Comments by "MrMustangMan" (@mrmustangman) on "NewsNation"
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Vinyl chloride is also an anaerobic biodegradation product of higher chlorinated compounds such as tetrachloroethylene and trichloroethylene. If released to air, a vapor pressure of 2980 mm Hg at 25 deg C indicates vinyl chloride will exist solely as a gas in the atmosphere. Gas-phase vinyl chloride will be degraded in the atmosphere by reaction with photochemically-produced hydroxyl radicals and ozone; the half-lives for these reactions in air are estimated to be 2.3 and 46 days, respectively. Vinyl chloride, exposed to light >290 nm for 17 hours was photo-degraded 15.3%. If released to soil, vinyl chloride is expected to have high mobility based upon a Koc of 57. Volatilization of vinyl chloride from soil has reported half-lives of 0.2-0.5 days at soil depths of 1 and 10 cm, respectively. Vinyl chloride may volatilize from dry soil surfaces based upon its vapor pressure. Vinyl chloride had a biodegradation rate of 1.456 ug/g soil/hr in soil. Vinyl chloride was degraded approximately 20-50% and 55-100% in 4 and 11 weeks, respectively, under anaerobic conditions in laboratory scale soil experiments. If released into water, vinyl chloride is not expected to adsorb to suspended solids and sediment based upon the Koc. The biodegradation half-life of vinyl chloride in aerobic and anaerobic waters was reported as 28 and 110 days, respectively. Volatilization from water surfaces is expected to be an important fate process based upon this compound's Henry's Law constant of 0.0278 atm-cu m/mole. Estimated volatilization half-lives for a model river and model lake are 2 hours and 3 days, respectively. A Bio-Concentration Factor of <10, measured in fish, suggests bioconcentration in aquatic organisms is low. Vinyl chloride is not expected to undergo hydrolysis in the environment based on reported hydrolysis half-lives of >9.91 to >107 years.
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Vinyl chloride is also an anaerobic biodegradation product of higher chlorinated compounds such as tetrachloroethylene and trichloroethylene. If released to air, a vapor pressure of 2980 mm Hg at 25 deg C indicates vinyl chloride will exist solely as a gas in the atmosphere. Gas-phase vinyl chloride will be degraded in the atmosphere by reaction with photochemically-produced hydroxyl radicals and ozone; the half-lives for these reactions in air are estimated to be 2.3 and 46 days, respectively. Vinyl chloride, exposed to light >290 nm for 17 hours was photo-degraded 15.3%. If released to soil, vinyl chloride is expected to have high mobility based upon a Koc of 57. Volatilization of vinyl chloride from soil has reported half-lives of 0.2-0.5 days at soil depths of 1 and 10 cm, respectively. Vinyl chloride may volatilize from dry soil surfaces based upon its vapor pressure. Vinyl chloride had a biodegradation rate of 1.456 ug/g soil/hr in soil. Vinyl chloride was degraded approximately 20-50% and 55-100% in 4 and 11 weeks, respectively, under anaerobic conditions in laboratory scale soil experiments. If released into water, vinyl chloride is not expected to adsorb to suspended solids and sediment based upon the Koc. The biodegradation half-life of vinyl chloride in aerobic and anaerobic waters was reported as 28 and 110 days, respectively. Volatilization from water surfaces is expected to be an important fate process based upon this compound's Henry's Law constant of 0.0278 atm-cu m/mole. Estimated volatilization half-lives for a model river and model lake are 2 hours and 3 days, respectively. A Bio-Concentration Factor of <10, measured in fish, suggests bioconcentration in aquatic organisms is low. Vinyl chloride is not expected to undergo hydrolysis in the environment based on reported hydrolysis half-lives of >9.91 to >107 years.
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The term rape kit actually refers to the kit itselfโa container that includes a checklist, materials, and instructions, along with envelopes and containers to package any specimens collected during the exam. A rape kit may also be referred to as a Sexual Assault Evidence Kit (SAEK). The contents of the kit vary by state and jurisdiction and may include:
Instructions
Bags and sheets for evidence collection
Swabs for collecting fluids from the lips, cheeks, thighs, vagina, anus, and buttocks
Sterile urine collection containers
Sterile sample containers
Blood collection devices
Comb used to collect hair and fiber from the victim's body
Clear glass slides
Self-sealing envelopes for preserving the victim's clothes, head hair, pubic hair, and blood samples
Nail pick for scraping debris from beneath the nails
White sheets to catch physical evidence stripped from the body
Documentation forms
Labels
Sterile water and saline
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Vinyl chloride is also an anaerobic biodegradation product of higher chlorinated compounds such as tetrachloroethylene and trichloroethylene. If released to air, a vapor pressure of 2980 mm Hg at 25 deg C indicates vinyl chloride will exist solely as a gas in the atmosphere. Gas-phase vinyl chloride will be degraded in the atmosphere by reaction with photochemically-produced hydroxyl radicals and ozone; the half-lives for these reactions in air are estimated to be 2.3 and 46 days, respectively. Vinyl chloride, exposed to light >290 nm for 17 hours was photo-degraded 15.3%. If released to soil, vinyl chloride is expected to have high mobility based upon a Koc of 57. Volatilization of vinyl chloride from soil has reported half-lives of 0.2-0.5 days at soil depths of 1 and 10 cm, respectively. Vinyl chloride may volatilize from dry soil surfaces based upon its vapor pressure. Vinyl chloride had a biodegradation rate of 1.456 ug/g soil/hr in soil. Vinyl chloride was degraded approximately 20-50% and 55-100% in 4 and 11 weeks, respectively, under anaerobic conditions in laboratory scale soil experiments. If released into water, vinyl chloride is not expected to adsorb to suspended solids and sediment based upon the Koc. The biodegradation half-life of vinyl chloride in aerobic and anaerobic waters was reported as 28 and 110 days, respectively. Volatilization from water surfaces is expected to be an important fate process based upon this compound's Henry's Law constant of 0.0278 atm-cu m/mole. Estimated volatilization half-lives for a model river and model lake are 2 hours and 3 days, respectively. A Bio-Concentration Factor of <10, measured in fish, suggests bioconcentration in aquatic organisms is low. Vinyl chloride is not expected to undergo hydrolysis in the environment based on reported hydrolysis half-lives of >9.91 to >107 years.
