xyz
October 26th, 2003, 10:02 AM
As of writing this, I have just spent the last hour and a half cleaning up 200mL of 98% Sulfuric Acid from all over the wall, floor, and several shelves in my lab, using 10 litres of water and 500g of NaHCO3. I was lucky that I was already wearing my "lab clothes" (the ones with lots of burns and acid holes in them already:)) and didn't end up wrecking any good clothes. My lab clothes have a few more small holes now, but fortunately I didn't get any on my skin while cleaning it up.
I was also lucky that nothing important was damaged by the acid (but it was an absolute bitch to clean up). I am glad that I keep all my other chems in well sealed containers, the last thing I want is for it to react with a nitrate and make an acid that is much nastier to clean up. My lab has concrete floors instead of carpet which is another thing I am very glad of right now.
The way I managed to get into this predicament was by having the abovementioned acid inside a small plastic bottle that managed to hold the acid for several hours before the bottom was eaten away. I had assumed that all plastics were safe from H2SO4 and that only HNO3 attacked plastic:o, this was because my H2SO4 came in a plasic container, I have used plastic containers for it before, and I have never read anything about it attacking plastics.
Anyway, it appears that a few types of plastic can be attacked by H2SO4, which is something that I should have known but didn't. I hope that someone else can learn from this dumb mistake as it is always better to learn from someone else's mistake than make the same mistake yourself.
I was also lucky that nothing important was damaged by the acid (but it was an absolute bitch to clean up). I am glad that I keep all my other chems in well sealed containers, the last thing I want is for it to react with a nitrate and make an acid that is much nastier to clean up. My lab has concrete floors instead of carpet which is another thing I am very glad of right now.
The way I managed to get into this predicament was by having the abovementioned acid inside a small plastic bottle that managed to hold the acid for several hours before the bottom was eaten away. I had assumed that all plastics were safe from H2SO4 and that only HNO3 attacked plastic:o, this was because my H2SO4 came in a plasic container, I have used plastic containers for it before, and I have never read anything about it attacking plastics.
Anyway, it appears that a few types of plastic can be attacked by H2SO4, which is something that I should have known but didn't. I hope that someone else can learn from this dumb mistake as it is always better to learn from someone else's mistake than make the same mistake yourself.