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General | |
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Name | Carbon monoxide |
Chemical formula | CO |
Appearance | Colourless gas |
Physical | |
Formula weight | 28.0 amu |
Melting point | 68 K (-205 °C) |
Boiling point | 81 K (-192 °C) |
Density | 8.0 ×103 kg/m3 (liquid) |
Solubility | 0.0026 g in 100g water |
Thermochemistry | |
ΔfH0gas | -110.53 kJ/mol |
ΔfH0liquid | ? kJ/mol |
ΔfH0solid | ? kJ/mol |
S0gas, 1 bar | 197.66 J/mol·K |
S0liquid, 1 bar | ? J/mol·K |
S0solid | ? J/mol·K |
Safety | |
Ingestion | May cause nausea and vomiting. |
Inhalation | Very dangerous, can be fatal. |
Skin | Inhalation may cause skin lesions. Avoid contact with cryogenic liquid. |
Eyes | Inhalation can cause long-term problems with vision. |
More info | Hazardous Chemical Database (http://ull.chemistry.uakron.edu/erd/chemicals/7/6261) |
SI units were used where possible. Unless otherwise stated, standard conditions were used. |
It binds very strongly to the iron atom in hemoglobin, (the principal oxygen-carrying compound in blood); this renders the hemoglobin incapable of taking up and releasing oxygen. A sufficient exposure to carbon monoxide can reduce the oxygen carrying capacity of the blood to the point that the victim becomes unconscious, and can suffer brain damage or even death from anoxia. Hemoglobin acquires a bright red colour when bound to carbon monoxide, so a casualty of CO poisoning can actually look abnormally pink-cheeked and healthy.
Town gas, used for illumination and heating from the 19th century, was made by passing steam through red-hot coke; the resultant reaction between the water and carbon generated a mixture of hydrogen and carbon monoxide. Town gas has now been replaced by natural gas (methane). Wood gas, the result of the incomplete combustion of wood, also contains carbon monoxide as a major component. The exhaust of the internal combustion engine, when burning a carbon based fuel (i.e. almost any fuel except pure hydrogen) contains carbon monoxide as well.
As other poisons such as opiates and arsenic had their availability placed under more and more stringent legal restrictions, the use of carbon monoxide in town gas became the principal method of suicide by poisoning. Later, suicide was often committed by inhaling exhaust fumes of running engines. Air-quality regulations have begun to reduce suicide by this route, as catalytic converters designed to clean up the exhausts remove all but a trace of CO.
During World War II, the Nazis devised a portable gas chamber for their murder of Jews and other minorities: the so-called `gas van', a Diesel engine van, with the CO-laden exhaust piped into the back of the van.
A major problem of accidental CO poisoning that still exists is the use of heaters, particularly gas water heaters and gas fires which are improperly vented. There are a number of deaths every year from this cause.
The structure of the CO molecule is best described using molecular orbital theory. The length of the bond (0.111 nm) indicates that it has a partial triple bond character. The molecule has a small dipole moment and is often represented by three resonance structures:
The metal nickel forms a volatile compound with carbon monoxide, known as nickel carbonyl. The carbonyl decomposes readily back to the metal and gas, and this was used as the basis for the industrial purification of nickel.
As in nickel carbonyl and other carbonyls, the electron pair on the carbon bonded to the metal. In this case carbon monoxide is regarded as a the carbonyl ligand.
The CAS registry number of carbon monoxide is 630-08-0.
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