Sciencemadness Discussion Board
Not logged in [Login ]
Go To Bottom

Printable Version  
Author: Subject: Strange feeling in lungs after hydrogen
Adas
National Hazard
****




Posts: 711
Registered: 21-9-2011
Location: Slovakia
Member Is Offline

Mood: Sensitive to shock and friction

[*] posted on 6-12-2011 at 11:03
Strange feeling in lungs after hydrogen


Hello SM,

Today I made some hydrogen by the Al/NaOH/water method. I collected it in balloon, I cleaned it with cold water and then I breathed it to have high voice. But now I feel something in my lungs, I can't describe it.

Is this caused by impurities or the hydrogen itself? Or is it just "placebo effect"? :D

Thanks in advance.
View user's profile Visit user's homepage View All Posts By User
resveratrol
Hazard to Self
**




Posts: 65
Registered: 6-11-2010
Member Is Offline

Mood: No Mood

[*] posted on 6-12-2011 at 11:20


physical asphyxia
View user's profile View All Posts By User
Luftwaffe
Harmless
*




Posts: 31
Registered: 23-8-2011
Member Is Offline

Mood: Curious

[*] posted on 6-12-2011 at 11:22


It's quite possible that the bubbling caused by the liberation of H2 formed an aerosol which contains NaOH. The exposure would be dependant on the molarity of the NaOH solution you made and how much you breathed in.

I took the liberty of searching the experiment and found a quote " Do not breathe in fumes, the vapor is harmful because it contains NaOH."

Heres the link: https://sites.google.com/site/sed525s/demonstrations/exother...

You may be experiencing some lung inflammation.
View user's profile View All Posts By User
Adas
National Hazard
****




Posts: 711
Registered: 21-9-2011
Location: Slovakia
Member Is Offline

Mood: Sensitive to shock and friction

[*] posted on 6-12-2011 at 11:27


Quote: Originally posted by Luftwaffe  
It's quite possible that the bubbling caused by the liberation of H2 formed an aerosol which contains NaOH. The exposure would be dependant on the molarity of the NaOH solution you made and how much you breathed in.

I took the liberty of searching the experiment and found a quote " Do not breathe in fumes, the vapor is harmful because it contains NaOH."

Heres the link: https://sites.google.com/site/sed525s/demonstrations/exother...

You may be experiencing some lung inflammation.


But I was doing it in large wine bottle = almost no vapors went to the balloon + I put some cold water into the balloon and shaked well.

And IF I breathed some NaOH, is it very bad? :/ My lungs don't hurt, I just feel kind of discomfort..

[Edited on 6-12-2011 by Adas]
View user's profile Visit user's homepage View All Posts By User
Luftwaffe
Harmless
*




Posts: 31
Registered: 23-8-2011
Member Is Offline

Mood: Curious

[*] posted on 6-12-2011 at 12:03


Well you can read the MSDS's if you want to scare yourself to death. But in this case I think you'll be fine. :D
View user's profile View All Posts By User
hissingnoise
International Hazard
*****




Posts: 3940
Registered: 26-12-2002
Member Is Offline

Mood: Pulverulescent!

[*] posted on 6-12-2011 at 12:29


If it happened me I'd have it checked out!


View user's profile View All Posts By User
Endimion17
International Hazard
*****




Posts: 1468
Registered: 17-7-2011
Location: shores of a solar sea
Member Is Offline

Mood: speeding through time at the rate of 1 second per second

[*] posted on 6-12-2011 at 12:53


There was some sodium hydroxide aerosol left, obviously. And lungs, together with the whole body filled with chemical receptors is quite sensitive for these things.
Don't inhale hydrogen. One mistake (static electricity, you never know) and you die in a painful fashion.




View user's profile Visit user's homepage View All Posts By User
Adas
National Hazard
****




Posts: 711
Registered: 21-9-2011
Location: Slovakia
Member Is Offline

Mood: Sensitive to shock and friction

[*] posted on 6-12-2011 at 12:57


Thank you, guys. I took a shower and I feel better now. I will never inhale hydrogen again, lol. I'd rather send H2 balloons with messages into the atmosphere xD
I should have washed it with vinegar instead of plain water :D

EDIT: It also diminished my taste

[Edited on 6-12-2011 by Adas]
View user's profile Visit user's homepage View All Posts By User
kuro96inlaila
Hazard to Self
**




Posts: 96
Registered: 21-6-2010
Location: Malaysia
Member Is Offline

Mood: Quietly thinking

[*] posted on 7-12-2011 at 03:49


If you want to experiment with high voice,just go for helium.It is easy to get and far much more safer than hydrogen.



http://www.youtube.com/user/kuro96inlaila

Genetic assortment is the dices of God
View user's profile Visit user's homepage View All Posts By User
White Yeti
National Hazard
****




Posts: 816
Registered: 20-7-2011
Location: Asperger's spectrum
Member Is Offline

Mood: delocalized

[*] posted on 11-12-2011 at 13:34


I know that there are no adverse effects associated with breathing helium (as long as you breathe deeply after every lung-full of helium), but every time I breathe in helium, my arms and hands start to tremble uncontrollably. Does anyone have an idea as to why this is?

