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  • 20 Examples of Toxic Gases
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    20 Examples of Toxic Gases

    Miscellanea   /   by admin   /   July 04, 2021

    The toxic gases They are substances of a fickle and ethereal nature, whose interaction with the human body is irritating, harmful or lethal. Many are the product of chemical reactions primary, voluntary or not, and are usually also flammable, oxidizers or corrosive, so the handling of it requires special care. For example: pepper spray, ozone, cyanide.

    According to their effect on the body, they can be:

    Examples of toxic gases

    carbon monoxide
    1. Carbon monoxide (CO). One of the most toxic forms of oxidation Carbon is a colorless gas capable of causing death when inhaled in large quantities. It is a common gas in the industrial world: it is the result of the reaction of combustion in combustion engines and burning hydrocarbons and other organic substances.
    2. Sulfur dioxide (SW2). It is a colorless, irritating gas with a very particular odor and soluble into water, which becomes acid (This reaction takes place in the polluted atmospheres and produces acid rain). It is usually released as a product of industrial combustion, despite the fact that in contact with the respiratory system it causes severe irritation and bronchitis.
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    3. Mustard gas. It is a family of highly irritating chemicals used as weapons of war (for the first time in 1915, in the First World War). It can be treated in two different ways: nitrogen mustards or sulfur mustards. Contact with them causes blisters and ulcerations on the skin or mucous membranes and eventually leads to agonizing suffocation.
    4. Pepper spray. Also known as tear gas, it is capable of producing moderate and painful irritation of the ocular and respiratory mucosa, and even temporary blindness. It is used as a personal defense mechanism or in the dispersal of demonstrations.
    5. Lewisite. It is a highly toxic synthetic chemical that was developed by the North American war industry during the First and Second World Wars. When inhaled, it causes painful burning, coughing, vomiting, runny nose and pulmonary edema.
    6. Ozone. This gas is naturally found in the atmosphere, where it shields us from solar radiation. It is rare in the everyday environment. Exposure to ozone generates irritation in the respiratory system and inflammatory bronchial responses. In high concentrations it can cause cyanosis, extreme fatigue and kidney failure.
    7. Methane (CH4). The simplest alkane hydrocarbon that exists is a combustible and potentially asphyxiating gas, colorless, odorless, insoluble in water. In high concentrations it can suffocate by displacing oxygen from the environment.
    8. Butane (C4H10). It is a highly flammable and volatile hydrocarbon, which is usually handled domestically and with the addition of odorant markers to detect its leaks (since it is odorless). It is potentially suffocating. It produces drowsiness, hallucinations and loss of consciousness when inhaled.
    9. Fire fumes. They are also known as mixed gases, as they contain various combinations of irritating and suffocating gases, depending on the nature of the gases. materials consumed in the fire. They are the main cause of death in fires, due to their wide effects on the body: suffocation, severe irritation, necrosis, cyanosis, etc.
    10. Cyanide (CN–). It is one of the most toxic substances known and with the most immediate lethal effect. In its gaseous form, it has a characteristic odor (similar to chestnuts), whose detection margin is very close to lethal. Its immediate effects inhibit cellular respiration and often lead to cardiorespiratory arrest.
    11. Diatomic chlorine (Cl2). Known as dichloro, it is a greenish-yellow gas, with a strong and unpleasant odor and very high toxicity. It was used as a weapon of war in the First World War, due to its pneumotoxic effects in medium concentrations. It is used in the chemical and materials industry, as well as in certain solvents domestic.
    12. Nitrogen oxides (I) (N2OR). Also called laughing gas, it is colorless, sweet-smelling and slightly toxic. It is neither flammable nor explosive, and is often used for pharmaceutical and anesthetic purposes. It has an important contribution to the greenhouse effect and, therefore, to global warming.
    13. Phosgene (COCl2). It is a poisonous gas, used as a pesticide and input in the plastics industry. It can be colorless or take the shape of a white or yellow cloud. It is not found naturally anywhere, it is not flammable, and it has an unpleasant odor. It is highly irritating and suffocating.
    14. Ammonia (NH3). Also called ammonium gas, it is colorless and has a very unpleasant and characteristic odor. It is widely used in various human industries, despite being caustic and highly polluting. The human body is able to process it through the Urea Cycle and expel it in the urine, but in reaction with other compounds it is highly toxic and flammable.
    15. Helium (He). It is a monatomic gas that exhibits many of the properties of Noble gases, It is colorless, odorless and very abundant since the stellar reactions produce it from hydrogen. When inhaled, it modifies the propagation speed of the sound, which results in high-pitched and rapid voices, but too much concentration can replace oxygen and cause suffocation.
    16. Argon (Ar). It is one of the noble gases, colorless and inert, little reactive and little conductor of heat, widely used in the electrical industry. It is a simple asphyxiant, whose toxicity depends on the decrease in oxygen in the environment, so it requires high concentrations to do so.
    17. Formaldehyde (CH2OR). It is a colorless gas with a very pungent odor. When it is dissolved in 40% water, it is called formaldehyde, and it is used to preserve biological specimens. It is a known carcinogen and irritant to the respiratory system.
    18. Fluorine (F). It is the most electronegative and reactive of all elements, composes a pale yellow gas with a pungent odor (F2). It has a high affinity for zinc and iodine. Zinc is essential for the functioning of memory, learning and the generation of antibodies. On the other hand, iodine is important for the thyroid and hormonal regulation of the body. Fluorine reduces the role of these two elements in the body by joining them.
    19. Acrolein (C3H4OR). While it is a liquid In its natural state, it is highly flammable and evaporates rapidly when heated, producing a gas that is irritating to the respiratory system whose toxic effects are not well studied, but point to moderate lung damage.
    20. Carbon dioxide (CO2). It is the natural result of respiration and many combustion processes, capable of suffocating by displacement of the molecules of oxygen, being heavier than air and very low flammable. It is odorless and colorless.
    Polluted air in Beijing

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