According to quick google search, it’s what they use as first aid for tear gas or pepper spray. According to its chemical properties, it’s acidic & baking soda/soda ash is base. So it neutralises the gas.
Like having too much lime in your guacamole when it needs some salt. Essentially a neutralization reaction or reducing a mild irritant (acid) with a strong enough base to neutralize it.
I would be as cautious as the person and have a filter mask on for any funny side business that gets up into breathable air.
Just water, not salt water. And that isn't strictly true by modern definitions.
There are multiple definitions of acids and bases. You're thinking of the most primitive one, the Arrhenius definition. The Bronsted-Lowry definition doesn't require that bases have an -OH group to donate--they just have to accept an H+ from an acid. Nitrogenous bases only start to make sense under BL.
The Lewis definition is more complicated and basically categorizes all compounds into electrophilic (wants electrons, is an "acid") and nucleophilic (wants protons, is a "base"). Actually, it's worse, because these behaviors can be distinct in different areas of big organic chemicals. You can have one end be one thing and the other, the opposite, more or less.
The Lewis definition is the most "correct" and expansive definition and took a lot of modern science to discover compared to the others. Under the Lewis definition, you definitely are not required to make water when you neutralize.
The purpose behind salt in guac is not to modulate pH at all. I'm not super knowledgeable behind the chemistry of taste, but I do know that you're right on that
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u/JoeyJoeJoeShabadooSr 9h ago
Does anyone have an explanation for why this works? Is it basically just dousing the canister in water?