I had similar symptoms when I experimented with H2S, but that was mostly due to a mild panic attack after partially losing my sense of smell.




"Ja, Kalzium, das ist alles!" -Otto Loewi
View user's profile View All Posts By User
Adas
National Hazard
****




Posts: 711
Registered: 21-9-2011
Location: Slovakia
Member Is Offline

Mood: Sensitive to shock and friction

[*] posted on 12-12-2011 at 07:23


Quote: Originally posted by White Yeti  
But every time I breathe in helium, my arms and hands start to tremble uncontrollably.


I got the same with this hydrogen! That's probably because body is in shock due to lack of oxygen. And I thought that it was because of the NaOH, lol.
View user's profile Visit user's homepage View All Posts By User
Neil
National Hazard
****




Posts: 556
Registered: 19-3-2008
Member Is Offline

Mood: No Mood

[*] posted on 12-12-2011 at 07:31


Diffusion; you are de-oxygenating your blood and tissue as oxygen leaves the blood for the oxygen free helium, rapid hypoxia results.

The danger of inhaling N2,H2,He etc. Is rapid de-oxygenation not simple asphyxiation.
View user's profile View All Posts By User
Endimion17
International Hazard
*****




Posts: 1468
Registered: 17-7-2011
Location: shores of a solar sea
Member Is Offline

Mood: speeding through time at the rate of 1 second per second

[*] posted on 12-12-2011 at 08:40


Quote: Originally posted by White Yeti  
I know that there are no adverse effects associated with breathing helium (as long as you breathe deeply after every lung-full of helium), but every time I breathe in helium, my arms and hands start to tremble uncontrollably. Does anyone have an idea as to why this is?

I had similar symptoms when I experimented with H2S, but that was mostly due to a mild panic attack after partially losing my sense of smell.


It's localized hypoxia. It shouldn't happen with "perfect" bodies in this manner. It just means that your muscle tissues don't have such high tollerance for lowered oxygen levels.
If not hereditary, or due to old age, this can be alleviated by proper exercise.

I remember my hands trembling while I had my blood pressure measured the first few times, so I've started doing some physical exercise and it stopped. Now it just tingles.

It's a warning sign: "Don't overdo it", and I hope you respect what the body is trying to say. ;)



Quote: Originally posted by Neil  
Diffusion; you are de-oxygenating your blood and tissue as oxygen leaves the blood for the oxygen free helium, rapid hypoxia results.

The danger of inhaling N2,H2,He etc. Is rapid de-oxygenation not simple asphyxiation.


That is asphyxiation. What was it supposed to be?

Deoxygenation is not a strict medical term. It means removal of oxygen. It happens during asphyxia and during poisoning with blood poisons such as carbon(II) oxide or hydrogen sulphide or hydrogen cyanide, when those molecules are better in a competition with oxygen, and are taking over the spots at haemoglobin.

[Edited on 12-12-2011 by Endimion17]




View user's profile Visit user's homepage View All Posts By User
White Yeti
National Hazard
****




Posts: 816
Registered: 20-7-2011
Location: Asperger's spectrum
Member Is Offline

Mood: delocalized

[*] posted on 12-12-2011 at 14:55


Quote: Originally posted by Endimion17  
Deoxygenation is not a strict medical term. It means removal of oxygen. It happens during asphyxia and during poisoning with blood poisons such as carbon(II) oxide or hydrogen sulphide or hydrogen cyanide, when those molecules are better in a competition with oxygen, and are taking over the spots at haemoglobin.


Actually, H2S and HCN are not blood poisons, they block the cytochrome complex at the end of the electron transport chains in your mitochondria. That's cell asphyxiation, much more dangerous because your cells are incapacitated, even if you breathe in more oxygen, your cells cannot make ATP for a while after being blocked.

I think there's a difference between asphyxiation and de-oxygenation; subtle as it may be. De-oxygenation is probably when you breathe in air that is deficient in oxygen while asphyxiation is breathing in air that contains poisons that block enzymes in your body that allow you to carry out cellular respiration.

