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  2. Carbon monoxide - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carbon_monoxide

    The blast furnace process is a typical example of a process of reduction of metal from ore with carbon monoxide. Likewise, blast furnace gas collected at the top of blast furnace, still contains some 10% to 30% of carbon monoxide, and is used as fuel on Cowper stoves and on Siemens-Martin furnaces on open hearth steelmaking .

  3. Carbothermic reaction - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carbothermic_reaction

    2, and coke (impure carbon) to produce P 4. The chemical equation for this process when starting with fluoroapatite, a common phosphate mineral, is: 4 Ca 5 (PO 4) 3 F + 18 SiO 2 + 30 C → 3 P 4 + 30 CO + 18 CaSiO 3 + 2 CaF 2. Of historic interest is the Leblanc process. A key step in this process is the reduction of sodium sulfate with coal: [3]

  4. Carbon monoxide poisoning - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carbon_monoxide_poisoning

    Carbon monoxide has a higher diffusion coefficient compared to oxygen, and the main enzyme in the human body that produces carbon monoxide is heme oxygenase, which is located in nearly all cells and platelets. [6] Most endogenously produced CO is stored bound to hemoglobin as carboxyhemoglobin. The simplistic understanding for the mechanism of ...

  5. Carboxyhemoglobin - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carboxyhemoglobin

    Later in 1854, Adrien Chenot similarly suggested carbon monoxide could remove oxygen from blood and be oxidized within the body to carbon dioxide. [4] The mechanism for carbon monoxide poisoning in the context of carboxyhemoglobin formation is widely credited to Claude Bernard whose memoirs beginning in 1846 and published in 1857 notably ...

  6. Water gas - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Water_gas

    Hydrocarbonate is an archaic term for water gas composed of carbon monoxide and hydrogen generated by passing steam through glowing coke.Hydrocarbonate was classified as a factitious air and explored for therapeutic properties by some eighteenth-century physicians, including Thomas Beddoes and James Watt. [5]

  7. Twelve die from carbon monoxide poisoning at Georgian ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/twelve-die-carbon-monoxide-poisoning...

    Carbon monoxide is particularly dangerous because it is colourless and odourless, making it impossible to detect without the necessary equipment. Symptoms of carbon monoxide poisoning may include ...

  8. Boudouard reaction - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Boudouard_reaction

    The Boudouard reaction is an important process inside a blast furnace. The reduction of iron oxides is not achieved by carbon directly, as reactions between solids are typically very slow, but by carbon monoxide. The resulting carbon dioxide undergoes a (reverse) Boudouard reaction upon contact with coke carbon.

  9. 12 dead at a ski resort in Georgia from possible carbon ...

    www.aol.com/news/12-dead-ski-resort-georgia...

    Eleven Indian nationals were among 12 people found dead at a ski resort in the Caucasus Mountains of Georgia, officials said, in what may be a case of carbon monoxide poisoning. All were employees ...