On Wednesday, we wrote about a scientific study showing that pee in a pool’s chlorinated water can yield a toxic chemical called cyanogen chloride. That substance has recommended exposure limits from the World Health Organization and is also considered a chemical warfare agent.
The yields from the pool water in the study were not anywhere near deadly or even conclusively harmful. But the next question that bubbled up in Ars readers’ minds was:
How much pee would it take to develop a deadly Olympic-sized swimming pool?
To figure that out, we extrapolated some figures cited in the paper (published in the American Chemical Society’s Environmental Science and Technology) then cross-referenced those numbers with some real-world, commonly-accepted values. This yielded a ballpark answer… likely not quite the answer you’d expect. But, here we’ll try to answer variations of the question in slightly more satisfying ways to provide a more comprehensive, academic understanding of urinating in pools.
First, a full rundown of how the experiment played out: a group of researchers added uric acid to chlorinated pool water. This combination resulted in the creation of cyanogen chloride, which can cause death in sufficiently high amounts. Again, the amount of cyanogen chloride generated in the experiment—roughly 20-30 micrograms per liter—is not considered immediately harmful and doesn’t even meet the WHO’s “danger zone” of 70 micrograms per liter or more. Nonetheless, it’s there.
The concentration of uric acid used in the experiments was 5×10-5 moles per liter. This is actually a lower concentration than the standard excretions of a human bladder. Humans excrete between 1.2 and 4.5 millimoles of uric acid per day over an amount of urine that can range from 0.8 liters to two liters. To take the results to the limit, we’ll take the highest concentrations of uric aid for the smallest amount of urine to get the highest reasonable concentration: 4.5 millimoles per 0.8 liters works out to be 5.625 millimoles of uric acid per liter of pee. Note that this is next-level pee concentration, as if for every glass of water you should be drinking, you ate a few strips of beef jerky instead.
Now, the 5×10-5 moles-per-liter concentration generated between 20 and 30 micrograms per liter of cyanogen chloride for the chlorine concentrations used in the experiment. The concentrations of chlorinated water vary throughout the experiment, but the concentrations that get that 20-30 micrograms per liter of cyanogen chloride are about 8-10 milligrams of chlorine per liter of water, roughly about two or three times the recommended chlorination of pool water.

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