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Saturday, December 3, 2011

Why Bleach + Ammonia is Dangerous


You’ve probably heard that you should never mix household bleach with ammonia.  With a little research I’ve discovered the reason why.  Bleach is a solution of sodium hypochlorite, and sodium hypochlorite and ammonia react to form a number of products, depending on the temperature, concentration, and how they are mixed.  To be more precise, in bleach sodium hypochlorite (NaOCl) dissociates into its ionic components

NaOCl → Na+ + OCl-
 
 
OCl- in turn reacts weakly with water to form:
 
 
OCl- + H2O → H+ + Cl- + HOCl, in which the H+ + Cl- portion is just hydrochloric acid.
 
 
Stronger reactions are:
 
 
NH3 + OCl- → OH- + NH2Cl
NH2Cl + OCl- → OH- + NHCl2
NHCl2 + OCl- → OH- + NCl3

The OH- produced in the last three reactions are probably more than enough to neutralize the hydrochloric acid made by the second reaction.  More importantly, the NHxCly compounds produced by the last three are severe irritants of the eyes and mucous membranes and are also toxic. NCl3 can also be explosive, in high enough concentrations. There still other reactions that produce toxic chemicals, but this alone should account for why mixing bleach with ammonia is such a no-no.
I think I understand me. If you think about things -- you know, life, the universe, and everything -- too much, you'll start freaking out. Unfortunately, that's exactly what I do. Life at the edge has its advantages too, however.

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