What chemicals taste like 5, what chemicals smell like

Updated on healthy 2024-03-05
10 answers
  1. Anonymous users2024-02-06

    HCL Thin: Relatively sour, feels slippery in the mouth, typical of vomit, slightly spicy.

    Thick: Extremely sour, bitter aftertaste after spitting it out, then the whole mouth is cold, and it gets better after 10 minutes.

    H2SO4 is diluted: faint sourness, aftertaste feels greasy, slightly hot, sweet, without any discomfort.

    Thicker (about 40%): super hot, feeling like drinking hot porridge, and then slightly sweet and painful coexist, lasting for 2 days before retreating (98% of pure concentrated sulfuric acid dare not drink).

    HNO3 thin: first bitter, then the whole tongue is numb, then painful, white patches, persistent pain, subsided after 3-4 days, and at the same time the mouth feels like a big inhalation of car exhaust.

    Strong: Don't dare to drink it (guess it's a fortified version of concentrated sulfuric acid).

    NaOH Thin: Basically the same strong Na2CO3 (I tasted, salty), more spicy (corrosive to proteins will have a spicy feeling).

    Thick: It is very spicy in the mouth (it may have reacted) Then the tongue is burned, yellow, the flesh is rotten, I can't speak for 1 month, there is a red pain in the mouth and the tongue is numb There is a spicy feeling and I am discharged from the hospital after half a year, my speech becomes inaccurate, my taste is almost gone, and my mouth is left with a scar (this thing's reaction to protein is not a joke.)

    Cuso4 has no taste at first, and after spitting it out, it has a faint bitterness aftertaste.

    BaCl2 is extremely bitter and salty, approximately equivalent to a fortified version of MGCL2.

    CCL4 This is the most terrifying, the whole mouth feels the taste of burnt plastic, extremely strong, after spitting it out, there is an indescribable weird sweetness, and I feel soft all over the body (indeed, it smells okay, but it tastes depressed).

    Na2O2 is generally salty (Na salt basically tastes like this).

    Anhydrous alcohol is completely tasteless in the mouth, after which the taste of toilet water lingers in the nose.

    FeCl3 is cool, then sour, and feels similar to a coin in your mouth (Fe salt tastes like this).

    agno3 has no taste...

    Dilute br2 in water.

    Extremely strong smell, it feels like car exhaust mixed with turpentine (which can only be described as such).

    hg(no3)2

    Very light taste, a bit like MSG and vinegar mixed up.

    H2O2 is so spicy that I vomited quickly, and there was nothing wrong after that.

    There is one more that knows inside:

    Extremely small amounts of cyanide are bitter, valuable information.

    I've tried acetylsalicylic acid a little sour, a little astringent, and finally a little bitter.

    Potassium chloride tastes similar to sodium chloride.

  2. Anonymous users2024-02-05

    I didn't know until I heard about it.

  3. Anonymous users2024-02-04

    The smell represents a certain gas.

    Different gases are combined with the detection part of the olfactory cells of the human nasal cavity, and different gas molecules have different structures, so the combination will be different, and different nerve impulses will be generated, and different odors can be separated by the analysis of the brain.

  4. Anonymous users2024-02-03

    Smell Definition:

    What the nose can smell: Fragrant. Lilacs smell good.

    Figurative personality and interests (often in a derogatory sense): Like-mindedness.

    Smell refers to mere taste.

  5. Anonymous users2024-02-02

    This question is a bit general ah = =

    For example, the smell of rotten eggs with hydrogen sulfide gas is - this is the official statement = =

  6. Anonymous users2024-02-01

    Potassium ions are a little bitter, calcium ions, sodium ions have a strange and indescribable astringency, and calcium ions are more obvious. Chloride ions are salty, magnesium ions have a bitter taste, and hydrogen ions have a sour taste.

  7. Anonymous users2024-01-31

    Generally speaking, it is the molecule that embodies the taste element and has not heard of it.

  8. Anonymous users2024-01-30

    Term: Smell.

    Pinyin: qì wèi

    English: 1 odor、2. scent、

    The object itself or the smell it emits.

    What is smell: smell = gas + taste. Gas is a gas, a volatile, it is a substance, usually a small molecule, so it is easy to become a gas.

    Taste is sensory perception, equivalent to sensor, which refers to the change of physical quantity (physical quantity can be electricity, magnetism, light, length or volume, ion flow, molecular flow, etc.) after the molecule acts on the surface of the sensory (sensor), and the signal generated is transmitted to the CPU (brain) through the nerves. Therefore, odor does not refer to a substance, but to the process of interaction between substances.

  9. Anonymous users2024-01-29

    Most volatile substances have a taste, and the number and variety are so large that it is impossible to list them all.

  10. Anonymous users2024-01-28

    Find it yourself. A lot.

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