So I'm writing a short story where the main antagonist is basically a living lump of indestructible raw biomass with its nerves hooked up to mechanical limbs, and our heroes kill off said creature by drenching it in a super corrosive acid, which finally kills it, so I need to know what the most corrosive acid (or just most corrosive to flesh) is and what the safest way to transport and store it would be
Side note: dissolving in an acid pool sounds like the worst way to go in my opinion
I don't get what you're attempting to tell me I'm asking for an acid that could corrode flesh quickly I don't get how you assume from that that I think all acid is a pool of green slime that magically melts things
Brody Myers
Just throw thermite on it
Julian Garcia
real acid is worse than comic book acid
the actual logistics of dissolving is more much gruesome and disgusting than anything a comic could portray
Brandon Kelly
Well im not creating a comic it's just writing And i've already planned the monster to kill a main character early on by crushing their head into a wall so hard it busts like a melon so no problem with fucked up content
Protagonists are just normal people in a the middle of an end of days scenario, they only get access to acid since they find an old lab where it was used to dispose of toxic failed experiments
Joshua Bell
Nope
Justin Green
I know about superacids c but I need a single name I mean what incompetent Chemist would just label a canister "super acid"
Jordan Price
You don't need a very strong acid to destroy organisms. Hydrofluoric acid is great example. If you were to accidentally step in a puddle of it with a bare foot, without treatment, you would die.
Another example, perhaps more terrifying, is dimethylmercury, which is basically the most dangerous neurotoxin. >The toxicity of dimethylmercury was highlighted with the death of the inorganic chemist Karen Wetterhahn of Dartmouth College in 1997. After spilling no more than a few drops of this compound on her latex-glove, the barrier was immediately compromised and within seconds it was absorbed into the back of her hand, quickly circulating and resulting in her death ten months later.
Robert Young
On the bottom of that Wikipedia page there are listed: Fluoroantimonic acid Magic acid Carborane acid Fluorosulfuric acid Triflic acid
David Russell
Why don't they just shoot it?
Liam Murphy
Not an acid, but sodium hydroxide is extremely effective at dissolving biomass and readily available as it has a lot of industrial uses and can be cheaply produced in huge quantities.
Well the idea is its such a simple primitive creature it can regenerate grievous injuries I'm seconds Plus it's 12 ft tall and has skin thicker than an elephants
Zachary Lewis
Well yeah but I decided that it would be anticlimactic if they just splashed some hydrochloric acid on it and called it a day
Ryan Flores
Despite aggressivechelation therapy, her condition rapidly deteriorated; three weeks after the first neurological symptoms appeared, Wetterhahn lapsed into what appeared to be a vegetative state punctuated by periods of extreme agitation.[6]One of her former students said that "Her husband saw tears rolling down her face. I asked if she was in pain. The doctors said it didn't appear that her brain could even register pain."[5]Wetterhahn was removed from life support and died on June 8, 1997, less than a year after her initial exposure.[6]
Jordan Ramirez
Magic acid He hehehe I can sell you some "magic acid" BWAYAHHAHSHAHAHA
Joshua Howard
As a rule of thumb, acids irritate your tissue but there are safety measures against (you form scabs), bases dissolve protein and fat. So the more dangerous thing is easily the latter. Most dangerous acids are dangerous for other reasons. I can only tell you that there is no real reason why a superacid should inflict much more harm than sulfuric acid. And you can spray that on your skin without feeling any pain for a couple of seconds. Then it slowly starts to dehydrate your tissue. Neither acids nor most bases "melt" through tissue in the matter of seconds, at least no aquatic solutions thereof. And I can't think of a strong liquid base.
Julian Bailey
Not an acid, but chlorine trifluoride can burn damn near anything. HF dissolves glass, ClF3 burns it.
There’s arecent reportof a method to make a more stable form of it by mixing it with TNT.
>a more stable form >mixing it with TNT
David Hall
Yeah, these people are insane. The way he describes the lab working with these is somewhat frightening: these guys seem solely driven by the motto "how can we make it more explosive?".
Ayden Flores
HF, or hydrofluoric acid is horrific and also interacts with nerves in a real bad way. It even attacks glass.