h a l f b a k e r yNaturally, seismology provides the answer.
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To paraphrase the wikipedia page:
1-butanol is 3 times more toxic than ethanol (if LD50 is the only factor)
1-butanol is 6 times as intoxicating as ethanol
I see a cost-benefit analysis here. Make your benders half as toxic or get twice as drunk before you die. Personally I'm glass half-full
kind of guy.
Get Crunk
http://en.wikipedia...bolism_and_toxicity [sneakythumbs, Jan 12 2010]
not good for you!
http://actrav.itcil...rn/osh/ic/71363.htm [xandram, Jan 12 2010]
Lack of hangover potential
http://www.ncbi.nlm...gov/pubmed/12960505 Interestingly non-hangovery [nineteenthly, Jan 13 2010]
[link]
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How is this an invention? |
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Would it be intoxicating in the same way though? I don't think it would. People use methanol and propanol for these purposes of course, but is this not going to feel horrible? For instance, your link attributes hangovers partly to butanol, so might that not mean that as well as it being relatively toxic, it would also give you the nasties almost immediately? |
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<spoken as McCoy, speaking as Spock>To expect someone to order poison in a bar is... illogical.</saM,saS> |
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is that the stuff you put in refillable cig lighters?
butane... |
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//How is this an invention?// |
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If you mean that a chemical cannot be an invention inandof itself, I updated the title. I hope this helps |
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There is a whole range of alcohols out there, and I have
tasted many of them. Most are pretty disgusting, and only
the lower ones are water miscible to a significant degree.
Butanol is miscible in water only to a modest degree but
tastes so-so; the higher alcohols are generally immiscible,
meaning that cocktails would be layered structures (not
necessarily a bad thing). |
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We seem to have skipped the propanols, which ought to
be interesting. |
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I think we should undertake, inter alia and quid pro
quondam ipse sphinctor, to do a systematic study of the
effects of these other ols. |
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Also, many other organic compounds could be explored as
beverage enhancers. For example, chloroform and ether
must be soluble in alcohol and hence, by extension, in
alcoholic beverages. |
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If nothing else, this would discourage people from drinking
out of plastic "glasses", than which nothing is more
barbaric. |
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One could probably dissolve higher alcohols in lower ones. I envision a scheme of progressively lower concentrations of higher molecular weight alcohols. |
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That could work. On the other hand, the higher alcohols are
probably not going to have many interesting
pharmacopsycholgical effects. But worth a try. |
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A good point about miscibility. I think butanol (depending on isomer) starts to separate at 7.5mass% which may or may not bother you. Ethelyne Glycol is another additive to explore, fairly non-toxic but does kill children who scull (american = chug?) it back because it tastes sweet. Not sure how it would affect the solubility of other alcohols etc. |
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I totally overlooked that but did you read the titles of the two reverences cited for that line ([37],[38])? |
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[37] "The composition of surrogate alcohols consumed in Russia" |
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[38] "Butanol ingestion in an airport hangar" |
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brutal. Anyway I'd argue that I'm not suggesting butanol abuse for alcoholics but rather legitimate range of butanolic beverages you could buy at a bottle store. |
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Well, if it gets tagged for deletion then it does but I think the concentrations of butanol in common liquors is slim to none, especially compared to the ethanol levels. |
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Mixtures of alcohols sometimes differ from mixtures of one alcohol with water. For instance, methanol and ethanol together in the right proportions would be less harmless than the same dosage of methanol on its own because (i think) the enzymes which would otherwise render methanol harmful are occupied in processing ethanol instead. Also, as can be seen from my link, it's claimed that butanol and the like don't necessarily contribute to hangovers. This makes me wonder about replacing some of the ethanol with butanol in order to make a drink stronger for less, but it doesn't mix very well. |
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The thing about that safety sheet is that the effects it describes on ingestion are somewhat similar, with the exception of the abdo pain, to those of ethanol anyway. Reminds me of the dihydrogen monoxide thing. |
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