Long story short, I've acquired a few thousand feet of plastic pipe that used to have a mixture of methanol and water running through it. The methanol was used as an antifreeze beneath an ice rink (the MSDS states it is pure methanol and nothing else). I realize that the porous plastic pipe will have absorbed small amounts of methanol over the years, which will "leech" into the water.
I would like to run this pipe to our corrals and stock tanks so we can get water to horses and cattle. However, methanol is pretty toxic.
Since methanol is readily soluble in water, I am hoping I will be able to "flush" the pipe to get the mixture dilute enough to be safe. However, I won't KNOW if it's dilute enough without testing the water somehow. Does anyone know of any way to detect methanol in water??
If I can't easily and readily detect the methanol, what would be a good way to destroy the methanol in the pipe? I would suppose there is SOMETHING that I could flush the pipe with that would destroy the methanol and not leave toxic byproducts in the pipe. Any ideas there?