Quizzes & Puzzles3 mins ago
the smell of natural gas
am i right in thinking that natural gas is actually odourless and its smell is added later ?
if so,how & when ? Also , who decided the smell would be the one we know and love ?!
Thanks .
Answers
No best answer has yet been selected by Mattk. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.You are correct. The smell of gas is added to make it detectable, and also prevent people from using it to commit suicide. The idea was that the smell would make the suicide attemptee sick and thus abandon their attemt before any real harm was done.
Another interesting fact about gas (which a gas fitter told me) is that if you fill a room completely with gas, then strike a match - it won't explode! I've never tried it, but have no reason to disbelieve him!!
The ''old'' gas contained large amounts of carbon monoxide, Carbon monoxide inhibits the blood's capacity to carry oxygen. In our lungs, CO quickly passes into our bloodstream and attaches itself to hemoglobin (oxygen carrying pigment in red blood cells). Hemoglobin readily accepts carbon monoxide - even over the life giving oxygen atoms (as much as 200 times as readily as oxygen) forming a toxic compound known as carboxyhemoglobin (COHb).
By replacing oxygen with carbon monoxide in our blood, our bodies poison themselves by cutting off the needed oxygen to our organs and cells, causing various amounts of damage - depending on exposure.
The ''new'' gas does not contain carbon monoxide and so is very safe.
And yes a space completely filled with gas will not explode it has to be mixed with oxygen at a specific ratio to be come explosive.
"Town gas" was derived from coal, and was made at the local 'gas works' it contained a mixture of aliphatic and aromatic hydrocarbons and carbon monoxide.
Natural gas is mainly methane.
Carbon monoxide is also formed by incomplete combustion of a fuel. In a properly ventilated environment, this carbon monoxide (CO) is itself burnt (oxidised) and burns with a blue flame to form carbon dioxide (CO2), but if ventilation is poor, their is not enough oxygen to oxidise the CO to CO2 and so it builds up. This can cause carbon monoxide poisoning as described by qapmoc.