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(-.-)" Inhaling difluoroethane until I became listless would solve everthing quicker than a "MIT" student solving partial fractions.
Recently, several teens have died after inhaling the chemical difluoroethane from a popular computer cleaning spray known as Dust-Off.
Recently, several teens have died after inhaling the chemical difluoroethane from a popular computer cleaning spray known as Dust-Off.
IUPAC name 1,1-difluoroethane ... Other names difluoroethane Freon 152a ethylidene difluoride ethylidene fluoride RTECS KI1410000 HFC-152a R-152a
Dust-Off is a brand of dust cleaner (refrigerant-based propellant cleaner, which is not compressed air and incorrectly called "canned air") containing difluoroethane; it is used to remove particulates and dust from computers and electronic equipment. Some customers buy Dust-Off just to cl...
Remember the aluminum foil boat floating on sulphur hexafluoride gas we had before? Turns out, if you inhale the gas, it gives you the opposite effect of inhaling helium.
The cleaner used to blow dust out of keyboards and electronics contains difluoroethane, which is similar to Freon, said Sgt. Tim Plummer of the Oregon State Police's drug recognition program.
A surviving front seat passenger witnessed the decedent inhaling "Dust Off" cleaner just prior to losing control of the vehicle.
IUPAC name 1,1-difluoroethane ... Difluoroethane, also called R-152a or HFC-152a, is a chemical compound composed of carbon, hydrogen, and fluorine.
CASE REPORT: A Motor Vehicle Accident Fatality Involving the Inhalation of 1,1-Difluoroethane Timothy Hahn, Joseph Avella, and Michael Lehrer Department of Forensic Toxicology, Division of Medical ...
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