Externet Posted May 25, 2005 Posted May 25, 2005 Hello. Can we make a list of typical household and over-the-counter chemicals that are obtainable without "prescription' in supermarkets, hardware stores, but not from chemical specialty suppliers ? Like: Sodium bicarbonate Rubbing alcohol Acetic acid (vinegar) Turpentine Acetone Gasoline Kerosene Diesel Naphta Butane Sodium chloride (salt) Paint thinner (whatever it is) Sodium hipochlorite? (the water softener stuff) Epsom salt Borax Graphite (pencil leads) Oils Methylethilketone Cyanoacrylate Please add, rename properly and do corrections... Miguel
blackout Posted May 25, 2005 Posted May 25, 2005 toluene xylene sodium/potassium benzoate acetic acid (60%) NaHSO4 HCl H2SO4 KCl urea sodium carbonate methyl alcohol KNO3 Ca(NO3)2 alum mercurochrome solution methylene blue solution ammonium carbonate H2O2 (3-35%) CaCl2 aluminium (paper, powder...) iron (nails, steel wool...) copper (wires, pipe...) zinc (nails...) nickel gold silver lead (impure fishing leads...) calcium carbide sodium/potassium iodide calcium hypochlorite boric acid iodine tincture sodium carbonate sulfur ethyl alcohol ammonia trisodium phosphate americium?? (salts or metal??) potassium ferrocyanide silver nitrate sugar starch there is a lot more...
akcapr Posted May 25, 2005 Posted May 25, 2005 balckout, I havebt heard of these being easiley obatinable, where do u get them? V calcium carbide sodium/potassium iodide Ca(NO3)2 NaHSO4
H2SO4 Posted May 25, 2005 Posted May 25, 2005 lithium from battery's water KMnO4 KNO3 NaNO3 Just to throw more out there.
akcapr Posted May 25, 2005 Posted May 25, 2005 water?!?! where do u get that- ive always wanted to get some!
YT2095 Posted May 26, 2005 Posted May 26, 2005 as this list could go on forever! here`s something to help you out (and Blikes Database Storage space). here: http://hpd.nlm.nih.gov/cgi-bin/household/list?tbl=TblChemicalsα=A
blackout Posted May 27, 2005 Posted May 27, 2005 I've forgot some, CO2 , propane gas, MnO2 ... calcium carbidesodium/potassium iodide Ca(NO3)2 NaHSO4 NaHSO4, that's used for pools Ca(NO3)2, in garden stores, mixed with paraffin, as a fertilizer for CaC2 and NaI/KI, I'm not sure where I can get them... I've found hexamine and magnesium metal at the canadian tire
calbiterol Posted May 27, 2005 Posted May 27, 2005 Wow this is really quite incredible... Sulfuric and hydrochloric acids are actually pretty household-common, by the way.
H2SO4 Posted May 28, 2005 Posted May 28, 2005 Ya, go to the auto parts store and ask them for some battery acid and theyll hand you over pure 35% H2SO4 for only a few bucks (one quart).
budullewraagh Posted May 28, 2005 Posted May 28, 2005 heh, i tried that. people gave me weird looks, i got nervous. then they said no and told me to leave
H2SO4 Posted May 29, 2005 Posted May 29, 2005 Ya, i hate buying things like that in public because people are stupid and think your gonna tried to do something dangerous with it. They think of "battery acid" as something that on contact with your skin will burn a hole in your hand in like 5 seconds. This is why my dad bought the H2SO4
Etacude Posted June 17, 2005 Posted June 17, 2005 You may also get a tiny amount of americium (Am) from smoke alarm - make sure you extract from an old, discarded one! Also, some agricultural store may sell copper sulphate. ________________ http://www.etacude.com
jdurg Posted June 17, 2005 Posted June 17, 2005 Doesn't matter if it's old or new. Am is used in all smoke alarms and the half-life is so long that even the very first smoke alarm will have Am in it.
YT2095 Posted June 17, 2005 Posted June 17, 2005 here`s one tho, it`s a little off topic and I know I shouldn`t really, but Am has a half life measured in tens of years IIRC, does it ever stabilise? and just become Am? I really CBA to look it all up LOL
jdurg Posted June 17, 2005 Posted June 17, 2005 Am-241 has a half-life of about 432 years. So if one microgram of it was in a smoke detector made in 1573, we'd have half a microgram of it. (And Am wasn't discovered until 1944, so if one gram of it was made way back then, I believe it would have decayed into about 0.93 grams of it today).
Hephaestus Posted June 22, 2005 Posted June 22, 2005 vanillin dissolved in alcohol is synthetic vannila esscence
Bob.C Posted January 12, 2010 Posted January 12, 2010 I read this while doing my science homework and had found a really cool chimical on my moms conditioner earlyer called Methylchloroisothiazolinone ,just thought to add it to your list.
Robert Goodale Posted February 15, 2010 Posted February 15, 2010 I am new and from Kitchener Waterloo ,Ontario Canada (Home of the Blackberry) and changing jobs from a major Building Centre Retailer that sells all the products that regularly come in a Wallmart. My focus is to develop a Melaleuca business . I am looking for third party varification that the off gasing in these Wallmart distrubuted products ( such as Tide and Febreeze)is worse than Melaleucas.(Particularly in the home), I can cetainly tell by breathing but need the science. Trade Secrets and lack of Work Hazardous Material Sheets tells me to dig deeper. Our family feels great using these products. I need some scientific proof to do some demonstrations and referrals for self confidence. I not trying to sell anybody anything in this paragraph just want to develop a better scientic story.
Recommended Posts
Create an account or sign in to comment
You need to be a member in order to leave a comment
Create an account
Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!
Register a new accountSign in
Already have an account? Sign in here.
Sign In Now