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you will probably die but im not sure
just dont even try it. dialysis is very serious, and who knows what could happen...
If they are centrifuged and distilled water is added, they will burst immediately
Copper atoms will dissolve into the water, giving off electrons at the anode. At the cathode, the copper ions will be deposited on the electrode and acquire electrons.
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no changes
distilled water does not contain ions, without ions it can not produce and electrical charge. In other words DISTILLED WATER does not conduct electricity.
Nothing will happen if you dip the free ends of the wire in a glass of distilled water with a 9 volt of battery for a minute.
You'd kill the patient in either case.I read the instructions on the dialysis machine Fresenius sells for home use. The bag is supposed to contain saline. (They also use reverse-osmosis water, but that comes in through a different port.) Dialysis is a very complex balancing act, and NaCl level in the dialysis solution is a big part of the balance. If it gets too low, it'll suck the salt out of the patient's blood and kill him quick.But twenty percent concentration? Normal Saline for Injection is only 0.9 percent, seawater is 3.5 percent...the brine you use to make pickles isn't even 20 percent. If you put that much salt in the solution, it would migrate across the membranes, raise the guy's sodium concentration and, once again, kill him quick.
If it is a water-filled or oil-filled radiator, it will leak fluid.
lysozyme will diffuse in to the cell
On dry distillation it produces Formaldehyde and Calcium carbonate.