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Poisonous substance

Other sources of hazard arise from the handling of such chemicals as concentrated acids, alkalis, metallic sodium and bromine, and in working with such extremely poisonous substances as sodium and potassium cyanides. The special precautions to be observed will be indicated, where necessary, in the experiments in which the substances are employed, and will also be supplied by the demonstrator. The exercise of obvious precautions and cautious handling will in most cases reduce the danger to almost negligible proportions. Thus, if concentrated sulphuric acid should be accidentally spilled, it should be immediately washed with a liberal quantity of water or of a solution of a mild alkali. [Pg.206]

Muscarine is a poisonous substance present in the mushroom Amanita muscana Its struc ture IS represented by the constitution shown here... [Pg.322]

Covalent synthesis of complex molecules involves the reactive assembly of many atoms into subunits with aid of reagents and estabUshed as well as innovative reaction pathways. These subunits are then subjected to various reactions that will assemble the target molecule. These reaction schemes involve the protection of certain sensitive parts of the molecule while other parts are being reacted. Very complex molecules can be synthesized in this manner. A prime example of the success of this approach is the total synthesis of palytoxin, a poisonous substance found in marine soft corals (35). Other complex molecules synthesized by sequential addition of atoms and blocks of atoms include vitamin potentially anticancer KH-1 adenocarcinoma antigen,... [Pg.206]

The typical industrial catalyst has both microscopic and macroscopic regions with different compositions and stmctures the surfaces of industrial catalysts are much more complex than those of the single crystals of metal investigated in ultrahigh vacuum experiments. Because surfaces of industrial catalysts are very difficult to characterize precisely and catalytic properties are sensitive to small stmctural details, it is usually not possible to identify the specific combinations of atoms on a surface, called catalytic sites or active sites, that are responsible for catalysis. Experiments with catalyst poisons, substances that bond strongly with catalyst surfaces and deactivate them, have shown that the catalytic sites are usually a small fraction of the catalyst surface. Most models of catalytic sites rest on rather shaky foundations. [Pg.171]

Class A—immediately dangerous to life and health based on oxygen level less than 19.5 percent and/or airborne presence of toxic or poisonous substances in concentration constituting IDLH conditions flammabihty up to 20 percent of lower flammable limit. [Pg.2338]

Class B—Non-IDLH based on oxygen level between 19.5 and 21 percent, but classified as dangerous due to the airborne presence of toxic or poisonous substance Below IDLH level, but greater than the protection factor offered by air-purifying respirators. [Pg.2338]

Natural products that contain caibon-caibon triple bonds aie numerous. Two examples aie tariric acid, from the seed fat of a Guatemalan plant, and cicutoxin, a poisonous substance isolated from water hemlock. [Pg.364]

A toxin is a poisonous substance produced by some bacteria, such as Clostridium tetani, the bacteria that cause tetanus. A toxin is capable of stimulating the body to produce antitoxins, which are substances that act in the same manner as antibodies. Toxins are powerful substances, and like other antigens, they can be attenuated. A toxin that is attenuated (or weakened) but still capable of stimulating the formation of antitoxins is called a toxoid. [Pg.578]

The mechanism whereby the bacteria produce the disease with its attendant symptoms is often due to the cells ability to produce specific poisons, toxins or aggressins (Chapter 14). Many of these are tissue-destroying enzymes which can damage the cellular structure ofthe body or destroy red blood cells. Others (neurotoxins) are highly specific poisons ofthe central nervous system, for example the toxin produced by Clostridium botulinum is, weight for weight, one ofthe most poisonous substances known. [Pg.14]

The human body can detoxify some toxic materials. This rate of detoxification is the rate at which the body can counteract the effects of a poisonous substance. It is an important factor in determining the hazards of repeated... [Pg.185]

The city of Hamilton, Ohio, considers that all these substances are regulated under its law, which forbids the use of poisonous substances where persons, animals, or fowl may be affected. [Pg.27]

Toxins are any poisonous substances that can be produced by an animal, plant, or microbe. Because of their complexity, most toxins are difficult to synthesize in large quantities by traditional chemical means. However, they may be harvested from cultured sources or produced by genetically engineered microbes. Toxins are odorless, tasteless, and nonvolatile. Ricin (C16-A036) and saxitoxin (C16-A018) are the only toxins listed in the Chemical Weapons Convention (Schedule 1). [Pg.461]

Shulga V., Delayed neuro-endocrine toxicity indused by organophosphorus compounds-natural consequence of poisonous substances application for terrorist purpose , In Medical Aspects of Chemical and Biological Terrorism -Chemical Terrorism and Tramautism, Alexander Monov and Christophor Dishovsky, eds, Publishing House of the Union of Scientists in Bulgaria, 2005 ( in press). [Pg.13]

Franke Z., P. Frantz, Chemistry of Poisonous Substances Part I and II, Moscow 1973. [Pg.190]

Toxin A colloidal poisonous substance that is a specific product of the metabolic activities of a living organism and notably toxic when introduced into living tissue. [Pg.336]

Since Se02 is an extremely poisonous substance, so proper care is taken in its handling. [Pg.281]

Copper, like iron, is frequently encountered in reactions involving dioxygen. The copper enzyme laccase catalyses the oxidation of uroshiol (the same poisonous substance found in poison oak and ivy) in the production of Japanese lacquer. It is the products of uroshiol oxidation, which are responsible for the lacquer s remarkable material properties. [Pg.9]

The membrane is a unit of the process separated from the reactor. It maintains only the separation function (passive membrane) and there is almost no interaction between reaction and separation. In fact, we have here two different processes connected in series. Stream purification from catalyst poisoning substances or feed enrichment of a recycle stream belong to the possibilities of this configuration. [Pg.120]

Disease syndromes caused by ingestion of endotoxin or exotoxin from food, by bacteria that produce poisonous substances in a patient s gastrointestinal system, and by xenobiotics present in food products, are a major challenge for medical personnel. [Pg.335]

Benzene is shipped in tank cars, tank trucks, barges, and drums. Transfers from one vessel to another are in dosed systems because benzene is a poisonous substance with acute toxic effects. It ll kill you in 5—10 minutes if you breathe too much. Red DOT flammable liquid labels are required. [Pg.37]


See other pages where Poisonous substance is mentioned: [Pg.400]    [Pg.54]    [Pg.530]    [Pg.511]    [Pg.261]    [Pg.542]    [Pg.298]    [Pg.54]    [Pg.198]    [Pg.77]    [Pg.105]    [Pg.628]    [Pg.125]    [Pg.110]    [Pg.106]    [Pg.106]    [Pg.136]    [Pg.275]    [Pg.27]    [Pg.28]    [Pg.150]    [Pg.174]    [Pg.39]    [Pg.494]    [Pg.258]    [Pg.105]   


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