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Household Chemical Products That Don't Belong Together

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AnnaBlack335
Household Chemical Products That Don't Belong Together

Some ordinary household chemical products can never be mixed. These mixed chemical products may produce a toxic or fatal compound, or they may cause adverse consequences. Here’s what you need to know about chemical products.

 

Bleach + Ammonia = Toxic Chloramine Vapor

Bleach and ammonia are two common household cleaners. They must not be mixed. They react together to form toxic chloramine vapor and may lead to the production of toxic hydrazine.

 

Effects: chloramine can burn eyes and the respiratory system, resulting in internal organ damage. Hydrazine may be produced if there is enough ammonia in the mixture. Hydrazine is not only toxic but also potentially explosive. The best case is discomfort; The worst case is death.

Bleach + Rubbing Alcohol = Toxic Chloroform

Sodium hypochlorite in household bleach reacts with ethanol or isopropanol in external alcohol to form chloroform. Other potentially harmful compounds include Chloroacetone, dichloroacetate, and hydrochloric acid.

Function: inhalation of enough chloroform will make you unconscious and make you unable to breathe fresh air. Breathing too much will kill you. Hydrochloric acid can cause chemical burns. These chemicals can cause organ damage and lead to cancer and other diseases later in life.

Bleach + Vinegar = Toxic Chlorine Gas

Have you noticed a common theme? Bleach is a highly active chemical and should not be mixed with other cleaners. Some people mix bleach with vinegar to increase the cleaning power of chemicals. This is not a good idea because the reaction produces chlorine. This reaction is not limited to vinegar (weak acetic acid). Avoid mixing other household acids with bleach, such as lemon juice or some toilet cleaners.

Usage: chlorine has been used as a chemical warfare agent, so you don’t want to produce or inhale chlorine at home. Chlorine can damage the skin, mucous membranes, and respiratory system. At best, it will make you cough and stimulate your eyes, nose, and mouth. It can cause chemical burns, which can be fatal if you are exposed to high concentrations of air or cannot touch fresh air.

Vinegar + Peroxide = Peracetic Acid

You may want to mix various chemicals to make more powerful products, but cleaning products are the worst choice to play the role of the home pharmacist! Acetic acid (weak acetic acid) combines with hydrogen peroxide to produce peracetic acid. The resulting chemical is a more effective disinfectant, but it is also corrosive, so you turn relatively safe household chemicals into dangerous chemicals.

Efficacy: peracetic acid will stimulate your eyes and nose and may cause chemical burns. 

Peroxide + Henna Hair Dye = Hair Nightmare

If you dye your hair at home, you are likely to encounter this annoying chemical reaction. If you use Henna Hair Dye, the chemical hair dye package warns you not to use the product. Similarly, Henna Hair Dye warns you not to use commercial dyes. Why this warning? Henna products other than henna contain metal salts, not just crushed plant substances. This metal has an exothermic reaction with hydrogen peroxide in other hair colors, which will cause a skin reaction, burn you, make your hair fall off, and produce terrible and unpredictable colors in the residual hair.

Function: hydrogen peroxide can remove the existing color on the hair, so it is easier to add a new color. When it reacts with metal salts (usually not present in hair), it oxidizes them. This will destroy the pigment of henna dye and leave a mark on your hair. The best case? The hair is dry, damaged, and strange in color. What’s the worst case? Welcome to the wonderful world of wigs.

Baking Soda + Vinegar = Mostly Water

Although the chemicals listed above add up to produce toxic substances, mixing baking soda with vinegar produces ineffective substances. Well, if you want to produce carbon dioxide gas for chemical volcanoes, this combination is great, but if you want to clean with chemicals, it’s in vain.

Function: baking soda (sodium bicarbonate) reacts with vinegar (weak acetic acid) to produce carbon dioxide gas, sodium acetate, and most water. If you want to make hot ice, it’s a worthwhile response. Unless you’re mixing chemicals for a scientific project, don’t bother.

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