ScienceIQ.com

What is Asthma?

In many people, asthma appears to be an allergic reaction to substances commonly breathed in through the air, such as animal dander, pollen, or dust mite and cockroach waste products. The catch-all name for these substances, allergens, refers to anything that provokes an allergic reaction. Some people have a genetic predisposition to react to ...

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WhatisAsthma
Chemistry

Exploding Fertilizer

Atmospheric nitrogen is a diatomic molecule of just two nitrogen atoms bonded very strongly to each other. Nitrogen, in compound with other elements, is just a single nitrogen atom bonded very weakly, ... Continue reading

ExplodingFertilizer
Medicine

Your Friend, the Fat Cell

A healthy, adult human body contains about 35 billion fat cells. Each contains about 0.5 micrograms of fat. Stored fat is essential to good health. Fat is the body's principal energy reserve. It is ... Continue reading

FatCell
Engineering

X-Ray Images & False Color

The colors we see in the world around us are the result of the way that the human eye and brain perceive different wavelengths of light in the visible part of the electromagnetic spectrum. X-rays, and ... Continue reading

XRayColor
Geology

Crater Lake

Crater Lake: overwhelmingly yet sublimely beautiful. Moody. At times brilliantly blue, ominously somber; at other times buried in a mass of brooding clouds. The lake is magical, enchanting - a remnant ... Continue reading

CraterLake

What is Oxidation?

WhatisOxidationThe term 'oxidation' derives from the ancient observation of rust (oxide) formation. Early chemists could determine an increase in the weight of a metal as it apparently captured something from the air and transformed into a completely different material The 'something' was eventually identified as oxygen, and the new materials that formed were called 'oxides'. The chemical process came to be known as oxidation.

The underlying transaction of oxidation was eventually identified as an alteration of the electronic structure of an element or compound. More accurately, this can be described as how strongly an atom 'owns' or controls the electrons around it. In an ion and ionic bonding, the atom controls its electrons completely, either by accepting them or by giving them up. In covalent bonding, an atom can be seen as sharing control of its electrons with another atom.

In oxidation, an atom loses control over a certain number of electrons to a material called an oxidizing agent. The loss of electrons by a chemical species is oxidation. Oxidation always occurs simultaneously with reduction. For example, the sulfide ion, S2-, can be easily oxidized to neutral sulfur atoms. To do this, each sulfide ion must give up ownership of two electrons to an oxidizing agent. In another example, the two carbon atoms of a carbon - carbon double bond lose control of two electrons in the reaction with an oxidizing agent to form two C - O bonds.