Maybe stick to the stuff that comes out of the tap.
Maybe stick to the stuff that comes out of the tap.
Maybe stick to the stuff that comes out of the tap.
For those interested in learning about uranium peroxide: https://pubchem.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/compound/Uranium-peroxide
Suprisingly mild and not very reactive. And I wondered if this even exists.
Uranium - it makes things safer!
it is a confirmed human carcinogen.
See, that's the good stuff
Thanks. I was wondering if it was a liquid or not. Crystaline solid.
Ok, but definitely don't drink it if it's liquid then.
Thanks for saying that saved me a click
Not with that attitude temperature
ty for the link, i learned that all h2o4u molecules look like a tiny happy frog jumping at your face
Oh my god I didn't think it was an actual molecule...
Sweet, a yellow cake dispenser! It's strangely difficult to acquire
Pfff U(IV)? More like U's a little bitch that can't add that weeny little O-O single bond. The only oxyuranium species worthy of entering my body are stripped of all valence electrons. Good ol peruranic acid, U(O)2(OH)2, that's the real quencher!
This must be what Nuka-Cola is made of.
Don't want to drink pure H₂O either...
I mean, unless I'm missing something it should be fine as long as you get salts another way.
Correct. I have no idea why people are freaking out over drinking water. We constantly eat and drink things that have wildly different osmolarity than our cells and yet here we still are. Our stomach and intestinal mucosa cells are not going to burst if we accidentally drink a milkshake (a hyperosmotic solution).
Going to link the comment of @ParsnipWitch@feddit.de, as that's a better explanation than I could have provided: https://feddit.de/comment/2620197
No? What would it be like?
Kishida getting real creative with marketing for that Fukushima Water.
wouldn't it be uranium dihydrogen per tetraoxide?
I believe that would be H2O2?
H2O4 would be Tetraoxidane if I’m not mistaken, but neither of those takes into account the U (Uranium) at the end there.
Of course, I don’t know much about how things would go beyond production, they may reach with each other and ultimately settle into something else.
I learned a rhyme once that's relevant:
Danny was a scientist, but now he is no more, for what he thought was H2O, was H2SO4
Reminds me on this chemist joke:
A man brought his chemist friend to the bar for a drink with the other friends. When asked what he wanted, the chemist decided that since she's the designated driver, she'll order water. "I'll have some H20, please!" the chemist said, with the man replying "I'll have some H20 too!"
The man died of ingesting hydrogen peroxide.
And the joke's alternative anti joke punchline:
The bartender served them both water, because he fully understands everyday human interaction and translated the request as intended.
Well, for as much as you use the chemical formula for water in your everyday human interactions, anyway
Little Billy was a chemist
Little Billy is no more
For what he thought was H2O
Was H2SO4
I've heard it as:
For better meter: Johnny was a chemist's son, but Johnny is no more / What Johnny thought was H2O you get the idea.
To which the bartender replied "I'm sorry, but we don't have icosatomic hydrogen"
I love the sequel to that one, too. Same set up. ... The first man orders H20 The second man says "why would you say that? It's incredibly pretentious, and you look like a jerk. Just order water." The first man frowns and sulks because his murder plot has been foiled.
is it called hydrogen peroxide because there’s one hydrogen per oxide?
It's actually because "per" is used to denote the maximum "proportion" of an element. Compare "oxide", which is just one oxygen. "per-" is also used in chemistry in the sense of the Latin prefix "per-", which attaches to adjectives and verbs and such to convey the sense of "very" or "all the way". For example, sometimes we refer to molecules as being "perdeuterated" when all hydrogen atoms have been replaced with the heavy isotope deuterium.
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Peroxide