
angelus
Interfice teipsum, et gaudium invenies.
- Jul 29, 2021
- 92
I've heared about deadly cases of pouring liquid nitrogen in a swimming pool, or people dying inside a car because of carbon monoxide leaks.
This could mean that if the gas is in very large quantities in a small room, it is not possible to fail even if you don't use a p,astic bag or a mask.
Is this true? Can I open the valve of a big tank in the room and be sure I will not end with brain damage?
I also heard haemoglobin loves carbon monoxide and bounds to it even if it's not pure.
Does this make a difference with nitrogen?
I mean can be carbon monoxide deadly and efficient from a stove in the room, but in case of nitrogen not? Is there a problem with the air that is already in the room? Should the room be vacuum sucked first? Or some hundreds cubic feet of nitrogen can displace some 20 cubic feet of air in the room and do the job without failure?
This could mean that if the gas is in very large quantities in a small room, it is not possible to fail even if you don't use a p,astic bag or a mask.
Is this true? Can I open the valve of a big tank in the room and be sure I will not end with brain damage?
I also heard haemoglobin loves carbon monoxide and bounds to it even if it's not pure.
Does this make a difference with nitrogen?
I mean can be carbon monoxide deadly and efficient from a stove in the room, but in case of nitrogen not? Is there a problem with the air that is already in the room? Should the room be vacuum sucked first? Or some hundreds cubic feet of nitrogen can displace some 20 cubic feet of air in the room and do the job without failure?