h a l f b a k e r yI didn't say you were on to something, I said you were on something.
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Some people light a match after stinking up the bathroom in order to lessen the effects of the chili they had the night before.
I suggest making a sprayable deodorizer that contains the same chemicals given off by the burning match. This would eliminate burned fingers, drapes and silk flowers and would
also decrease the risk of exploding gasses.
How Matches work
http://www.pa.msu.e.../ask_st/092596.html Try "Country Scent" next time. [Letsbuildafort, Oct 04 2004, last modified Oct 05 2004]
hydrogen sulphide...
http://www.saburchi...apters/chap035.html [po, Oct 04 2004, last modified Oct 05 2004]
Why does a lit match cover smell
http://www.madsci.o...923460606.Ch.r.html Either: 1) it doesn't, 2) sulphur dioxide numbs the sense of smell, 3) it oxidises various smelly stuff, 4) smoke absorbs other odours. [kropotkin, Oct 04 2004, last modified Oct 05 2004]
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Thats red phosphorous, buddy. I'm not sure you'd want that in aerosol form. On the other hand, it would make a great home-defense spray. |
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Label reads:
"New formula: Now with imitation red phosphorous!" |
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So you want to take a dirt cheap and readily available product and repackage it in a can? Fishbone for wasting our time. |
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Premise problem. The burning match doesn't give off a chemical. |
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The theory behind 'light a match' is that the odor is supposedly caused by errant methane in the air, and the match burns away the methane, removing the odor. This is not the case. |
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Hydrogen sulfide is the culprit, not methane. So the method doesn't work, but no one notices that and goes on doing it regardless. |
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hydrogen sulphide is flammable is it not? |
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Yes. But waving a match around doesn't burn stuff out of the atmosphere. |
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I was always under the impression that the smell of the chemicals reacting at the head of the match is supposed to overpower any kind of human-born smell in the area in question ... |
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well I just found a page that says a lighted match will burn a combination of hydrogen sulphide and oxygen to produce sulphur and water. |
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I also read that hydrogen sulphide is a rather lethal gas. my chemistry is a bit rusty. |
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I think it's sulfur that's burning in a match head and that is what masks the other smells. |
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Lighted candles are good for destroying the chemicals in onions that make your eyes water. Wouldn't be at all surprised if they work for odors generally. But that is not what this idea is about. |
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There doesn't seem to be any consensus about whether or how burning matches masks smell (See link to MadSci article). |
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Re H2S combustion: Gas has to be a certain concentration (called the lower explosive limit) in air before it will burn or explode. I can't find the LEL of hydrogen sulphide, but it is toxic at the level of 1-3 mg per litre, which suggests it would poison you long before it would ignite. Methane has an LEL of 5%-15%, but methane is of course odourless. |
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