Blood is contain iron ligand (Fe 2+), and sensitive with contact and can react with hydrogen sulfide (H2S) into iron (II) sulfide (FeS), Iron (II) sulfide is black color not red like normal blood..
ChemicalForce is it posible to make thiols or org. sulfides from Aluminnium sulfide using anhydrous alcohols or their sodium salts. Purely academic interest//
@simplepyro7897 you should fear carbon monoxide more, at least H2S is heavy and very uncommon, CO is as deadly, can't be smelt in any concentration, will kill you as efficiently, and can be generated in quite a few ways in day to day life
in extremely low concentrations you can smell it but as it rises it more or less overloads the receptors in your nose that can sense it and the smell stops. Problem is it does not take much of an increase in concentration from that point before major health risks are a threat. I have to wear a detector for that shit at some jobsites. Risk of a release is small but if the wrong systems spring a leak you need to get out fast. thankfuly its never gone off.
Hydrogen binds hemoglobin more aggressively than hydrogen cyanide. But I can't remember whether hydrogen cyanide is a competitive inhibitor like Carson monoxide or an allosteric inhibitor
CN- complexes iron ions like N3-. FeS is a very insoluble (low K(sp)) 'salt' and is removed from the complex with the porphyrin ring system of the heme prosthetic group of hemoglobins, myoglobins and cytochromes. All bound Oxygen is released if you add any of the Fe-ion binding poisons. Making the blood more or less 'frothy'. I've just tried it with cyanide.
😂 they don’t have to stash anything bro. Shit loads of it is underground in quantities you can’t comprehend. He really doesn’t give the toxicity any credit here either. 1000ppm is instant one breath death. 1% = 10,000ppm.
Why would they? It is incredibly abundant found pretty much anywhere with decaying organic material. It is deadly in very, very low amounts. In Canada (and I assume other places in the world) we have courses on H2S awareness, it is a requirement to work in pretty much any oil and gas related work. I've been getting that ticket for over a decade now (the ticket only lasts 3 years) and they are still adding new information to the course materials every time I renew it.
@@donatotedesco2134I think Americans should say Aluminium because it flows with chromium, barium, selenium etc. Heard someone pronounce iron as Ay-ron on TV once. It intrigued me.
Does the blood turn black because iron in hemoglobin reacts with H2S to form iron sulfide?
That sounds highly likely
That wad my guess too
He said exactly that in the full video so yes it's iron sulfide turning the blood black
That is exactly what occurs.
Yes
And that all can come from burning aluminium and sulfur and letting it sit inside a humid place that is not well ventilated... that is just terrifying
Blood is contain iron ligand (Fe 2+), and sensitive with contact and can react with hydrogen sulfide (H2S) into iron (II) sulfide (FeS), Iron (II) sulfide is black color not red like normal blood..
Which means you'd suffocate on a cellular level. Terrifying stuff!
I was expecting a less bubbly mess and more of an instant liquid skin discoloration
It’s scary how easy it is to make.
Kind of hard to restrict. Even heating sulfur with paraffin generates it
H2S resembles the smell of rotten eggs but sense of smell is lost at around 100 ppm. Instant death occurs at 1000 ppm.
I used to react iron sulphide with sulphuric acid to annoy my mum. I had no idea that the H2S stink could kill us, though. Luckily, it didn't.
When the consentration is strong enough you can't smell it. Then it is time to be conserned.
@@boeesen
Oh, dear, I can't! ;)
Seriously, though: interesting, thank you.
@@boeesenit goes, no smell, smell, bad smell, no smell, OH THE LORD IS COMING.
@@planetoforts
Never heard that one, thanks.
It also kills sense of smell.
If you smell 'sewer' ventilate and call your local plumber.
ChemicalForce is it posible to make thiols or org. sulfides from Aluminnium sulfide using anhydrous alcohols or their sodium salts. Purely academic interest//
NICE! So it should smell just from the moisture in the air?
For some odd reason h2s only has a smell in small concentrations, but from this reaction it'll be too high to smell
And death will be very quiet
@@guythat779
That's the reason I fear that gas the most.... Like The John wick I would stay away from 😮
@simplepyro7897 you should fear carbon monoxide more, at least H2S is heavy and very uncommon, CO is as deadly, can't be smelt in any concentration, will kill you as efficiently, and can be generated in quite a few ways in day to day life
in extremely low concentrations you can smell it but as it rises it more or less overloads the receptors in your nose that can sense it and the smell stops. Problem is it does not take much of an increase in concentration from that point before major health risks are a threat.
I have to wear a detector for that shit at some jobsites. Risk of a release is small but if the wrong systems spring a leak you need to get out fast. thankfuly its never gone off.
Imagine what would happen if you had an IV line with this in you
I guess we have different definitions for 'instantly'.
you can also prepare H2S by mixing powdered sulphur and potassium hydroxide, the take the precipitate and add hydrochloric acid
Is there a considerable pH change in the destroyed blood?
Uhh...I sniffed a lot of it during my chemistry lab class....
H2s is awesome one of my favorite things for sure I add sodium sulfide to my water sometimes and drink it
Hydrogen binds hemoglobin more aggressively than hydrogen cyanide. But I can't remember whether hydrogen cyanide is a competitive inhibitor like Carson monoxide or an allosteric inhibitor
carson monoxide lol
CN- complexes iron ions like N3-. FeS is a very insoluble (low K(sp)) 'salt' and is removed from the complex with the porphyrin ring system of the heme prosthetic group of hemoglobins, myoglobins and cytochromes.
All bound Oxygen is released if you add any of the Fe-ion binding poisons. Making the blood more or less 'frothy'. I've just tried it with cyanide.
@@SherbertHusky I went to high school with Carson
*aluminium
instantly i see
The rethult ith tokthic😂
That is scary
Now I want to see CO and blood
you can find it in my latest video on the channel
Silan
Ya that can't be good to breath. I'm sure our illustrious gov't has some stashed to use on us...
Indeed
😂 they don’t have to stash anything bro. Shit loads of it is underground in quantities you can’t comprehend.
He really doesn’t give the toxicity any credit here either.
1000ppm is instant one breath death.
1% = 10,000ppm.
@adamtalpash6469 I believe that. Really 1 breath death huh? Marvelous...
Why would they? It is incredibly abundant found pretty much anywhere with decaying organic material. It is deadly in very, very low amounts.
In Canada (and I assume other places in the world) we have courses on H2S awareness, it is a requirement to work in pretty much any oil and gas related work. I've been getting that ticket for over a decade now (the ticket only lasts 3 years) and they are still adding new information to the course materials every time I renew it.
@NoblePineapples ooooh k...
WTF is ALUMINUM?! do you have had a stroke?
Murricans say aluminum. British English is aluminium
@@donatotedesco2134I think Americans should say Aluminium because it flows with chromium, barium, selenium etc. Heard someone pronounce iron as Ay-ron on TV once. It intrigued me.