Nitrogen dioxide
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Nitrogen dioxide
Nitrogen dioxide is the chemical compound with the formula NO2. It is one of the several nitrogen oxides. This reddish-brown toxic gas has a characteristic sharp, biting odor. NO2 is one of the most prominent air pollutants.
Preparation and reactionsNitrogen dioxide (NO2) arises from the aerobic oxidation of nitric oxide:
In the laboratory, NO2 can be prepared by treating of nitric acid (HNO3) with copper metal. The reaction is the following:[1]
NO2 exists in equilibrium with its dimer, N2O4, which is colourless and diamagnetic. Safety and pollution considerationsNitrogen dioxide is toxic by inhalation but the material is so acrid that accidental poisoning is easily avoided. For example, fuming nitric acid is often contaminated with NO2. Symptoms of poisoning (lung edema) tend to appear several hours after one has inhaled a low but potentially fatal dose. Also, low concentrations (4 ppm) will anesthetize the nose, thus creating a potential for overexposure. Long-term exposure to NO2 at concentrations above 40–100 µg/m³ causes adverse health effects[2]. Nitrogen dioxide is formed in most combustion processes using air as the oxidant. At elevated temperatures nitrogen combines with oxygen to form nitrogen dioxide:
The most important sources of NO2 are internal combustion engines [3], thermal power stations and, to a lesser extent, pulp mills.[4] The excess air required for complete combustion of fuels in these processes introduces nitrogen into the combustion reactions at high temperatures and produces nitrous oxides (NOx). Limiting NOx production demands the precise control of the amount of air used in combustion. The map shown below, depicting results of satellite measurements over Europe, illustrates nitrogen dioxide as large scale pollutant, with rural background ground level concentrations in some areas around 30 µg/m³, not far below unhealthful levels. Nitrogen dioxide plays a role in atmospheric chemistry, including the formation of tropospheric ozone. A recent study by researchers at the University of California, San Diego, suggests a link between NO2 levels and Sudden Infant Death Syndrome. [5]
NO2 pollution levels in Europe, from January 2003 to June 2004. See also
Nitrogen dioxide (NO2) gas converts to the colorless gas dinitrogen tetroxide (N2O4) at low temperatures, and converts back to NO2 at higher temperatures. Both bottles in this photograph contain equal amounts of gas at different temperatures.
More esoteric nitrogen oxides include N2O5 and the blue species N2O3. Oxidized (cationic) and reduced (anionic) derivatives of many of these oxides exist: nitrite (NO2?), nitrate (NO3?), nitronium or NO2+, and nitrosonium or NO+. NO2 is intermediate between nitrite and nitronium:
References
External links
ar:????? ????? ???????? bs:Du?ik dioksid ca:Diòxid de nitrogen cs:Oxid dusi?itý da:Nitrogendioxid de:Stickstoffdioxid es:Óxido de nitrógeno (IV) fr:Dioxyde d'azote ko:??? ?? it:Diossido di azoto nl:Stikstofdioxide ja:????? no:Nitrogendioksid pl:Tlenek azotu(IV) pt:Dióxido de azoto ru:????? ?????(IV) sk:Oxid dusi?itý sl:Du?ikov dioksid fi:Typpidioksidi sv:Kvävedioxid uk:??????? ????? zh:???? Source: Wikipedia | The above article is available under the GNU FDL. | Edit this article
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