How does carbon monoxide cause soda cans to explode?

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Carbon monoxide (CO) exposure from idling cars in garages can lead to serious health risks, including poisoning. The discussion centers on the claim that CO can cause soda cans to explode, which many participants express skepticism about, attributing the explosions more likely to heat rather than CO itself. Observations of exploded cans suggest they failed at the seams due to excessive internal pressure, potentially from heat rather than CO exposure. The article in question has since been revised, removing references to the cans, leading to speculation that the cans may have exploded prior to the CO incident. Overall, the consensus leans towards heat being the primary factor in the can explosions, rather than carbon monoxide.
  • #31
Excessive CO2 will kill you, excessive CO kills you quicker,
 
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  • #32
In modern cars with effective catalytic converters, the amount of CO is very, very low. Cars are no longer an effective source of CO. Bad furnaces can produce a lot of CO as can a fireplace with a closed damper. CO2 will kill you, but again, how much CO2 would have to be loaded into a home from a garage to become lethal? There are places where CO2 can be lethal quickly. When fermenting any biologic that's going to make distilled spirits, the gas given off by the yeast is CO2 (they're living things eating sugar). I'm familiar with a modern distillery here in Louisville that has eight 24,000 gallon fermenters and they produce copious amounts of CO2. It is heavier than air and can collect in the lower reaches of the plant. There is an extraction system so it is constantly moved out, but if that fails, there are alarms to prevent humans from going into those spaces without an air pack. In high concentration, CO2 will kill you very fast and rather painlessly.
 
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  • #33
rootone said:
Excessive CO2 will kill you, excessive CO kills you quicker,
It of course depends on how much.

In a previous post, I mentioned the suicide by car tactic, where you use a garden hose to pipe exhaust into the car cabin. With this tactic, there should be almost no carbon monoxide in the car cabin (per previous post about how little CO cars actually produce*), but after just a few minutes pretty much all of the air will be replaced by CO2 and water vapor. Thus it is my belief that it would be CO2, not CO, that would kill you.

*Short version: in order to produce a significant amount of CO you need to significantly choke-off the oxygen supply to the combustion and the car ECM has to be unable to compensate. In other words, in order for the engine to produce a significant amount of CO it first has to replace a significant amount of air in the garage with CO2. If you pipe your exhaust into the cabin of the car, the engine is getting normal, fresh air for a while, so it should be producing almost no CO.
 
  • #34
trainman2001 said:
In high concentration, CO2 will kill you very fast and rather painlessly.
And for that reason, it is used to euthanize animals.
 
  • #35
russ_watters said:
It of course depends on how much.
You need much less CO than CO2.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carbon_monoxide_poisoning#Signs_and_symptoms
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hypercapnia#Tolerance

russ_watters said:
Thus it is my belief that it would be CO2, not CO, that would kill you.
In some scenarios maybe. But here the victim was found in the house, not in the garage. Reaching lethal levels of CO2 in the entire house seems unlikely. The article names CO as the cause of death, and states that the levels in the house were "at least 30 times the level that humans can tolerate". This cannot refer to CO2.
 
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  • #36
A.T. said:
You need much less CO than CO2.
And less is produced.

This was already pointed out. I was reiterating the point that even though CO kills at a much lower concentration, if much more CO2 is produced, it could be CO2 that kills you.
In some scenarios maybe. But here the victim was found in the house, not in the garage.
Right: My conclusion applies to my scenario.
 
  • #37
russ_watters said:
I was reiterating the point that even though CO kills at a much lower concentration, if much more CO2 is produced, it could be CO2 that kills you.
Other difference are (I think):
- For CO2 risk it's the CO2 to O2 ratio in the air that is crucial, rather than the CO2 concentration on its own.
- In case of CO2 you recover quicker, once you get air with high O2 to CO2 ratio. But CO binds to your hemoglobin, and blocks O2 delivery for a while, even when enough O2 is coming into your lungs.
 
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  • #38
I thought that the emission control would turn the engine off before there was more than a safe level in the garage. Was it just an urban legend that it is now difficult to kill yourself with a tube from the exhaust pipe? Perhaps I am just gullible.
No, I don't think it is that the engine turns off. The catalytic converter is supposed to reduce greenhouse emissions, thus, lower CO2 and co. which are gasses that will kill.
 
  • #39
gmalcolm77 said:
The catalytic converter is supposed to reduce greenhouse emissions, thus, lower CO2 and co. which are gasses that will kill.
A catalytic converter does not reduce CO2. It produces CO2 as a result of completing the oxidation of CO and unburned hydrocarbons.
 
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  • #40
russ_watters said:
And for that reason, [CO2] is used to euthanize animals.

