What do you think will happen when you drop aqueous HCl into conc. sulphuric acid?
I understand hydrogen is the end result of passing hcl through NaOH
No, HCl + NaOH
NaCl + H
2O
Hydrogen is generated from the following reaction:
2Al + 6HCl
2AlCl
3 + 3H
2For for every 267 grams (ca £16) of AlCl
3 you produce you will make approximately 30 litres of hydrogen gas. This is enough to cause a serious accident unless everything you are using is spark proof. I can tell you now that your heat gun is not spark proof.
To be fair there is not much about your set up that fills me with confidence. There are much safer, more efficient ways to generate anhydrous HCl to begin with.
After the HCl stage I am afraid you have such serious safety issues that I am unable to offer any more help.
With the greatest of respect and I mean that sincerely because I don't want to put hobbists off conducting propper scientific experiments. Chemists buy chemicals so that they do something more exciting with them, if your goal is to re-invent the wheel then perhaps start with something a little less hazardous.
Anything that involved gaseous acid or base (such as ammonia) is a serious danger to a trained chemist in a fully operational lab with safety equipment and emmergency showers. To put it bluntly, I personally would not conduct this experiment, I am a very experienced chemist but that means I can see every step being a potential hazzard.
If gaseous hydrogen chloride comes into contact with your eyes at a relatively low concentration you will be blinded.
If you are still reading then I guess you may have realised that whether or not you shlould flush the system is a moot point at this stage.
edit: changed "cones into contact" to "comes into contact" for readability