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Camphor

Camphor, volatile, white, crystalline compound,with a characteristic aromatic odor. Ordinary camphor is obtained from the camphor tree, Cinnamomum camphora, which grows in Asia and Brazil. The camphor is distilled by steaming chips of the root, stem , or bark . The leaves of certain plants, such as tansy and feverfew, contain a second form of camphor, which is not used commercially. A racemic form is present in the oil of an Asian chrysanthemum and is also produced synthetically for most commercial uses. Camphor is used in the manufacture of celluloid and explosives and medicinally in liniments and other preparations for its mild antiseptic and anesthetic qualities. It is poisonous if ingested in large amounts. Camphor is insoluble in water, soluble in organic solvents, and melts at 176° C (349° F) and boils at 209° C (405° F).

Ozone

Ozone (Greek ozein, “to smell”), pale blue, highly poisonous gas with a strong odor. Ozone is considered a pollutant at ground level, but the ozone layer of the upper atmosphere protects life on Earth from the Sun’s harmful ultraviolet radiation. Ozone is one of three forms, called allotropes, of the element oxygen. Ozone is triatomic, meaning that it has three atoms in each molecule (formula O3). Ordinary, or diatomic, oxygen (O2) is more stable than ozone and accounts for the bulk of oxygen in the atmosphere. Electrical sparks and ultraviolet light can cause ordinary oxygen to form ozone. The presence of ozone sometimes causes a detectable odor near electrical outlets. PROPERTIES At normal temperatures and pressures ozone is a gas with a specific gravity of 2.144 (about 1.5 times the density of ordinary oxygen gas). Ozone accounts for only a tiny fraction of the atmosphere and is normally invisible, but high concentrations of ozone gas are pale blue. The gas condenses to a liquid at ...

Chlorofluorocarbons (CFCs)

Chlorofluorocarbons (CFCs), family of synthetic chemicals that are compounds of the elements chlorine, fluorine, and carbon. CFCs are stable, nonflammable, noncorrosive, relatively nontoxic chemicals and are easy and inexpensive to produce. During the 1970s, scientists linked CFCs to the destruction of Earth’s ozone layer. The manufacture of CFCs has since been banned in most countries. USES Scientists developed the first CFCs during the late 1920s. The compounds subsequently became used in a wide range of industrial products in the United States, Europe, and Japan. Manufacturers used CFCs as refrigerants in refrigerators, freezers, air conditioners, and heat pumps, and as propellants in aerosols and medical inhalers. CFCs also served as insulating foams in packaging materials, furniture, bedding, and car seats. Cleaning agents for electronic circuit boards, metal parts, and dry cleaning processes also used CFCs. Learn more: Harmful Effects of CFCs Regulation Extended Impact

Allotrope

Allotrope, two or more distinct physical forms of a chemical element in the same physical state. The term allotropy comes from the Greek allos tropos meaning “another shape.” Allotropes arise because of differing arrangements of an element’s atoms within its molecules or crystals. One of the best-known examples of allotropy is carbon , which has multiple distinct allotropes including graphite , diamond , and buckminsterfullerene . Carbon atoms in diamond form a rigid, three-dimensional structure, with each carbon atom bonded to four other carbon atoms. In graphite the carbon atoms form stacks of flat honeycomb layers with only weak intermolecular forces between layers, while buckminsterfullerene forms balls and tubes with structures reminiscent of the geodesic domes designed by the architect Richard Buckminster Fuller. Elements exhibiting allotropy include arsenic , antimony , iron , oxygen , phosphorus , selenium , sulfur , and tin . There are two main kinds of allotropy, monotropy...

Infrared Radiation

Infrared Radiation, emission of energy as electromagnetic waves in the portion of the spectrum just beyond the limit of the red portion of visible radiation (see Electromagnetic Radiation ). The wavelengths of infrared radiation are shorter than those of radio waves and longer than those of light waves. They range between approximately 10-6 and 10-3 (about 0.0004 and 0.04 in). Infrared radiation may be detected as heat, and instruments such as bolometers are used to detect it. Infrared radiation is used to obtain pictures of distant objects obscured by atmospheric haze, because visible light is scattered by haze but infrared radiation is not. The detection of infrared radiation is used by astronomers to observe stars and nebulas that are invisible in ordinary light or that emit radiation in the infrared portion of the spectrum. An opaque filter that admits only infrared radiation is used for very precise infrared photographs, but an ordinary orange or light-red filter, which will absor...

Fossil Fuels

Fossil Fuels, energy-rich substances that have formed from long-buried plants and microorganisms. Fossil fuels, which include petroleum, coal, and natural gas, provide most of the energy that powers modern industrial society. The gasoline that fuels our cars, the coal that powers many electrical plants, and the natural gas that heats our homes are all fossil fuels. Chemically, fossil fuels consist largely of hydrocarbons, which are compounds composed of hydrogen and carbon. Some fossil fuels also contain smaller amounts of other compounds. Hydrocarbons form from ancient living organisms that were buried under layers of sediment millions of years ago. As accumulating sediment layers exerted increasing heat and pressure, the remains of the organisms gradually transformed into hydrocarbons. The most commonly used fossil fuels are petroleum, coal, and natural gas. These substances are extracted from the earth’s crust and, if necessary, refined into suitable fuel products, such as gasoline,...

Formation of Fossil Fuels

Fossil fuels formed from ancient organisms that died and were buried under layers of accumulating sediment. As additional sediment layers built up over these organic deposits, the material was subjected to increasing temperatures and pressures. Over millions of years, these physical conditions chemically transformed the organic material into hydrocarbons. Most organic debris is destroyed at the earth's surface by oxidation or by consumption by microorganisms. Organic material that survives to become buried under sediments or deposited in other oxygen-poor environments begins a series of chemical and biological transformations that may ultimately result in petroleum, natural gas, or coal. Many such deposits occur in sedimentary basins (depressed areas in the earth’s crust where sediments accumulate), and along continental shelves. Sediments may accumulate to depths of several thousand feet in a basin, exerting pressures up to one hundred million pascals (tens of thousands of pounds ...