autumnal
Enlightened
- Feb 4, 2020
- 1,950
OK, I'm a little confused here.
Back on 14 February I tested my SN using the aquarium method but with slightly sub-optimal methodology (spring water rather than distilled, 250ml water only, 3g of SN rather than 2.5g) as described here. The test strips showed the highest possible concentration of Sodium Nitrite being 80mg/L. So this was an awesome result, even bearing in mind any methodological limitations.
Before testing, the SN was transferred from the ziplock bag it arrived in, into a sealed plastic Tupperware container. The container held the 200g of SN and was around 1/3 full, so 2/3 of the space was empty air. I also put in a desiccant packet I had spare, to help absorb any moisture. The container was kept in a dark cupboard away from light and any temperature extremes.
Today I decided to retest, now having access to distilled water, more precise scales and larger container sizes. I followed the PPH method exactly as described here. This time I got vastly different results. Bottle 1 (not meant for testing but I did anyway) had a concentration of 10mg/L and Bottle 2 was only 5mg/L.
Puzzled by these results being vastly lower than the previous occasion, I mixed up a fresh batch of solution using lethal quantities, that is 35g of SN in 100ml tap water (I had used up all my distilled water in the previous tests). When tested, this mixture was only 1mg/L!
So my questions are:
1. Has my SN degraded over the time between the first and second testing occasions?
2. Based on the level in Bottle 2 of only 5mg/L, is my SN now insufficient for lethal purposes?
3. How is it possible that a lethal dose of 35g/100mL tap water can have a lower concentration of SN (1mg/L) than the heavily diluted amount in Bottle 2 did (5mg/L)?
4. If the SN has degraded, is it because there was too much empty air space in the container for it to react with? If I need to get a new batch, should I be vacuum-sealing it instead? I do have one of those Tupperware containers that you attach the vacuum pump to and pump the air out. Could the dessicant packet have done something?
Thanks in advance for any advice.
Back on 14 February I tested my SN using the aquarium method but with slightly sub-optimal methodology (spring water rather than distilled, 250ml water only, 3g of SN rather than 2.5g) as described here. The test strips showed the highest possible concentration of Sodium Nitrite being 80mg/L. So this was an awesome result, even bearing in mind any methodological limitations.
Before testing, the SN was transferred from the ziplock bag it arrived in, into a sealed plastic Tupperware container. The container held the 200g of SN and was around 1/3 full, so 2/3 of the space was empty air. I also put in a desiccant packet I had spare, to help absorb any moisture. The container was kept in a dark cupboard away from light and any temperature extremes.
Today I decided to retest, now having access to distilled water, more precise scales and larger container sizes. I followed the PPH method exactly as described here. This time I got vastly different results. Bottle 1 (not meant for testing but I did anyway) had a concentration of 10mg/L and Bottle 2 was only 5mg/L.
Puzzled by these results being vastly lower than the previous occasion, I mixed up a fresh batch of solution using lethal quantities, that is 35g of SN in 100ml tap water (I had used up all my distilled water in the previous tests). When tested, this mixture was only 1mg/L!
So my questions are:
1. Has my SN degraded over the time between the first and second testing occasions?
2. Based on the level in Bottle 2 of only 5mg/L, is my SN now insufficient for lethal purposes?
3. How is it possible that a lethal dose of 35g/100mL tap water can have a lower concentration of SN (1mg/L) than the heavily diluted amount in Bottle 2 did (5mg/L)?
4. If the SN has degraded, is it because there was too much empty air space in the container for it to react with? If I need to get a new batch, should I be vacuum-sealing it instead? I do have one of those Tupperware containers that you attach the vacuum pump to and pump the air out. Could the dessicant packet have done something?
Thanks in advance for any advice.