Wednesday, October 2, 2019
Lead :: essays research papers
 Lead is a lustrous, silvery  metal that tarnishes in the presence of air and becomes a dull bluish  gray. Soft and flexible, it has a low melting point (327 Ã °C). Its chemical  symbol, Pb, is from plumbum, the Latin word for waterworks, because of  lead's extensive use in ancient water pipes. Itsatomic number is 82; its  atomic weight is 207.19.    Lead and lead compounds can be highly toxic  when eaten or inhaled. Although lead is absorbed very slowly into the  body, its rate of excretion is even slower. Thus, with constant exposure,  lead accumulates gradually in the body. It is absorbed by the red blood  cells and circulated through the body where it becomes concentrated in  the soft tissues, especially the liver and kidneys. Lead can cause damage  in the central nervous system and apparently can damage the cells making  up the blood-brain barrier that protects the brain from many harmful chemicals.    Symptoms  of lead poisoning include loss of appetite, weakness, anemia, vomiting,  and convulsions, sometimes leading to permanent brain damage or death.  Children who ingest chips of old, lead-containing paint or are exposed  to dust from the deterioration of such paint may exhibit symptoms. Levels  of environmental lead considered nontoxic may also be involved in increased  hypertension in a significant number of persons, according to studies  released in the mid-1980s. As a result, the U.S. Centers for Disease Control  in recent years have been revising downward the levels of environmental  lead that it would consider safe. At one time, lead poisoning was common  among those who worked with lead, but such workplace hazards have been  largely curtailed.    Lead has been used by humans since ancient times.  It was used in ancient Egypt in coins, weights,  ornaments, utensils,  ceramic glazes, and solder. Lead is mentioned in the Old Testament. The  Romans  conveyed drinking water in lead pipes, some of which are still in operation.  Roman slaves  extracted and prepared the lead, describes a disease among  the slaves that was clearly lead poisoning. Because of their potential  toxicity, lead water pipes are no longer being installed. The greatest  single use of lead metal today is in the plates of storage batteries for  automobiles.    The protective oxidation layer formed by lead in contact  with such substances as air, sulfuric acid,  and fluorine makes it highly  resistant to corrosion. For this reason, lead has been used to make  drainage  pipes and lead chambers in sulfuric acid factories. It is also used as  a roofing material. The  softness and malleability of lead make it useful  for sheathing telephone and television cables. Lead is  used in solder  because of its low melting point. When combined with tin, lead forms solder    					    
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