Did somebody say Science?!
An interesting property of H2S is olfactory Fatigue.
It's an annoyance in low concentrations (can be smelt as low as 0.008ppm), and respiratory complaints at much higher concentrations around 10ppm. Deadly at approx 500ppm.
The interesting part is where you lose the ability to smell it as exposure increases with time. The threshold is approx 100ppm.
Here's a case of a poor bugger who copped a solid lung-full after welding inside a tank used to store sulfur products in an oil refinery. Almost died. (I'm hoping to have my 'solid lung-full' accepted by the International System of Units... watch this space!)
This article discusses further the aetiology, and clinical signs of H2S poisoning.
H2S affects Cytochrome C oxidase, a mitochondrial protein that is used in the oxidative phosphorylation process, which converts ADP to ATP- one of the chemical 'fuels' our body uses. Cyanide also affects this same protein.
Don't be alarmed though... the low levels needed to smell H2S are a long way from something that will kill you.
H2S is an interesting gas.



) I recently got hearing aids...
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