brianmquinn
Member
A dermatologist knows a lot better how to apply this stuff safely than the bottle you accidently drop on your legs. According to Wikipedia, covering 6% of your skin in Chloroacetic Acid can kill you. Another thing that concerns me in these synthesis steps is the need for boiling Ether in sealed glass tubes. If one of these breaks for whatever reason, you might well have an uncontrolled fuel-air explosive going off right in your lab.
Trichloroacetic Acid and Chloroacetic Acid are very similar in name. But as pointed out earlier do not confuse the two when it comes to how toxic they are. I am a scientist and work in a lab with Trichloroacetic Acid and by the name alone I would have thought that Chloroacetic Acid would be less toxic. That would be wrong. I normally consider the MSDS sheets that come with chemicals to be a joke in that they make everything, including sodium chloride, sound super toxic and dangerious. If this case it would be good to read it.
Oh and ether explosions. I've been in a lab for one of those. Glad I was on the other side of the large room when it happened. Nobody hurt except the pride of the one who caused it. He thought he knew what he was doing when it happened.
Just storing a bottle of ether can cause an explosion when the either forms peroxides that are shock sensitive. Sometimes that old bottle of either can explode when you unscrew the lid. That is because the peroxides can form on the underside of the cap. Turning the cap can set them off. If you see any white solid in a bottle of either that has been stored for any amount of time don't open it. Remember sometimes it is under the cap and can't be seen. At least in the USA the more dangerous ethers are stored in metal bottles to lessen the peroxide risk not to make then easier to be seen but because less peroxides from in metal bottles.
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