Lead (Pb) - Chemical Properties, Health And Environmental Effects
Maybe your like
- Home
- Request a quote Phone: +31 152 610 900 [email protected]
- Turnkey plants
- Containerized plants
- About Lenntech
- Applications
- Home
- Request a quote Phone: +31 152 610 900 [email protected]
- Applications
- Process water
- Drinking water
- Process waste water reuse
- Irrigation water
- Ultra pure water
- Foods and Beverages
- Emergency water supply
- Ecosorb Technology
- Water treatment in the car wash
- Cooling towers
- Processes
- Home
- Request a quote Phone: +31 152 610 900 [email protected]
- Processes
- Reverse Osmosis Demineralization
- Sea water desalination
- Surface water treatment processes
- Water softening systems
- Disinfection
- Remineralisation
- Waste water treatment
- Brine Treatment (ZLD)
- Electro Membrane processes
- Pesticide treatment
- Iron and manganese
- Heavy metal removal
- Nitrates treatment
- Degasser calculation sheet
- Ion exchange - demi plants
- PFAS
- Systems
- Home
- Request a quote Phone: +31 152 610 900 [email protected]
- Systems
- Deep filtration
- Reverse osmosis
- Fleck valves
- Ultrafiltration
- Ion Exchange Plants
- Ozone disinfection
- UV disinfection
- ClO2 disinfection
- Sediment filters
- Clarifiers
- LennRO mini Reverse Osmosis
- Electrodeionization Plants
- LennRO Industrial Reverse Osmosis
- Industrial Microfiltration
- HPNow Peroxide Generators
- Products
- Home
- Request a quote Phone: +31 152 610 900 [email protected]
- Products
- Sediment filters
- Filtration media
- RO membranes
- UF modules
- Chemicals
- Ion Exchange resins
- Instrumentation & sensors
- Parts for Water Treatment
- Pumps & Pumping
- Cooling Towers
- Electrodeionization (EDI)
- Watermaker Spares
- Control valves
- ATG UV Lamps / Systems
- Activated Carbon
- Replacement Parts / Spares
- Ozone generator
- Statiflo Static Mixers
- Pilot Units testing
- Instrumentation
- Inverters
- Heat Exchangers
- Industries
- Home
- Request a quote Phone: +31 152 610 900 [email protected]
- Industries
- Agriculture & Horticulture
- Chemicals & Pharmaceutics
- Food, beverage & tobacco
- Industrial water supply
- Micro Electronics
- Mining & metallurgy
- Oil & Gas
- Power generation
- Paper & Pulp
- Tourism hotels and (golf) resorts
- Services/R&D
- Home
- Request a quote Phone: +31 152 610 900 [email protected]
- Services/R&D
- Laboratory Tests
- Pilot Units
- Maintenance
- Rental Units
- Troubleshooting
- Plant Inspection & Process Optimalisation
- Separation and Concentration Purification Request
- Molecular weight cutoff (MWCO)
- Process Feasibility Assessment
- Periodic table
- Library
- Calculators
- Applications
- Processes
- Systems
- Products
- Industries
- Services/R&D
- More
- Periodic table
- Library
- Calculators
- Reference projects
-
Languages
Deutsch
English
Español
Français
Italiano
Nederlands
Polski
Português
Turkish
العربية
-
Languages
Deutsch
English
Español
Français
Italiano
Nederlands
Polski
Português
Turkish
العربية
- Home
- Periodic table
- Elements
- Lead
Chemical properties of lead - Health effects of lead - Environmental effects of lead
| |
LeadLead is a bluish-white lustrous metal. It is very soft, highly malleable, ductile, and a relatively poor conductor of electricity. It is very resistant to corrosion but tarnishes upon exposure to air. Lead isotopes are the end products of each of the three series of naturally occurring radioactive elements. Applications Lead pipes bearing the insignia of Roman emperors, used as drains from the baths, are still in service. Alloys include pewter and solder. Tetraethyl lead (PbEt4) is still used in some grades of petrol (gasoline) but is being phased out on environmental grounds. Lead is a major constituent of the lead-acid battery used extensively in car batteries. It is used as a coloring element in ceramic glazes, as projectiles, in some candles to threat the wick. It is the