since were OT already, about chemicals: whats the "best" organic solvent? like a solvent where i could dump a LED in, to totally dissolve the dome, and be left with the bare, connected die (to remove the phosphor and other silly things). tetrachorinemethan? chloroform/dichlorinemethan? acetone didnt do anything to the dome (acrylic?) .not that any of the nicer ones would be easy to get ;-)
What the best solvent is, obviously entirely depends on what you are trying to dissolve. For table salt, it would be water, for nail polish acetone and so on.
Also, its important to notice the difference between a solvent, and a reagent. Solvents do not chemically alter whatever you dissolve in them, and if you where to evaporate the solvent away, you'd get back exactly what you dissolved in the beginning (chemically that is, a cube of sugar will obviously dry down to disc of sugar when you do this with water).
Things like HF and aqua regia are reagents - the later forms gold chloride from metallic gold. If you removed the solvent, you'd get goldchloride (a salt), not gold metal.
For dissolving plastics, nonpolar or semipolar solvents usually work best, but not all plastics can be dissolved. Crosslinked polymers for example, basically are one big molecule the size of the entire object, and will not dissolve in anything. Other plastics like polystyrene will readily dissolve in acetone.
I'm not sure what LED casings are made of though. You could try do dunk a led in acetone overnight and check the result. If its still entirely there and not softened or changed, there is little chance that any other solvent will be able to completely dissolve the material. You can try something like white spirit (turpentine, very light mineral oil, paint stripper) or toluene/xylene too.
Solvents like chloroform, CS2 or CCl4 are even more non-polar, but realistically will not be much better at attacking plastics. There are plenty of applications where other properties of the solvent are important too, and using these is justified, but they are pretty hazardous materials and even (suspect) carcinogenic.