Distillation equipment or laboratory glassware would not be obtainable, although household glassware is available.
That said, Sherlock would not be able to mix the solution because A) ammonium vanadate wouldn't be available and B) if it were, it is a dry, extremely toxic powder that needs to be handled under a chemical fume hood to prevent inhalation as it's handled and poured (the dust rises), even a less advanced one as would have been used during the time the test was created, and students don't have access to the chemistry wing (where this type of hood is) unsupervised.
In general, his options for his canon typical chemistry/poisons work in this game's setting are going to be extremely limited - unless it's a household chemical (like NaOH via Drano etc), reagents can't be accessed by player characters. Toxic agents in the college laboratories are kept in a locked room, and a player character would not be able to successfully obtain them before being noticed.
To mix reagents available in their household forms, he would be limited to things that wouldn't poison him without a chemical fume hood - so no generation of chloroform or cyanide gas etc, because even in a sealed container, he would have to eventually vent it to let out pressure and a kitchen hood wouldn't be powerful enough for that.
no subject
That said, Sherlock would not be able to mix the solution because A) ammonium vanadate wouldn't be available and B) if it were, it is a dry, extremely toxic powder that needs to be handled under a chemical fume hood to prevent inhalation as it's handled and poured (the dust rises), even a less advanced one as would have been used during the time the test was created, and students don't have access to the chemistry wing (where this type of hood is) unsupervised.
In general, his options for his canon typical chemistry/poisons work in this game's setting are going to be extremely limited - unless it's a household chemical (like NaOH via Drano etc), reagents can't be accessed by player characters. Toxic agents in the college laboratories are kept in a locked room, and a player character would not be able to successfully obtain them before being noticed.
To mix reagents available in their household forms, he would be limited to things that wouldn't poison him without a chemical fume hood - so no generation of chloroform or cyanide gas etc, because even in a sealed container, he would have to eventually vent it to let out pressure and a kitchen hood wouldn't be powerful enough for that.
Hope this answers any questions!