I have wanted to know for some time whether or not the high-levels of chloroform found in the trunk could have been formed as a result of a decomposing body that had drowned. :waitasec: As a result I decided to try a little experiment to see if I
could make chloroform.
I referred to the sci-spot article on making chloroform to get a better understanding of what success would look like. Success would be a bunch of bubbles at the bottom of my "reaction vessel", looking not unlike tadpole eggs. :frog:
My goal, however, was not to duplicate the sci-spot experiment. It
was to simulate the manufacture of "extra" chloroform produced by a drowning victim, in this case a small child.
Instead of using one cup of bleach like the experiment, I used 1000ml of swimming pool water. This is approximately four cups and looked like it was about the volume of water a small child's lungs would hold. I will mention that our swimming pool, while chlorinated, does not smell strongly of chlorine. It is possible (probably likely) the Anthony's pool contains more chlorine by volume than ours.
I searched for information on how much acetone is produced by a decomposing body, but could find no quantitative information. So I had to guess. :doh: I used 0.5 ml of fingernail polish remover, which I am guessing is about 60% acetone. Thus, my ratio of acetone to pool water was roughly 1 to 3000. Note that the sci-spot article suggested 1 to 50 for bleach and 1 to 25 for pool shock, so I was using a ratio two orders of magnitude lower than expected.
Results: after about 3 hours I saw maybe two-dozen small bubbles at the bottom of the "reaction vessel" that resembled the bubbles in the bubble mass on the sci-spot article. After stirring the mixture the bubbles did not "mass together" but they all did sink. My conclusion is that
I did create chloroform as a byproduct of pool water and acetone...but I cannot prove I did.
Nor can I state how much was produced. :bang:
I did try to take pictures of the result, but could not get an image that clearly showed a bubble.