2 different things here - one is cooking food and the other is the build up of harmful gases including Carbon Monoxide.
Any cooking is best done where any cooking smells can escape from where you are doing the cooking, not everyone is a good cook.
If you are using a gas range to cook with then the same good idea is still a good idea as the burnt gases (like Carbon Monoxide) need to be removed or they will be a problem.
There is no set time for this to happen so when you are cooking you will need to open a window or a door near to where you are cooking
Carbon Monoxide carbon monoxide carbon monoxide I believe
No. Small concentrations of carbon monoxide are potentially lethal. Carbon monoxide requires higher concentrations.
NO!!! The word 'monoxide' indicates that a substance, NOT an element, has one(1) oxygen in its formula. e.g. Carbon monoxide (CO) or Nitrogen monoxide (NO)
For carbon dioxide, CO2; for carbon monoxide, CO.
The carbon monoxide is CO.
When you breath in the carbon monoxide particles stick to your red blood cells instead of oxygen, so your body essentially becomes starved of oxygen.
carbon Monoxide
Life did not exist before carbon monoxide. It is a gas that can be naturally formed and has existed for as long as the planet has.
I have a carbon monoxide detector. If a leak is detected, what type of company would I call to repair it?
carbon monoxide is a rich indicator, if you are producing too much, you have a fuel system problem.
Carbon monoxide is not created by incomplete combustion. Almost all fuel burning appliances and fires do not burn at 100% efficiency. So some carbon monoxide gas is created. The amount produced is usually not a problem if the appliances are working as designed and venting properly. However, there are many circumstances that can cause carbon monoxide levels to rise. http://www.carbon-monoxide-Survivor.com/carbon-monoxide-sources-where-it-comes-from.html
it harms the enviroment and builds up polloution
Carbon dioxide has one carbon and two oxygen molecules. Carbon monoxide has one of each. So the answer is: one "missing" oxygen atom if you are looking at it from the perspective of a carbon dioxide molecule.
of course we breathe out carbon dioxide not carbon monoxide
Soda does not have any amounts of carbon monoxide. It has carbon dioxide dissolved in it, but no carbon monoxide.
It does not contain carbon monoxide, but it will likely produce carbon monoxide when burned.
no that is carbon dioxide,carbon monoxide is CO