In one case things i won’t work with:
I got a real chuckle about the protective gear that was need in 1943 research on this compound.
My recent entries in this category have, for the most part, been hazardous in a direct (not to say crude, or even vulgar) manner.
These are compounds that explode with bizarre violence even in laughably small amounts, leaving ruined.
Things i won't work with:
Azidoazide azides, more or less.
Add to reading list.
Things i won't work with:
Add to reading list.
Things i won't work with:
Add to reading list.
Things i won't work with:
Chemistry , safety , bromine , author. derek lowe
Things i won’t work with:
Now this is a fine substance.
Also known in the older literature as fluorine azide, you make it by combining two other things that have already made my “things i won’t work with” list.
Just allow fluorine (ay!) to react with neat hydrazoic acid (yikes), and behold!
Things i won’t work with:
Everyone’s heard of cyanide, whether they’ve spent any time in a chemistry classroom or not.
And if you form a covalent bond to the carbon of that cn group, you’ve got a nitrile, and those are familiar compounds to any organic chemist.
But what if you flip the group.
No, making things that go off when someone down the.
The effect of selenophenol on the skin is very similar to that of thiophenol, forming blisters which itch intensely.
After a time, these dry up, the skin scales off, and there appears to be a deposit of red selenium beneath it.
The odor of selenophenol is very penetrating, and is nauseating beyond description.
Well, it’s hard to make so other people don’t make it and test.
And what the germans in 2011 published is ”hey, it’s too sensitive and we can’t test it because it’s below our threshold for sensitivity”….
Which doesn’t mean suppose that’s a fucking zero then, it just means they have some cut off. ”.
This guy is the best.
The effect of selenophenol on the skin is very similar to that of thiophenol, forming blisters which itch intensely.
After a time, these dry up, the skin scales off, and there appears to be a deposit of red selenium beneath it.
The odor of selenophenol is very penetrating, and is nauseating beyond description.
Things i won't work with:
Everyone knows hydrogen peroxide, hooh.
The 30% solution will go to work immediately bleaching you out if you are so careless as to spill some on you, and the 70% solution.
It's toxic to the lungs, naturally, but since it gets into the blood stream so well, it's also toxic to the liver, and to the kidneys (basically, the organs that are on the front lines when it's time to excrete the stuff), and to the brain and nervous system.
Cadmium compounds in general have also been confirmed as carcinogenic, should you.
Things i won't work with:
Unfortunately, most of them are hostile.
Azide anion, as you find in sodium azide, is pretty toxic.
It shuts down several important enzymes, and it's often used in biology labs as a.
No, making things that go off when someone down the hall.
Things i won't work with :
Chlorine trifluoride “…the compound also a stronger oxidizing agent than oxygen itself, which also puts it into rare territory.
That means that it can potentially go on to “burn” things that you would normally consider already burnt to hell and gone, and a practical consequence of that is that it’ll start.
Things i won’t work with:
Column vi of the periodic table doesn’t start out smelly, but that’s probably just because we run on its first element, oxygen.
Animal ancestors of ours who felt woozy all the time from the stench of oxygen didn’t leave much of a legacy, so we’re all pretty positive about it.
To separate general fact from fiction, we grabbed a few of these videos and also turned to the experts and asked other housecleaners about what they won’t or wouldn’t do after years of experience in the field:
Expect a cleaner to do a pile of dishes or clean up after a pet.
“cleaning litter boxes or cleaning up after pets who have.
Things i won’t work with:
Everyone knows hydrogen peroxide, hooh.
The 30% solution will go to work immediately bleaching you out if you are so careless as to spill some on you.