lmao. Anybody with an intro class of chemistry in college can tell you, you dont get steam of salt or its anions. If fluorIDE is added as a salt, its never becoming fluorINE gas any time soon without electrolysis. Unless NaF decomposes in w hot water into F gas ? So no, you cannot breath in either fluorINE gas or any fluorIDE salt, anions if its added in water as a salt component. You must be thinking of HCN![]()
Except that the Fluoride is suspended around the water molecules that make up the steam, so yes you are inhaling it. It doesn't have to make the phase change to be inhaled when it's suspended in the medium that is being inhaled. Yes, I did learn this in chemistry, but at the High School level. The College level taught me how to measure the PPM of the salts within the liquid. The water doesn't just lose it's properties or contaminates when it undergoes a phase change, because in reality it's still a liquid, it's just in smaller molecule clusters than when it was a larger amorphous liquid. Water is relatively unique in this aspect. Enough Mr. Wizard though.
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