I'm not a biology expert, so don't take my word for it.




"Ja, Kalzium, das ist alles!" -Otto Loewi
View user's profile View All Posts By User
Endimion17
International Hazard
*****




Posts: 1468
Registered: 17-7-2011
Location: shores of a solar sea
Member Is Offline

Mood: speeding through time at the rate of 1 second per second

[*] posted on 12-12-2011 at 17:23


Quote: Originally posted by White Yeti  
Actually, H2S and HCN are not blood poisons, they block the cytochrome complex at the end of the electron transport chains in your mitochondria. That's cell asphyxiation, much more dangerous because your cells are incapacitated, even if you breathe in more oxygen, your cells cannot make ATP for a while after being blocked.

I think there's a difference between asphyxiation and de-oxygenation; subtle as it may be. De-oxygenation is probably when you breathe in air that is deficient in oxygen while asphyxiation is breathing in air that contains poisons that block enzymes in your body that allow you to carry out cellular respiration.

I'm not a biology expert, so don't take my word for it.


I think haemoglobin gets messed up, too.
I was reffering to "blood poisons" in the warfare agent sense. HCN is in the same group as CO, though it blocks the cellular respiration as well.

As I've said, deoxygenation doesn't have a strict medical sense. It's a broad term used just about everywhere, even in the smelting industry.
Asphyxiation will occur in an atmosphere with lowered partial pressure of oxygen, whether it due to lower absolute pressure of air or just lots of inert gasses take over a certain volume of air.
In medical terms, there's asphyxiation and there's poisoning which can even work together, and deoxygenation is simply an umbrella term, a process that happens in both cases, whether the body is slowly depleted of oxygen because there isn't enought of it, or the system that transmits it is blocked/destroyed, or the system that uses it is blocked/destroyed.

Slow asphyxiation will always lead to initial euphoria, and slow poisoning probably won't. That's why people doing the helium baloons laugh even more while their lips are turning purple, and people poisoned by CO/HCN turn pink without the "happy go lucky" part. (I'm not sure if hydrogen sulphide causes skin to turn pink...)




View user's profile Visit user's homepage View All Posts By User
Neil
National Hazard
****




Posts: 556
Registered: 19-3-2008
Member Is Offline

Mood: No Mood

[*] posted on 13-12-2011 at 07:14


it is, technically, asphyxiation but it is much more dangerous then your everyday getting smothered with a pillow kind of asphyxiation.

Holding your breath lets CO2 collect and that tells your brain that you need to exhale - you can't detect the O2 levels from my understanding.

Inhaling something with no O2 and no CO2 means you are not going to fee the urge to breath AND your lungs are going to be operating in reverse, actually letting the oxygen out of your blood stream and into the oxygen free air. The result is RAPID hypoxia without any urgency to breath, versus a more mundane hypoxia caused by not breathing which lets your brain detect the rise in CO2 and send panic signals to your body.

Inhale a bit of CO2 and you'll feel an 'urgency' to breath.

Side note, Hypoxia in some folk causes a bit of a high, hence all those people who inhale oxygen blocking gasses to giggle.

Some of the lit I saw when training on the safe transport of LN2 suggested that having a failure of a Dewar seal while in an enclosed space, like an elevator, would result in almost certain death as the air entering the Dewar caused a large amount of liquid N2 to boil turning the elevator into a low to no oxygen area. The time to unconsciousness in some people is measurable in tens of seconds.
View user's profile View All Posts By User
Endimion17
International Hazard
*****




Posts: 1468
Registered: 17-7-2011
Location: shores of a solar sea
Member Is Offline

Mood: speeding through time at the rate of 1 second per second

[*] posted on 13-12-2011 at 17:21


I'd rather die from asphyxiation than suffocating. Carbon dioxide reacts with receptors in sinus caroticus, producing horrific pain and panic. I know this shit because I almost died by suffocation, and trust me, you don't want that. People found dead after being smothered have lung lesions and internal bleeding, and drowned people have lungs full of water because they inhale it in their last moments of agony.

Asphyxiation by oxygen depletion is one of the less nasty deaths.




View user's profile Visit user's homepage View All Posts By User
White Yeti
National Hazard
****




Posts: 816
Registered: 20-7-2011
Location: Asperger's spectrum
Member Is Offline

Mood: delocalized

[*] posted on 13-12-2011 at 18:43


Quote: Originally posted by Endimion17  
I'd rather die from asphyxiation than suffocating. Carbon dioxide reacts with receptors in sinus caroticus, producing horrific pain and panic. I know this shit because I almost died by suffocation, and trust me, you don't want that. People found dead after being smothered have lung lesions and internal bleeding, and drowned people have lungs full of water because they inhale it in their last moments of agony.

