12/19/2008 5:03:58 PM
I am going to ignore your dick-beating, jargon-infested pedantry, and insinuations of superiority to focus on your argument and cited reference, if that's cool with you. It's indeed a discussion of the mechanics of a breathalyzer that, aside from clearly targetting the audience of school children, doesn't say a mother fucking thing that supports your claim.I would be happy to demonstrate how to calculate the relative concentrations of chemicals in solution before and after mixing, if that's where you want to take this. If not, for arguments' sake, the Cliff Notes version is that diluting a solution reduces the concentration of the solute. Reducing the solution's concentration affects the alcohol vapor pressure, consequently the vapor concentration, and ultimately the calculated BAC. The time relationship of these events and extent of influence are both debatable. There are also the question of whether or not water consumption affects the enzyme activity in the liver positively or negatively, and which of the two factors of blood dilution and enzyme activity has greater influence. If you want to make a point, I suggest debating along these lines.Incidentally, water is technically "volatile", as volatility is "in the context of chemistry, physics and thermodynamics a measure of the tendency of a substance to vaporize." It evaporates in the lung in much the same way as alcohol, and if you don't believe me or Wikipedia, exhale on cold glass for a reminder. The breathalyzer measures the absolute quantity, the mass if you will, of alcohol in your breath and then calculates the alcohol content by the ratio I mentioned earlier in the thread.That said, please brush up on your "basic science", find some numbers, and come back with an argument... or please shut the fuck up, before I have to whipsmack you in the face with the straw man's bulging ad hominem.[Edited on December 19, 2008 at 9:08 PM. Reason : .]
12/19/2008 8:40:09 PM
I found a source that makes an interesting observation about the relationship of water vapor to alcohol vapor:Water, present in the form of vapor, in expired air will condense into the liquid form with a lowering of temperature. Air exhaled into the tubes of a breath test device, such as the Breathalyzer, is assumed to be saturated with water at about 93.2F . Decreases in this temperature can result in an underestimation of reported BAC due to condensation of water and the subsequent removal of alcohol from the expired air. One study showed that when the mouthpiece of the breath test instrument was kept at 23C, there was an average decrease in temperature of exhaled air by 1.6C.and back on the original topic, it also provides many examples of challenges against the partition ratio*http://www.forensic-evidence.com/site/Biol_Evid/Breath_Tests.html[Edited on December 19, 2008 at 9:32 PM. Reason : *which I have deleted in lieu of providing the link]
12/19/2008 9:30:28 PM
12/22/2008 11:35:38 AM