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CycloRook
Hazard to Self
Posts: 89
Registered: 2-4-2018
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Mood: No Mood
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I have a question. Can you use a dishwasher to clean glassware ?
I noticed that dish detergent is a great cleaner in general.
If I ran glassware through my dishwasher then took it out and ran the dishwasher empty several time to clean it would that present a health hazard ?
I think in general this is a bad idea
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Tsjerk
International Hazard
Posts: 3032
Registered: 20-4-2005
Location: Netherlands
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Depends on what you use the glassware for. Mercury? Probably better not. Kitchen salt? Shouldn't be a problem.
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Rainwater
National Hazard
Posts: 919
Registered: 22-12-2021
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Mood: indisposition to activity
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If in dought, incineration will decompose most waste products, no heavy metals please. But most organics are substantially reduced.
I have a pressureized container bleeding into the air inlet of my forge burner.
12cfm air
6psi propane
150ml of byproducts from making dixoane
Can process about 2 liter per minute. Depending on how energetic the combustion is and now much water is present.
This was . Very flammable.
https://youtu.be/RqdhXs26fE8
"You can't do that" - challenge accepted
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Fyndium
International Hazard
Posts: 1192
Registered: 12-7-2020
Location: Not in USA
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This is a topic that has interested me for some time.
Are there any studies how much soluble OR insoluble mercury is left in a glass beaker after it has been thoroughly washed and cleaned and rinsed?
I would presume the amounts are extremely small, but detectable with sufficient equipment even after ordinary washing procedure, because glass is
non-porous surface. Acid washing would likely be pretty exclusive.
I'm not paving a slope for using mercury laced pyrex for cooking after you've finished cooking, just out of interest.
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ManyInterests
National Hazard
Posts: 930
Registered: 19-5-2019
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Quote: | This is a topic that has interested me for some time.
Are there any studies how much soluble OR insoluble mercury is left in a glass beaker after it has been thoroughly washed and cleaned and rinsed?
I would presume the amounts are extremely small, but detectable with sufficient equipment even after ordinary washing procedure, because glass is
non-porous surface. Acid washing would likely be pretty exclusive.
I'm not paving a slope for using mercury laced pyrex for cooking after you've finished cooking, just out of interest. |
One way of doing that is to never use the same things you use for chemistry for cooking. I have two glass baking dishes and I only use them for
chemistry.
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Mateo_swe
National Hazard
Posts: 541
Registered: 24-8-2019
Location: Within EU
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Never use chemistry glassware for cooking or something you eat or drink and never use cooking tings for chemistry unless they stay chemistry only
after.
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