Post: Are you smart? Answer this
06-16-2017, 09:05 AM #1
Hydrogen
Super Mod
(adsbygoogle = window.adsbygoogle || []).push({}); If poison expires, would it be more poisonous, or is it no longer poisonous?
(adsbygoogle = window.adsbygoogle || []).push({});

The following user thanked Hydrogen for this useful post:

Algebra
06-16-2017, 09:58 AM #2
Toke
PC Master Race
Originally posted by Hydrogen View Post
If poison expires, would it be more poisonous, or is it no longer poisonous?


if u were dropped on your head or folded in a stroller which autistic would you be?

The following 2 users say thank you to Toke for this useful post:

Algebra, Tears
06-16-2017, 04:00 PM #3
SlimShadyXV-
League Champion
Ask your chemistry teacher
06-16-2017, 08:10 PM #4
Alt
Banned
Drink out of date bleach and tell me
06-16-2017, 09:42 PM #5
Hammy
[b]#Hammy4IMGPerms McCoy[/b]
That depends on what the poison is and how it is stored.

Many organic poisons like most common insecticides and herbicides break down over time and eventually lose their toxicity. They become less poisonous, meaning you need a bigger dose, but you'd have to wait years after the expiration before it stopped working altogether.

Some organic poisons have an expiry date for exactly the opposite reason. They break down, but they break down into more poisonous substances. Some herbicides for example gradually decay and produce dioxanes, some pesticides break down when exposed to water and produce a very potent volatile nerve gas. You can usually spot these poisons because the expiration date is very short and is printed as two dates: expiration date and shelf life from date of opening.

The inorganic poisons like arsenic or mercury compounds tend not to break down as such. They have expiration dates because they absorb moisture from the air and change form chemically. That makes then harder to use and it also means they take longer to work. Instead of killing the animal within hours it might take days or months. Ironically the chemically altered form of arsenic is often more deadly insofar as it requires a smaller dose to be lethal. It's just less useful because it takes a long time to act.


So the answer is, it can become less poisonous, it can become more poisonous, but poison is always poison.

tl;dr; copy and pasta
06-16-2017, 10:23 PM #6
Originally posted by Hammy View Post
That depends on what the poison is and how it is stored.

Many organic poisons like most common insecticides and herbicides break down over time and eventually lose their toxicity. They become less poisonous, meaning you need a bigger dose, but you'd have to wait years after the expiration before it stopped working altogether.

Some organic poisons have an expiry date for exactly the opposite reason. They break down, but they break down into more poisonous substances. Some herbicides for example gradually decay and produce dioxanes, some pesticides break down when exposed to water and produce a very potent volatile nerve gas. You can usually spot these poisons because the expiration date is very short and is printed as two dates: expiration date and shelf life from date of opening.

The inorganic poisons like arsenic or mercury compounds tend not to break down as such. They have expiration dates because they absorb moisture from the air and change form chemically. That makes then harder to use and it also means they take longer to work. Instead of killing the animal within hours it might take days or months. Ironically the chemically altered form of arsenic is often more deadly insofar as it requires a smaller dose to be lethal. It's just less useful because it takes a long time to act.


So the answer is, it can become less poisonous, it can become more poisonous, but poison is always poison.

tl;dr; copy and pasta


fuck off hamoy
06-16-2017, 10:24 PM #7
Hammy
[b]#Hammy4IMGPerms McCoy[/b]
Originally posted by John View Post
fuck off hamoy


okay, sorry feverdex

The following user thanked Hammy for this useful post:

John
06-16-2017, 10:25 PM #8
Originally posted by Hammy View Post
okay, sorry feverdex


thank
06-17-2017, 02:10 AM #9
GJx
League Champion
Depends on which Poison your talk about!

Copyright © 2026, NextGenUpdate.
All Rights Reserved.

Gray NextGenUpdate Logo