carbon dioxide dioksid-e karbon, gâz karbonik (#) Fr.: dioxyde de carbone CO2, also called carbonic acid gas. A colorless gas which occurs in
the atmosphere playing an essential part in animal respiration and the
growth of green plants. → photosynthesis,
→ carbon cycle. It is formed by the
→ oxidation of carbon and carbon compounds. Carbon dioxide is the most
important → greenhouse gas produced by human activities, primarily
through the combustion of fossil fuels. Its concentration in the
Earth's atmosphere has risen by more than 30% since the Industrial
Revolution. CO2 forms a solid at -78.5 °C at atmospheric pressure, and
is used as a refrigerant in this form as a dry ice for the
preservation of frozen foods. As carbon dioxide gas is heavier than
air and does not support combustion, it is used in fire
extinguishers. |
dioxide dioksid Fr.: dioxyde Any → oxide containing two → atoms of → oxygen the → molecule. |
uranium dioxide dioksid-e urâniyom Fr.: dioxyde d'uranium A black crystalline solid (UO2pitchblende, carnotite, and autunite and is used chiefly as a source of nuclear energy by fission of the radioisotope uranium-235. After the → uranium hexafluoride is enriched, a fuel fabricator converts it into uranium dioxide powder and presses the powder into fuel pellets. |