One could always wonder--why drag the 'default position' into a new thread? All it does is introduce something unrelated and immediately derail...
Last edited by SenorToenails (2010-10-08 09:20:12)
Last edited by SenorToenails (2010-10-08 09:20:12)
The edit spree was due to personal attacks, not to disagreement with my post.Mekstizzle wrote:
Yeah well there's no point making silly posts and then going on an edit-spree, it just messes everything up for no reason.
It would require boatloads of acid and would probably produce ungodly amounts of heat. I don't know why they wouldn't deal with it though...it's not like it would just take care of itself!FEOS wrote:
Enough of that...
Back on topic: Why didn't they treat the sludge while still in storage to bring the pH down to a normal range beforehand? Seems keeping that much highly alkaline stuff laying about is a recipe for exactly what happened.
Any chemists/chemical engineers who can weigh in on why they didn't/wouldn't want to do that?
this.SenorToenails wrote:
It would require boatloads of acid and would probably produce ungodly amounts of heat. I don't know why they wouldn't deal with it though...it's not like it would just take care of itself!FEOS wrote:
Enough of that...
Back on topic: Why didn't they treat the sludge while still in storage to bring the pH down to a normal range beforehand? Seems keeping that much highly alkaline stuff laying about is a recipe for exactly what happened.
Any chemists/chemical engineers who can weigh in on why they didn't/wouldn't want to do that?
I wonder what molarity that sludge is... or rather, molality
Sodium bicarbonate? Don't have to worry about the heat or the acid then.SenorToenails wrote:
It would require boatloads of acid and would probably produce ungodly amounts of heat. I don't know why they wouldn't deal with it though...it's not like it would just take care of itself!FEOS wrote:
Enough of that...
Back on topic: Why didn't they treat the sludge while still in storage to bring the pH down to a normal range beforehand? Seems keeping that much highly alkaline stuff laying about is a recipe for exactly what happened.
Any chemists/chemical engineers who can weigh in on why they didn't/wouldn't want to do that?