traditional base metal for organ pipes, and it is used as electrodes in the process of electrolysis. One if its major uses is in the glass of computer and television screens, where it shields the viewer from radiation. Other uses are in sheeting, cables, solders, lead crystal glassware, ammunitions, bearings and as weight in sport equipment. Lead in the environment Native lead is rare in nature. Currently lead is usually found in ore with zinc, silver and copper and it is extracted together with these metals. The main lead mineral in Galena (PbS) and there are also deposits of cerrussite and anglesite which are mined. Galena is mined in Australia, which produces 19% of the world's new lead, followed by the USA, China, Peru' and Canada. Some is also mined in Mexico and West Germany. World production of new lead is 6 million tonnes a year, and workable reserves total are estimated 85 million tonnes, which is less than 15 year's supply. Lead occurs naturally in the environment. However, most lead concentrations that are found in the environment are a result of human activities. Due to the application of lead in gasoline an unnatural lead-cycle has consisted. In car engines lead is burned, so that lead salts (chlorines, bromines, oxides) will originate. These lead salts enter the environment through the exhausts of cars. The larger particles will drop to the ground immediately and pollute soils or surface waters, the smaller particles will travel long distances through air and remain in the atmosphere. Part of this lead will fall back on earth when it is raining. This lead-cycle caused by human production is much more extended than the natural lead-cycle. It has caused lead pollution to be a worldwide issue. Health effects of lead
Environmental effects of lead
Read more on lead in water Back to periodic chart. |
|
More from 'Elements'
Actinium
Silver
Aluminum
Americium
Argon
Arsenic
Astatine
Gold
Boron
Barium
Beryllium
Bohrium
Bismuth
Berkelium
Bromine
Carbon
Calcium
Cadmium
Cerium
Californium
Chlorine
Curium
Cobalt
Chromium
Cesium
Copper
Dubnium
Darmstadtium
Dysprosium
Erbium
Einsteinium
Europium
Fluorine
Iron
Fermium
Francium
Gallium
Gadolinium
Germanium
Hydrogen
Helium
Hafnium
Mercury
Holmium
Hassium
Iodine
Indium
Iridium
Potassium
Krypton
Lanthanum
Lithium
Lawrencium
Lutetium
Mendelevium
Magnesium
Manganese
Molybdenum
Meitnerium
Nitrogen
Sodium
Niobium
Neodymium
Neon
Nickel
Nobelium
Neptunium
Oxygen
Osmium
Phosphorus
Protactinium
Palladium
Promethium
Polonium
Praseodymium
Platinum
Plutonium
Radium
Rubidium
Rhenium
Rutherfordium
Roentgenium
Rhodium
Radon
Ruthenium
Sulfur
Antimony
Scandium
Selenium
Seaborgium
Silicon
Samarium
Tin
Strontium
Tantalum
Terbium
Technetium
Tellurium
Thorium
About Lenntech
Lenntech (European Head Office)
Distributieweg 3 2645 EG Delfgauw The Netherlands Phone: +31 152 610 900 fax: +31 152 616 289 e-mail: [email protected]
Lenntech USA LLC (Americas)
5975 Sunset Drive South Miami, FL 33143 USA Phone: +1 877 453 8095 e-mail: [email protected]
Lenntech DMCC (Middle East)
Level 6 - OFFICE #101-One JLT Tower Jumeirah Lake Towers Dubai - U.A.E. Phone: +971 4 429 5853 e-mail: [email protected]
Lenntech terms of business are according to Orgalime SI 24 conditions. A copy can be provided on request. Privacy Policy Copyright © 1998-2025 Lenntech B.V. All rights reserved
back to topTag » What Does Lead Look Like
-
Lead - Wikipedia
-
What Does Lead Metal Look Like? - YouTube
-
What Does A Lead Hazard Look Like? | CLEARCorps Detroit
-
Facts About Lead | Live Science
-
Photos Of Natural Lead Ore, Lead Minerals And Specimens
-
Lead Facts
-
Lead
-
Learn About Lead | US EPA
-
[PDF] What Do Lead Service Lines Look Like?
-
What Does A Good Quality Lead Look Like? - WorkCast
-
What Does Lead Look Like? - Blurtit
-
Commodity Lead - Everything You Need To Know About The Metal Lead
-
What Does Lead Look, Taste And Smell Like In Water?
Languages 