In the natural atmosphere open to air movements ammonia has a limited half life as it is absorbed by wet surfaces, scrubbed out by rain, diffused by air movement and chemically removed by other materials. In confined spaces ammonia can build up (example, the air space over chicken manure storage)
A build up is the result of ammonia generation past the removal mechanisms present in the system (however defined)
ammonia methane and oxygen
No, ammonia is less dense than air.
yes there is naturally occurring Ammonia in the air you breathe, Ammonia is made when you die and decompose and that Ammonia Nh3 goes into the air, it is everywhere and present all around us, so there is Ammonia in small amounts, it is important for life if there is no Ammonia then no you or me, i wouldn't be giving you this note to you for example if Ammonia haven't existed, it is also made naturally from the decomposition of proteins. yes Ammonia is in the air.
Ammonia can be built up in them separately or the two together. Some species of fish produce more waste and therefore more ammonia than others, for example the goldfish. Turtles are also very wast producing and turtle tanks are often high in ammonia. All fish produce ammonia. So yes.
The 'Iqair ammonia purifier' removes harmful ammonia from the air.
An ammonia purger removes air and noncondensables from the ammonia system by directing vapor from the condenser, where air collects, through cold liquid ammonia. This condenses the ammonia and separates noncondensables which are then removed from the system.
Yes ammonia is less dense than air
Ammonia is found all around us. In the air, soil,water.
The "Haber process" to produce ammonia from the nitrogen in the air was developed by Fritz Haber and Carl Bosch in 1909 and patented in 1910.
Ammonia is a air polluter. So we place ammonia plants ner towns.
An alkaline air is an obsolete name for ammonia.
That would likely not be a good idea. Ammonia is toxic in the concentrations produced by industry. So it would be ill-advised to build an ammonia factory uin an area prone to major natural disasters.