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Potassium is used a lot as an electrolyte, both in industrial applications but especially in biological processes. While your body can substitute other elements on hand for electrolytic reactions if it runs out of potassium, it's not going to feel very nice and can eventually lead to some lethal conditions.
Bananas are not actually the most potassium rich foods out there. Apricots have a lot more, and there's quite a lot of it in beans, potatoes, and dark leafy lettuce.
Ozelot said: Potassium is used a lot as an electrolyte, both in industrial applications but especially in biological processes. While your body can substitute other elements on hand for electrolytic reactions if it runs out of potassium, it's not going to feel very nice and can eventually lead to some lethal conditions.
Bananas are not actually the most potassium rich foods out there. Apricots have a lot more, and there's quite a lot of it in beans, potatoes, and dark leafy lettuce.
Potassium can also form an amalgam with sodium called "NaK" which resembles Mercury in that it is a silvery liquid at room temperature but is much lighter. It also instantly bursts into flames when exposed to air.
Wow, I am surprising myself with how many of these I can remember despite never studying them in school. Screw you, high school chemistry! (which I never took)
Also Bananas and Potassium have the most naturally occuring radioactive isotopes, making Bananas the most naturally radioactive foods because of the high chance of radioactive isotopes of Potassium. Eating 600 Bananas is the equivalent of getting a Cat Scan.
Virtually everyone who's paid the least bit of attention in chemistry class knows about the violent single-replacement reaction that occurs when you expose metallic Sodium to water. Metallic Potassium has near identical properties, except the reaction yielded is much more potent.
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Ozelot
BlockedPotassium is used a lot as an electrolyte, both in industrial applications but especially in biological processes. While your body can substitute other elements on hand for electrolytic reactions if it runs out of potassium, it's not going to feel very nice and can eventually lead to some lethal conditions.
Bananas are not actually the most potassium rich foods out there. Apricots have a lot more, and there's quite a lot of it in beans, potatoes, and dark leafy lettuce.
Queerbrony69
MemberPotassium can also form an amalgam with sodium called "NaK" which resembles Mercury in that it is a silvery liquid at room temperature but is much lighter. It also instantly bursts into flames when exposed to air.
Wadxxx
BlockedPotassium is mildly radioactive.
See
"Banana equivalent dose."
Drax99
MemberWow, I am surprising myself with how many of these I can remember despite never studying them in school. Screw you, high school chemistry! (which I never took)
someoneelse229
BlockedAlso Bananas and Potassium have the most naturally occuring radioactive isotopes, making Bananas the most naturally radioactive foods because of the high chance of radioactive isotopes of Potassium. Eating 600 Bananas is the equivalent of getting a Cat Scan.
7Metal5Rainbow7
MemberSodium free salt?
Try KCl, Potassium Chloride!
It works just fine as NaCl.
user 188108
Memberof course it is molestia with the banana, why am i not surprised. actually i am kinda happy it is her <3
GB
Memberbad joke
she can ride my bananas X3
DryIce
MemberVirtually everyone who's paid the least bit of attention in chemistry class knows about the violent single-replacement reaction that occurs when you expose metallic Sodium to water.
Metallic Potassium has near identical properties, except the reaction yielded is much more potent.
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