User Controls
question about eating lsd
-
2017-07-06 at 6:28 PM UTCi usually wash blotters down with a drink to make sure they reach the stomach quicker. i still trip fucking hard. so obviously the 'acid gets absorbed into blood before it reaches stomach' theory is bullshit. once a chemical gets into the bloodstream it is only seconds until it reaches the brain. so if that were true it wouldn't take so long after swallowing before the effects were noticed.
spectroll talking bollocks as usual.
. -
2017-07-06 at 6:28 PM UTC
Originally posted by 霍比特人 Chemistry is not legos, spectral. Hydrochloric acid is its own thing. It is not hydrogen + chlorine when it comes to chemical reactions. If this were true, drinking piss would lead you to spew out a bunch of chlorine gas because of the ammonia. But obviously that doesn't happen.
This is highschool chemistry, guys.
breh molecules dissociate into ions in an aqueous solution. are you retarded? -
2017-07-06 at 6:29 PM UTC
Originally posted by NARCassist i usually wash blotters down with a drink to make sure they reach the stomach quicker. i still trip fucking hard. so obviously the 'acid gets absorbed into blood before it reaches stomach' theory is bullshit. once a chemical gets into the bloodstream it is only seconds until it reaches the brain. so if that were true it wouldn't take so long after swallowing before the effects were noticed.
spectroll talking bollocks as usual.
.
yea but so is the other dude. -
2017-07-06 at 6:35 PM UTCThis thread is now about people who don't know what they are talking about.
-
2017-07-06 at 7:13 PM UTC
-
2017-07-06 at 7:15 PM UTC
-
2017-07-06 at 7:15 PM UTC
-
2017-07-06 at 7:23 PM UTC
Originally posted by 霍比特人 You need to re-take chemistry if you think there's a bunch of chlorine swishing around in your stomach. It's not stupid to ask questions, but it is stupid to be told exactly how you're wrong and to still claim you're right.
Sorry man but you are 100% verifiably wrong.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hydrochloric_acid
Check out the "structure and reactions" section for the chemical equation. Furthermore it states that HCl is a strong acid which dissociates completely into ions when in an aqueous solution. -
2017-07-06 at 7:38 PM UTCare all of you really this fucking stupid?
-
2017-07-06 at 7:46 PM UTC
Originally posted by greenplastic are all of you really this fucking stupid?
no, not stupid. it just seems you are asking a question to which there has been little study done. so if you want to know the answer i suggest you start with these
https://research.unc.edu/files/2013/03/CCM3_039065.pdf
https://www.grants.gov/web/grants/applicants/apply-for-grants/step-1-download-an-application-package.html
. -
2017-07-06 at 7:48 PM UTC
Originally posted by NARCassist no, not stupid. it just seems you are asking a question to which there has been little study done. so if you want to know the answer i suggest you start with these
https://research.unc.edu/files/2013/03/CCM3_039065.pdf
https://www.grants.gov/web/grants/applicants/apply-for-grants/step-1-download-an-application-package.html
.
I don't mean because no one has the answer, I just mean the obvious and flagrant ignorance of spectral and that chinese guy. -
2017-07-06 at 7:52 PM UTCthat chinese guy is §m£ÂgØL btw.
. -
2017-07-06 at 8 PM UTC
-
2017-07-06 at 8:14 PM UTCDissociation =/= Degradation
Do you even dissociation constant? The amount of hydrochloric acid splitting is actually pretty low. The chart goes from 1-30 with the higher end being less stable, and the pka of hydrochloric acid is at -4.
It also isn't the only thing in the stomach so if you want to go figuring that out its on you.
Faggot. -
2017-07-06 at 8:25 PM UTC
Originally posted by greenplastic Well, he's fucking stupid, and not only is he stupid but he's extremely confident that his stupidity is correct, which it is not.
Why is it always the stupidest people who think they are the most correct? You couldn't even be bothered to look up dissociation, and had you actually read the wiki article you posted I'm sure you would've found something about dissociation constants.
You cannot even begin to comprehend my ultimate power. -
2017-07-06 at 8:31 PM UTC
Originally posted by 霍比特人 Dissociation =/= Degradation
Do you even dissociation constant? The amount of hydrochloric acid splitting is actually pretty low. The chart goes from 1-30 with the higher end being less stable, and the pka of hydrochloric acid is at -4.
It also isn't the only thing in the stomach so if you want to go figuring that out its on you.
Faggot.
LOL
In aqueous HCl, the hydrogen and chlorine ions completely dissociate. That's what dissociation means. LSD hasn't even come into the picture yet at this point. Your stomach is full of aqueous HCl, meaning it's full of chlorine ions.
Originally posted by 霍比特人 Dissociation =/= Degradation
Do you even dissociation constant? The amount of hydrochloric acid splitting is actually pretty low. The chart goes from 1-30 with the higher end being less stable, and the pka of hydrochloric acid is at -4.
It also isn't the only thing in the stomach so if you want to go figuring that out its on you.
Faggot.
bro are you serious? straight from wikipedia:The strength of an acid refers to its ability or tendency to lose a proton (H+). A strong acid is one that completely ionizes (dissociates) in a solution (provided there is sufficient solvent). In water, one mole of a strong acid HA dissolves yielding one mole of H+ (as hydronium ion H3O+) and one mole of the conjugate base, A−. Essentially, none of the non-ionized acid HA remains. Examples of strong acids are hydrochloric acid (HCl), hydroiodic acid (HI), hydrobromic acid (HBr), perchloric acid (HClO4), nitric acid (HNO3) and sulfuric acid (H2SO4). In aqueous solution, each of these essentially ionizes 100%.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Acid_strength
Now we have another fucking moron here who thinks a valid argument is "ur an idiot, read more then u'll see where im right"
get the fuck out infinitycuck the second -
2017-07-06 at 8:32 PM UTC
Originally posted by 霍比特人 Why is it always the stupidest people who think they are the most correct? You couldn't even be bothered to look up dissociation, and had you actually read the wiki article you posted I'm sure you would've found something about dissociation constants.
You cannot even begin to comprehend my ultimate power.
Answer your own question, dipshit. Why is it you think you're correct when you are unable to provide anything supporting this opinion you just made up about something that is taught in elementary chemistry? -
2017-07-06 at 8:37 PM UTCThe pka of hydrochloric acid is also not -4
are you making some lame troll attempt or are you really this arrogant and stupid? -
2017-07-06 at 8:39 PM UTCHere's a source from UCSB also stating that hydrochloric acid is a strong acid, and dissociates full in water:
http://clas.sa.ucsb.edu/staff/Resource%20folder/Chem109ABC/Acid,%20Base%20Strength/Table%20of%20Acids%20w%20Kas%20and%20pKas.pdf -
2017-07-06 at 8:53 PM UTCChrist.
http://www.chembuddy.com/?left=BATE&right=dissociation_constants
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dissociation_constant
When they say STRONG vs WEAK dissociation on that acid page they aren't talking about how much of the compound dissociates but rather the ability a compound has to dissociate into its base parts. If you keep reading the next few paragraphs of what you linked you'd see that. Like ABC turning into AB + C instead of A + B + C. Get it?
Dissociation constant is about how well it actually dissociates and does not have to do with what its dissociating into. It's about stability. We can measure this, again, by the PKA value which I just linked you to.
And this is to say nothing for the binding constant.