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How is carbon monoxide produced?

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How is carbon monoxide produced?

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10

Carbon monoxide is hard to detect because it has no smell, taste or colour. It is therefore easy to inhale it without realising. Carbon monoxide is produced when fuels such as gas, oil, coal and wood do not burn fully. When a fire burns in an enclosed room, the oxygen in the room is gradually used up and replaced with carbon dioxide. Following a build-up of carbon dioxide in the air, the fuel is prevented from burning fully, and starts releasing carbon monoxide instead. The effects of breathing in carbon monoxide When carbon monoxide is breathed in, it gets into the blood stream where it mixes with the haemoglobin. Haemoglobin is the part of the red blood cells that carry oxygen around the body. When carbon monoxide mixes with haemoglobin, the blood is no longer able to carry oxygen. This lack of oxygen causes the body tissue and cells to die. When haemoglobin mixes with carbon monoxide it produces a compound called carboxyhaemoglobin. Carboxyhaemoglobin affects blood vessels in the bo

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