joe69cool
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H2S
I'm preparing to generate some H2S for an experient. I'm concerned about its toxicity. Would preparing it outdoors with a gas-mask be enough or is
it easily absorbed through the skin? I looked at some MSDS but I couldnt get a handle on this issue.
\"Why oh why didn\'t I take the blue pill?\"
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Oxydro
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Um, I believe that it is toxic by inhalation only but doesn't it strike you that if you can't answer a question like that to your satisfaction you
would be better off not making something that deadly? No second chances, and a false sense of security after a brief warning.
"Our interest's on the dangerous side of things" -- Browning
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16MillionEyes
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How much of this stuff are you making? If you need the H2S for its reducing properties then I'd suggest using thioacetamide. Just add a few drops to
your solution and heat it up, the H2S will appear as aqueous and do its job. No stinky toxic gas evolved (just a negligible amount if you use just
enough to react your solution). But if you really need it as a gas then if you do it outdoors you should be fine (unless you do something obviously
stupid like stick the test tube inside a nostril or something). Just don't make too much of it or the smell no longer will help you keep away as the
smell fades away even though concentration might not be getting smaller.
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woelen
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I myself sometimes experiment with toxic gasses, but when I make larger quantities, I do this on a windy day, with my back directed towards the wind.
As long as you don't make more than gram quantities there hardly will be any risk if you do this outside on a windy day.
Another safety measure is to step back a few meters, every time you smell the gas. In this way you won't inhale so much that your sense of smell may
become numbed. If the latter occurs, then things may become dangerous, because the warning effect is not present anymore.
If you want to make larger quantities (e.g. > 10 gram) then you really need a good fumehood, or you should wear a suitable gas mask.
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chemrox
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By all mean do this outside. Americans are way over cautious about these things. If you have a respirator, the kind with cartridges, and you have
the cartridge that stops h2S, you could do it anywhere. A hood is nice but for one experiment? Go for it. If you have the respirator on and you
smell H2S either it isn't fitted properly or the cartridge isn't right for the application. Butyl acetate is often used to check fit. The folks that
sell the respirators sell little fit test cartridges. Having said all that, I had a chem set as a kid and one of the experiments was making an H2S
gas genrator in a test tube. Maybe that explains some things ...anyway, a windy day works for me .. or a nearby exhaust fan...what's the experiment?
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