The exact ingredients in the street drug bath salts are not known because they have not fully been tested. They are known to have the chemical methylenedioxypyrovalerone in them.
Bath salts are mostly things like Epsom salts (MgSO4.7H2O) and table salt (NaCl). I can't think of why anyone would make them from an acid... these are minerals you can get from the ground.
water H2O is solvent
It depends on the bath salt. You are likely thinking about the bath salts that produce a meth-like high. These contain a chemical called MDVP (Methylenedioxypyrovalerone). Bath salts Dont get you high, but a product Called Ivory Wave which was sold as bath salts (Much like how mephedrone was sold as plant food) contained MDPV and other stimulant drugs. Please refer to the related link for more information.
Yes. The salts dissolve faster the more water molecules collide with the salts. Just make sure that you agitate well to make sure the solution is evenly distributed. You can also heat to the water to raise the average kinetic energy of each water molecule causing more collisions.
The problem with Bath Salts is that even though they are legal in lots of places, often times they are extremely impure and have no business going into people's circulatory system. That being said, it's possible to do and acheieve a stronger higher.
Standard drug tests do not detect bath salts, but there are custom drug tests that can detect them.
Well Most Baths Salts Can Make You Fail Drug Test Except One A Strawberry One Which You Can Get From A Hospital.
bath salts rarely have drug tests
Bath salts will show up on a lab drug test but not your normal quick urine drug test.
No
NO, Cosmic Bliss bath salts will NOT show up in a drug test.....
Bath salts, baby.
Bath salts are mostly things like Epsom salts (MgSO4.7H2O) and table salt (NaCl). I can't think of why anyone would make them from an acid... these are minerals you can get from the ground.
bath salts
No.
Bath salts, the drug are illegal for sale in Massachusetts. Bath Salts the hygiene products have largely been removed from shelves due to people's confusion in believing they are the same as the drug. They are not the same.
yes...for pcp