Asphyxiation by oxygen depletion is one of the less nasty deaths.


I do agree with you, but oxygen depletion can do one of two things, it can kill you or it can cause irreversible damage to your brain and everything else. The latter is also pretty horrid, as you might not die from it but you could potentially become an invalid for life. Whether that is worse than death is up to you.




"Ja, Kalzium, das ist alles!" -Otto Loewi
View user's profile View All Posts By User
Endimion17
International Hazard
*****




Posts: 1468
Registered: 17-7-2011
Location: shores of a solar sea
Member Is Offline

Mood: speeding through time at the rate of 1 second per second

[*] posted on 13-12-2011 at 19:17


Quote: Originally posted by White Yeti  
Quote: Originally posted by Endimion17  
I'd rather die from asphyxiation than suffocating. Carbon dioxide reacts with receptors in sinus caroticus, producing horrific pain and panic. I know this shit because I almost died by suffocation, and trust me, you don't want that. People found dead after being smothered have lung lesions and internal bleeding, and drowned people have lungs full of water because they inhale it in their last moments of agony.

Asphyxiation by oxygen depletion is one of the less nasty deaths.


I do agree with you, but oxygen depletion can do one of two things, it can kill you or it can cause irreversible damage to your brain and everything else. The latter is also pretty horrid, as you might not die from it but you could potentially become an invalid for life. Whether that is worse than death is up to you.


Suffocation leads to brain damage, too. It's not like oxygen stays inside. It is depleted by the metabolism, and carbon dioxide won't help.

Asphyxiation or suffocation, brain damage will happen, so all we're left with is the way we slip into unconsciousness. I choose vertigo and slight euphoria over pain and panic.




View user's profile Visit user's homepage View All Posts By User
Panache
International Hazard
*****




Posts: 1290
Registered: 18-10-2007
Member Is Offline

Mood: Instead of being my deliverance, she had a resemblance to a Kat named Frankenstein

[*] posted on 15-12-2011 at 08:20


given this seems to be a medico thread i'm going to ask a medico sort of question, but off topic completely from the current discussion.
What happens to aluminum shrapnel lodged in the body, are the chemical reactions know? The reason i ask is some 18months ago i inadvertently handled a large amount of al swarf, then wore gloves for a few more hours. Lots of swarf, much of it not visible to the eye is lodged in me. Because of the nature of swarf, you often have a kind of wire ended with a hook, all very small. I theorise that this style of swarf can worm its way deeper and deeper into tissue as the hook prevents reversal and normal motion or movement can cause it to penetrate. Anyway i have found that an area suddenly becomes inflamed and when i investigate its often very deep, however with no visible entry point.
I think i have been abducted by aliens.




View user's profile View All Posts By User
Neil
National Hazard
****




Posts: 556
Registered: 19-3-2008
Member Is Offline

Mood: No Mood

[*] posted on 15-12-2011 at 08:36


Most swarf migrates out. I've had steel swarf stick in, break off below the surface and then come back out so I ended up with the tail stuck in my hand with no connection to the surface.

I couldn't find any med journals specifically on aluminum shrapnel, it seems they lump it under 'metals' and ignore it.
View user's profile View All Posts By User
symboom
International Hazard
*****




Posts: 1143
Registered: 11-11-2010
Location: Wrongplanet
Member Is Offline

Mood: Doing science while it is still legal since 2010

[*] posted on 8-1-2012 at 17:58


hmm probably the aerosol of LiOH formed from reaction of lithium in water.
i coughed from this too.
View user's profile View All Posts By User
garage chemist
chemical wizard
*****




Posts: 1803
Registered: 16-8-2004
Location: Germany
Member Is Offline

Mood: No Mood

[*] posted on 8-1-2012 at 21:32


My teacher used to do the high voice trick by inhaling hydrogen from a steel tank since we did not have any helium at school. He did it dozens of times over the years and never had a single health problem. So I think that pure hydrogen is "safe" to inhale from a health perspective. Of course there's the danger of accidental ignition, but as long as that doesn't happen, you'll be fine.



www.versuchschemie.de
Das aktivste deutsche Chemieforum!
View user's profile View All Posts By User
Arthur Dent
National Hazard
****




Posts: 553
Registered: 22-10-2010
Member Is Offline

Mood: entropic

[*] posted on 10-1-2012 at 04:39


@SthAnDraMrK : post reported...



--- Art is making something out of nothing and selling it. - Frank Zappa ---
View user's profile View All Posts By User

  Go To Top