Animals can sense excess CO2, so this method of euthanasia may not be as painless as one may think. Nitrogen would be better as an asphyxiant since it does not produce the same sensation of suffocation. This lack of sensation causation makes N2 dangerous (e.g. when working with pressurised nitrogen in confined spaces you may not realize you're being asphyxiated), and is the reason that nitrogen is being considered as a "humane" replacement for lethal injection in the US.
 
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  • #41
Recent event where dry ice, being transported in a car, killed one of the passengers:
https://www.usatoday.com/story/news...ton-death-dippin-dots-delivery-car/870007002/

CO kills by blocking the ability of hemoglobin to carry oxygen - with the brain deprived of oxygen, you pass out quickly, and then you die, even if there's plenty of oxygen in your lungs. You'll never know what hit you, which is why we have CO detectors.
CO2 is different: your blood normally carries CO2 from the body to your lungs, where it gets exhaled. It's an equilibrium process, and too much CO2 in the air you inhale prevents the exchange, and can even drive the exchange in the wrong direction. Too much CO2 in your blood (hypercapnia) causes all sorts of things to go wrong, and it can be a very unpleasant way to die. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hypercapnia When CO2 is used for euthanasia, it's not being used as a toxic agent, but as a (relatively) inert gas: the animal passes out from lack of oxygen before hypercapnia can set in. It's 'ideal' from a veterinarian's point of view because it's safe, cheap, and free of regulations and paperwork. (Nitrogen requires high pressure hardware and a mess of workplace safety regulations.)

I've tried breathing pure CO2 in the lab - it's irritating, probably due to being a mild acid when it dissolves, and it triggers a reflexive cough. Continued breathing of pure CO2, I think, would be pretty uncomfortable, for however long it takes to pass out for lack of oxygen.
 
  • #42
James Demers said:
Recent event where dry ice, being transported in a car, killed one of the passengers:
https://www.usatoday.com/story/news...ton-death-dippin-dots-delivery-car/870007002/

CO kills by blocking the ability of hemoglobin to carry oxygen - with the brain deprived of oxygen, you pass out quickly, and then you die, even if there's plenty of oxygen in your lungs. You'll never know what hit you, which is why we have CO detectors.
CO2 is different: your blood normally carries CO2 from the body to your lungs, where it gets exhaled. It's an equilibrium process, and too much CO2 in the air you inhale prevents the exchange, and can even drive the exchange in the wrong direction. Too much CO2 in your blood (hypercapnia) causes all sorts of things to go wrong, and it can be a very unpleasant way to die. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hypercapnia When CO2 is used for euthanasia, it's not being used as a toxic agent, but as a (relatively) inert gas: the animal passes out from lack of oxygen before hypercapnia can set in. It's 'ideal' from a veterinarian's point of view because it's safe, cheap, and free of regulations and paperwork. (Nitrogen requires high pressure hardware and a mess of workplace safety regulations.)

I've tried breathing pure CO2 in the lab - it's irritating, probably due to being a mild acid when it dissolves, and it triggers a reflexive cough. Continued breathing of pure CO2, I think, would be pretty uncomfortable, for however long it takes to pass out for lack of oxygen.

You're missing a very very important point. Hold your breath. You'll notice that after a while you will begin to develop a feeling of urgency to breathe. This occurs because your lungs detect the presence of high levels of CO2 inside of them. This is how your body tells your brain "BREATHE! YOU'RE GOING TO DIE! DO IT NOW!" This is the evolutionary mechanism that has developed to keep you breathing.

That's why death by CO2 is so vastly much rarer than death by CO. Because when you're being poisoned by CO2 YOU KNOW IT, and you know you have to find fresh air in order to breathe. It also explains your observation of how unpleasant it is to be breathing CO2.

It is NOT IDEAL for use by veterinarians because the IT'S TORTURE! Its like being waterboarded. And it is not, in general, recommended for euthanasia because of how painful it is to die that way. https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/15901358
 
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  • #43
Danny Sleator said:
...lungs detect the presence of high levels of CO2 inside of them.
What sensory mechanism in the lungs does that? Or did you mean that of high levels of CO2 in the blood trigger that reflex?
 
  • #44
Find the outlier:
https://uploads.disquscdn.com/image...86d986540536df786ac7c0136878a8200ff0a030f.jpgLack of O2 knocks the animals out before the CO2 level in the blood can register, which as you note takes a while to kick in. The distress, from my experience, is due to carbonic acid, which is definitely irritating to the lungs. How "torturous" thirty seconds of this would be is a matter of individual judgement, but it seems to be acceptable to the people who do it. (Last I checked, veterinarians tend to care about animals and animal welfare.) It's less than perfect, but they make the tradeoff for simplicity and safety, which is the only point I was making.
 

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