I don't know the answer but I was looking for that answer this morning and, while unsuccessful, I'm going to do it anyway. I did find you can pour sour milk on plants (roses) and old soda and beer is good for the lawn too so it's probably better than going down the drain. It will still be determine whether it will attact any extra varmit though on rowdy Saturday nites!
Most of the substances used in most laboratory experiments can be safely poured down a drain. However, laboratory experiments sometimes involve corrosive substances which would damage the plumbing if poured down the drain; they can also involve chemicals which, if they were to be mixed together as they are poured into the same drain, would undergo chemical reactions that might cause an explosion or a fire. And it is also possible that you are conducting experiments on highly toxic materials that would become an environmental hazard if poured down the drain. So not everything goes down the drain. You have to understand the nature of the substances that you are dealing with. Some thing go to a hazardous waste center instead, or can be neutralized in your own laboratory before you dispose of them.
No chemistry should be poured down the drain. It should be disposed of at the appropriate refuse site. Check you local council where.
Hazardous materials that are poured down the drain can:damage the sewersdamage the waste water treatment facilitiescontaminate drinking water suppliesimpair the health and safety of sewer workers
Drain cleaner pollutes the environment after it is poured down the drain. You should use green cleaners.
Not until you've run LOTS of water down the drain.
4 quarts
its 4 quartz
Yes, if you do not use them often and have poured sugary substances down the drain.
Let it stand in an open container, in sunlight, and it will decompose. Dilute solutions can normally be poured down the drain.
Things that can safely go down the drain include water, soap, shampoo, and toothpaste. Other items, such as food scraps, grease, oil, and chemicals should not be poured down the drain as they can cause clogs, damage the plumbing system, or contaminate the water supply.
gravity pulls the water down when it is poured
Let's see why. NaOH + HCl -> NaCl + H2O Looks to be a solution containing a disassociated salt, common table salt, and plain water. Perfectly safe to dump down the drain.