How important to detect CO released by tobacco burned

Smoking is harmful to health and can easily lead to lung diseases for a long time. Studies have found that most lung diseases are linked to smoking. Lung cancer kills millions of people every year and is the most common form of cancer in many countries, including China.

Tobacco contains many harmful substances such as nicotine, carbon monoxide, tar and so on. These harmful substances are harmful to the windpipe, mouth and lungs. If tar deposits on the lung villi, it destroys their function and can lead to lung disease. Smoking can reduce the amount of oxygen in the blood in the brain, to some extent blocking blood circulation in the brain, causing bleeding and occlusion of blood vessels in the brain, which can lead to paralysis, stroke and other diseases. In general, smokers are twice as likely to have a stroke as nonsmokers.

CO release when smoking

In short, smoking is harmful to all other organs of the body, such as the liver, reproductive system, and especially second-hand smoke, which is more harmful to those around it. So, for your own health, you should embrace a healthy lifestyle and quit smoking as soon as possible.

In addition, the harm of smoking to the environment should not be underestimated. Cigarette butts produced by smoking are non-degradable garbage, which will not only corrod the surrounding land, greatly reduce the ability of land to retain water and fertilizer, but also deteriorate the water quality and bring inconvenience to the use of water resources. As tobacco is grown and processed, more soil will harden and more trees will be cut down, which will cause serious soil erosion.

Cigarette smoke is an important source of indoor pollutants. The composition of smoke is very complex. More than 3,000 chemicals have been identified, many of which are carcinogenic, teratogenic and mutagenic. They exist in the air as gases and aerosols, of which gaseous substances account for more than 90%. Gaseous pollutants include CO, NO2, alkanes, alkenes and so on.

The smoke contains a lot of carbon monoxide. Carbon monoxide binds hemoglobin 240 to 300 times more than oxygen. When inhaled, it binds to hemoglobin, severely weakening the oxygen-carrying capacity of red blood cells. Therefore, smoking accelerates blood clotting, which is easy to cause cardiovascular diseases such as myocardial infarction, stroke and myocardial hypoxia.

So it is very important to detect carbon monoxide concentration in smoke, and JXCT CO sensor can be very sensitive to help you detect whether carbon monoxide exceeds the standard

CO gas sensor

JXCT Electrochemical CO gas sensor has three electrode structure design, the built-in high precision electrochemical sensor, gas concentration by circuit signal output to the customer need to digital signal, sensor internal precision, excellent noise processing, temperature compensation, the factory before each sensor through standard calibration gas processing, is a mature technology and excellent electrochemical detection circuit design, Design and manufacture of gas sensors, versatility to ensure that customers receive sensor modules directly output usable and accurate gas concentration information

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