what they do is put either water or salt on the affected area to neutralize the acid and make the road safe to drive through
true
take off all clothes the acid harmed and go to the safety shower
It is. It's also something they don't make--the ingredients for synthetic citric acid are worth more than the finished acid.
Wash it with lots of water
u wear a mask
what they do is put either water or salt on the affected area to neutralize the acid and make the road safe to drive through
Usually not.
Use an acid.
Often, massive dilution with water is enough to make it safe for ordinary clean-up. Sometimes adding a base, or a basic salt such as Sodium bicarbonate is sufficient. The nature and concentration of the spilled acid will usually dictate the clean-up method used.
acid can eat away at whatever it comes in contact with
As safe as any car battery. They are full of acid so don't let them spill or tip over. The main difference is they can be deeply discharged and recharged many, many times.
NO
true
take off all clothes the acid harmed and go to the safety shower
It is. It's also something they don't make--the ingredients for synthetic citric acid are worth more than the finished acid.
in a lab, an acid spill is considered dangerous. as with any spills it is slippery and the acid may splash here and there. so in order for people to not slip on the acid and hurt themselves physically and chemically, it is recommended to evacuate the laboratory immediately until given permission to come back in.