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  2. Ammonia pollution - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ammonia_pollution

    Ammonia is toxic to aquatic life which leads to increased amounts of fish deaths. [6] Ammonia pollution also leads to eutrophication. Eutrophication is the growth of algae that kills other aquatic life and creates dead zones. Ammonia pollution affects freshwater and salt water ecosystems differently due to physical and chemical differences.

  3. Ammonia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ammonia

    The world's longest ammonia pipeline (roughly 2400 km long), [128] running from the TogliattiAzot plant in Russia to Odesa in Ukraine. The US Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) has set a 15-minute exposure limit for gaseous ammonia of 35 ppm by volume in the environmental air and an 8-hour exposure limit of 25 ppm by volume. [129]

  4. Asphyxiant gas - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Asphyxiant_gas

    Fire extinguisher systems that flood spaces with inert gases, such as computer data centers and sealed vaults [4] Large-scale natural release of gas, such as during the Lake Nyos disaster in which volcanically-released carbon dioxide killed 1,800 people. [6]

  5. Hazmat team responds to airborne chemical leak at East St ...

    www.aol.com/news/hazmat-team-responding-chemical...

    Here’s what we know about the chemical leak. Home & Garden. Lighter Side

  6. Ammonium chloride - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ammonium_chloride

    Concentrated ammonia and hydrochloric acid solutions are added to two gas-washing bottles, respectively. Using rubber pumps, air (acting as gas-carrier) is injected in the gas-washing tubes causing the streams of ammonia and hydrogen chloride in air to collide and react giving the solid product, ammonium chloride.

  7. Ammonia production - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ammonia_production

    Before the start of World War I, most ammonia was obtained by the dry distillation of nitrogenous vegetable and animal products; by the reduction of nitrous acid and nitrites with hydrogen; and also by the decomposition of ammonium salts by alkaline hydroxides or by quicklime, the salt most generally used being the chloride (sal-ammoniac).

  8. Haber process - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Haber_process

    Fritz Haber, 1918. The Haber process, [1] also called the Haber–Bosch process, is the main industrial procedure for the production of ammonia. [2] [3] It converts atmospheric nitrogen (N 2) to ammonia (NH 3) by a reaction with hydrogen (H 2) using finely divided iron metal as a catalyst:

  9. Forming gas - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Forming_gas

    It is sometimes called a "dissociated ammonia atmosphere" due to the reaction which generates it: 2 NH 3 → 3 H 2 + N 2. It can also be manufactured by thermal cracking of ammonia, in an ammonia cracker or forming gas generator. [2] Forming gas is used as an atmosphere for processes that need the properties of hydrogen gas.