Its A gas That is made of Carbon,Fluorine,and Chlorine And they are dangerous because i said so
Answer 2: CFC gases are gases from the group Hydroflourocarbons. They are gases made up of Chlorine, Flourine, Carbon and Hydrogen, and are dangerous to our environment as they are major parts of the air pollution caused by industrial activity. They cause negative affects on Earth's delicate environment such as the depletion of Ozone in the upper atmosphere. Ozone helps keep the temperature on Earth stable by reflecting out radiation from space.
Hope this helped a little more than....the first answer comment.
The main danger of CFCs is that they deplete the ozone layer giving rise to increased penetration of UV rays on to the earth. This heats up earth's surface, melts glaciers thereby flooding many parts of the world. They also reduce the oxygen levels.
CFC is short for chlorofluorocarbon. They are, as you might guess from the name, compounds made from chlorine, fluorine, and carbon. They tend to be fairly nonreactive and are often either low-boiling liquids or easily liquified gases at room temperature and normal atmospheric pressure. They aren't dangerous in and of themselves; in fact, they're about the least dangerous molecules in existence because they're so inert. The problem is that if they get to the upper atmosphere, the UV rays there are energetic enough to break the molecules apart and knock off individual chlorine or fluorine atoms as free radicals. And free radical chlorine or fluorine atoms are extremely reactive; in particular, they catalyze the breakdown of ozone. One free radical can break down dozens or even hundreds of ozone molecules before it finds another free radical and combines into a reasonably stable molecule again. Nobody would really care, because ozone is itself poisonous (and we worry about it a lot if there's too much at the surface level), except that the reason there's much more UV in the upper atmosphere is that the ozone does a fabulous job of blocking it from reaching the lower atmosphere. So if the ozone breaks down, then we get more UV at the surface, which means more mutations and more skin cancer.
CFC's are dangerous chemicals that are synthetic. These chemicals can react with ozone in ozone layer to deplete it.
Ozone depletion and cancer .
CFCs are neither soluble in water or reactive with it. Rain has no impact on CFCs
Replacements for CFCs (dependding on use) included:HCFCsNitrogenAirPropane
no.
Deplete the ozone.
No, the chlorine and other chemicals in CFCs (chlorofluorocarbons) destroy the ozone molecules and weaken the ozone layer.
yes
No dangerous rays harm the ozone layer. CFCs (chlorofluorocarbons) harm the ozone layer. The ozone layer actually protects us and theearth from dangerous ultraviolet radiation.
CFCs are neither soluble in water or reactive with it. Rain has no impact on CFCs
Chlorofluorocarbons (CFCs) are non-toxic.
Replacements for CFCs (dependding on use) included:HCFCsNitrogenAirPropane
CFCs or chlorofluorocarbons are released when a device that holds it is leaking. Also some aerosols release CFCs into the atmosphere.
Air pollution and CFCs Ai pollution as all the gasses are polluting all the air which can be causing breathing problems and health problems. CFCs as all the fuels and gasses are creating the CFCs to crash and the hole in the atmosphere is getting bigger by the minute.
CFCs were the compressed gas that was used as "spring" to push the can contents out of the container. CFCs have been replaced with HCFCs as a consequence of the Montreal Protocol.
The Montreal Agreement of September 16, 1987, laid down rules for the phasing out of the production and use of CFCs (chlorofluorocarbons). Every country in the world agreed and ratified this, the only time this has happened in history. There are now no CFCs in use (except perhaps in the air conditioners of very old cars), or production (unless a rogue state or company is producing them illegally). CFCs were replaced in most cases by HCFCs (hydrochlorofluorocarbons), which were not so dangerous for the ozone layer. The Montreal Agreement was extended to phase out HCFCs by 2015. CFCs and HCFCs have now been replaced by HFCs (hydrofluorocarbons) which do not contain chlorine, and so do not destroy ozone. However, CFCs are dangerous greenhouse gases, much more potent than carbon dioxide, so their threat to global warming is very real. Scientists are now looking for a safer option to HFCs. There are still levels of CFCs in the atmosphere, which may lead to ozone layer depletion, and further leading to loss of lives on earth due to skin cancer, etc. caused by the ultra-violet radiation.
By the CFCs being sorced into the air, the sun is Breaking them down into the earth.
CFCs
no