlockLink x33
Template:BlockLink x67

The results approximate SiO2, the chemical formula for silicon dioxide, the mineral quartz. Silicon and oxygen are the primary atomic elements of silicate minerals. Many of these real life rocks are composed of silicate minerals, not just SiO2.

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Template:BlockLink x47
Template:BlockLink x28
Template:BlockLink x8
Template:BlockLink x5
Template:BlockLink x4
Template:BlockLink x3
Template:BlockLink x3
Template:BlockLink x2

These elements are all commonly found in silicate minerals. The abundances of these elements are the average composition of earth's crust and close to the average composition of real life Andesite

Template:BlockLink
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Template:BlockLink x45
Template:BlockLink x28
Template:BlockLink x8
Template:BlockLink x5
Template:BlockLink x4
Template:BlockLink x3
Template:BlockLink x3
Template:BlockLink x2
Template:BlockLink x2

Similar to regular cobblestone. Mossy cobblestone has carbon to account for the moss.

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Template:BlockLink x77
Template:BlockLink x17
Template:BlockLink x3
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These results reflect the formulae of many real-life clays, although real-life clay contains much more oxygen.

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Template:BlockLink x67
Template:BlockLink x33

The results approximate H2O, the chemical formula for water.

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Template:BlockLink x6
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Template:BlockLink x43
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The results mirror the composition of coal, although real-life coal contains much less oxygen.

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Template:BlockLink x64
Template:BlockLink x12
Template:BlockLink x24

A mixture of pure (elemental) iron and silicate rock. In real life, iron ore usually contains oxidized iron, so the formula would contain much more oxygen.

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Template:BlockLink x64
Template:BlockLink x12
Template:BlockLink x24

A mixture of pure gold and silicate rock. As gold is chemically inert, it is always naturally found in its elemental form.

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Template:BlockLink x64
Template:BlockLink x12
Template:BlockLink x24

A mixture of pure carbon and silicate rock. Diamond is composed of pure carbon, and takes billions of years to form deep underground.

Template:BlockLink
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Template:BlockLink x13
Template:BlockLink x8
Template:BlockLink x13
Template:BlockLink x53
Template:BlockLink x13

The formula roughly corresponds to lazurite, the main component of lapis lazuli.

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Template:BlockLink x31
Template:BlockLink x31
Template:BlockLink x38

The formula implies that Redstone is made out of uranium methanide and an unknown element, thus it is radioactive.

Template:BlockLink
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Template:BlockLink x15
Template:BlockLink x25
Template:BlockLink x20
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The formula roughly corresponds to beryl, the main component of emerald.

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Template:BlockLink

Template:BlockLink x100

The results mirror the composition of 100% pure iron.

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Template:BlockLink x100

The results mirror the composition of 100% pure gold.

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Template:BlockLink

Template:BlockLink x100

The results mirror the composition of 100% pure diamond.

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Template:BlockLink x64
Template:BlockLink x18
Template:BlockLink x15
Template:BlockLink x3

A mixture of silicate rock and mercury. Mercury(II) oxide (HgO) is red to orange in color, although these results contain too little oxygen for any of this compound to form.

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Template:BlockLink x59
Template:BlockLink x13
Template:BlockLink x28

The approximate formula is Si4C. Although, it is similar to the mineral SiC (carborundum).

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Template:BlockLink x20
Template:BlockLink x20
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Template:BlockLink x20
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These three gases are noble gases, which are commonly used in neon lights to produce vibrant colors.

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Template:BlockLink x37
Template:BlockLink x3
Template:BlockLink x60

Soul sand is mostly composed of an unknown element, due to its paranormal composition.

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Template:BlockLink x4

This formula roughly corresponds to Iron (II) sulfate, an inorganic dark dye, which is not found in any species of real-life squid.

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Template:BlockLink x6
Template:BlockLink x12
Template:BlockLink x6

The results approximate C6H12O6, the chemical formula for a simple sugar.

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Template:BlockLink x7
Template:BlockLink x4
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The results approximate C7H4O, the chemical formula for charcoal.

Note that amethyst-related blocks and items, copper-related blocks and items, mud, coarse dirt, raw ore blocks and items, deepslate ores, iron, gold, and diamond equipment, doors, and trapdoors cannot be put into a material reducer, despite them being related to blocks that can.

All compounds that can be made in the compound creator and lab table can also be reduced in the material reducer, yielding their respective ingredients.

Sounds

Template:Sound table/Block/Stone/BE

Data values

ID

Template:ID table

Block states

Template:See also

{{#lst:Compound Creator|block states}}

History

Bedrock Edition

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Minecraft Education

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Issues

Template:Issue list

Trivia

  • There is currently a glitch in the material reducer's GUI: When the input slot becomes red, the "tubes" that are connected to it are sometimes rendered over the red square, which causes the image to flick between the normal square and the tubes.

Gallery

Renders

Screenshots

Other

Navigation

Template:Navbox blocks Template:Navbox Education

Minecraft:de:Stoffreduzierer Minecraft:es:Reductor de materia Minecraft:fr:Déconstructeur de matériaux Minecraft:ja:物質還元器 Minecraft:ko:물질 분해기 Minecraft:pl:Analizator materiałów Minecraft:pt:Redutor de Material Minecraft:ru:Редуктор материала Minecraft:uk:Розбивач матеріалів Minecraft:zh:材料分解器