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well2hell

Student
Nov 6, 2022
102
Potassium nitrite (PN) and sodium nitrite (SN) are just two different salts of the same lethal agent, namely, nitrite. Therefore, both can be used interchangeably* as long as the dose of nitrite consumed remains the same.

Nitrite has a molecular weight of 46.01 u; PN's is 85.10 u and SN's is 69.00 u. This means that PN contains 54.1% nitrite while SN comes in slightly higher at 66.7% nitrite, so a correction factor of 1.23 needs to be applied when transposing SN to PN doses.

In other words, the nitrite equivalent of 25g SN is 25 * 1.23 = 31g PN.

* The oral LD50 of potassium chloride is approximately 2.5 g/kg. Given that the molecular weights of potassium and potassium chloride are 39.10 u and 74.55 u respectively, potassium chloride contains 52.4% potassium. Assuming that chloride does not significantly contribute to the toxicity of potassium chloride, extrapolating from the value above gives a LD50 for potassium of 1.3 g/kg. Since a dose of 31g PN contains 14g potassium, potassium does not have a lethal role in PN (except for individuals weighing under 11 kg / 24 lb… i.e. babies).

@Meretlein tagging you since you were wondering about the dosage equivalencies between SN and PN in this post.

Edit: note that PN is a food additive with the same uses as SN. It is labeled as E249 in the European Union and SN as E250.
 
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