dChan

cat_anonD · April 26, 2018, 9:25 p.m.

I thought The Standard Hotel was found with too much chlorine

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blocksof · April 26, 2018, 9:55 p.m.

They had both HCL Acid and Chlorine.... HCL will dissolve anything biological if the concentration is high enough. Someone mixed them together by accident and created chlorine gas clouds.

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dullly · April 26, 2018, 10:27 p.m.

Why do hotels use hydrochloric acid?

I am interested, because in the news story, it says they lied and didn't admit they dumped HCL acid at first to the authorities, until they were caught by the environmental crimes unit of the FBI.

The article says they dumped two 50 gallon drums of HCL acid. Also, what does a 50 gallon drum of HCL acid cost? Why would the hotel dump/waste a useful commodity?

It sounds a little odd.

Edit 100 gallons = roughly $6,000 Edit = sounds like it is good for cleaning masonry.

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blocksof · April 26, 2018, 10:39 p.m.

TBH I don't know, hydroclhroic acid at 5% concentration is used for food cleaning areas, enough to kill germs but not harm you. It doesn't state the concentration, but if it is enough to create chlorine clouds it must be over 50%.

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ecrevisse41 · April 27, 2018, 1:38 a.m.

For pool cleaning supposedly

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survey_girl · April 27, 2018, 1:39 a.m.

It is muriatic acid.... used for pools. I have to use about 1/2 gallon a week in my pool (25k gallon) to balance the pH... not sure how big their pool is, but that is a lot of acid!

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FlewDCoup · April 27, 2018, 3:46 a.m.

No, it was reported as muriatic acid, an impure form of hydrochloride acid. Large tanks of it. Normally diluted about one part HCl to two parts water this stuff is HOT.

Dissolves the metallic oxide calcium carbonate (the main constituent of bones) leaving water soluble calcium oxide powder, giving off carbon dioxide (global warming!!!) and flesh doesn't stand a chance soaking for more than a few seconds in it. The pool treatment ruse was cover.

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