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look at the ingredient list of a little debbie oatmeal creme pie....
"corn syrup, enriched bleached flour (wheat flour, barley malt, niacin, reduced iron, thiamin mononitrate (vitamin b1), riboflavin (vitamin b2), folic acid), palm and soybean oils with tbhq and citric acid to protect flavor, sugar, whole grain rolled oats, water, dextrose, molasses, raisin paste. contains 2% or less of each of the following: soy flour, leavening (baking soda, ammonium bicarbonate, sodium aluminum phosphate), whey, salt, soy lecithin, corn starch, caramel color, mono- and diglycerides, sorbitan monostearate, polysorbate 60, eggs, palm and palm kernel oil, egg whites, yellow 5, red 40, blue 1, titanium dioxide, turmeric, annatto extract, beta carotene, cocoa processed with alkali, high fructose corn syrup, rice flour, nonfat dry milk, modified corn starch, datem, modified tapioca starch, carrageenan, sorbic acid (to preserve freshness), spices, natural and artificial flavors, citric acid, malic acid, propylene glycol monostearate, sodium stearoyl lactylate, polysorbate 80, pectin, sodium citrate, modified wheat starch, chocolate, cocoa butter"
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Vinyl chloride is also an anaerobic biodegradation product of higher chlorinated compounds such as tetrachloroethylene and trichloroethylene. If released to air, a vapor pressure of 2980 mm Hg at 25 deg C indicates vinyl chloride will exist solely as a gas in the atmosphere. Gas-phase vinyl chloride will be degraded in the atmosphere by reaction with photochemically-produced hydroxyl radicals and ozone; the half-lives for these reactions in air are estimated to be 2.3 and 46 days, respectively. Vinyl chloride, exposed to light >290 nm for 17 hours was photo-degraded 15.3%. If released to soil, vinyl chloride is expected to have high mobility based upon a Koc of 57. Volatilization of vinyl chloride from soil has reported half-lives of 0.2-0.5 days at soil depths of 1 and 10 cm, respectively. Vinyl chloride may volatilize from dry soil surfaces based upon its vapor pressure. Vinyl chloride had a biodegradation rate of 1.456 ug/g soil/hr in soil. Vinyl chloride was degraded approximately 20-50% and 55-100% in 4 and 11 weeks, respectively, under anaerobic conditions in laboratory scale soil experiments. If released into water, vinyl chloride is not expected to adsorb to suspended solids and sediment based upon the Koc. The biodegradation half-life of vinyl chloride in aerobic and anaerobic waters was reported as 28 and 110 days, respectively. Volatilization from water surfaces is expected to be an important fate process based upon this compound's Henry's Law constant of 0.0278 atm-cu m/mole. Estimated volatilization half-lives for a model river and model lake are 2 hours and 3 days, respectively. A Bio-Concentration Factor of <10, measured in fish, suggests bioconcentration in aquatic organisms is low. Vinyl chloride is not expected to undergo hydrolysis in the environment based on reported hydrolysis half-lives of >9.91 to >107 years.
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look at the ingredient list of a little debbie oatmeal creme pie....
"corn syrup, enriched bleached flour (wheat flour, barley malt, niacin, reduced iron, thiamin mononitrate (vitamin b1), riboflavin (vitamin b2), folic acid), palm and soybean oils with tbhq and citric acid to protect flavor, sugar, whole grain rolled oats, water, dextrose, molasses, raisin paste. contains 2% or less of each of the following: soy flour, leavening (baking soda, ammonium bicarbonate, sodium aluminum phosphate), whey, salt, soy lecithin, corn starch, caramel color, mono- and diglycerides, sorbitan monostearate, polysorbate 60, eggs, palm and palm kernel oil, egg whites, yellow 5, red 40, blue 1, titanium dioxide, turmeric, annatto extract, beta carotene, cocoa processed with alkali, high fructose corn syrup, rice flour, nonfat dry milk, modified corn starch, datem, modified tapioca starch, carrageenan, sorbic acid (to preserve freshness), spices, natural and artificial flavors, citric acid, malic acid, propylene glycol monostearate, sodium stearoyl lactylate, polysorbate 80, pectin, sodium citrate, modified wheat starch, chocolate, cocoa butter"
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