helene_t, on 2015-April-06, 08:47, said:
Intersting. Do you have a source?
This was all stuff from he 1980's. So, I don't have any sources. I was an undergraduate in Chemical Engineering at the time and did several projects on Tetra Ethyl Lead and fuel. (We had a mandatory group project "Chemistry and Society". This took an afternoon per week of instructor contact for an entire year. We chose Lead in Fuel, since it was hot at the time (1984) in the Netherlands: The Kuwait Petroleum Company (Q8) was the first one to introduce lead free fuel on the market there, under the brand name 2048.
We studied quite a bit of literature. I would not claim that our work at the time was of top scientific level, bit I'ld like to think that we were quite thorough. (We got excellent grades, at least.)
So most of the "politico-social background" comes from those days from my memory and, obviously, I have followed the developments there.
Later in my career, I specialized in catalysis. Then the story of the three-way catalyst is mandatory knowledge, because it is the connection of the world of science to the man in the street. Whenever you need to explain what kind of work you do, you need an example of an application that an interested layperson might have heard of. The catalyst in the car is the obvious example.
Now, I am a surface scientist: I look specifically at the outermost layer of atoms of a material. This is important in catalysis, since the reaction happens at the surface of the catalyst where the gas can be in contact with it. But it is also important in many other fields, such as layer growth (e.g. semiconductors are grown one layer of atoms at the time!), adhesion (How do you make the paint stick to a rubber car bumper? Try to paint some piece of plastic at home without it chipping off in 2-3 days.), friction (wear), biology (How do chemical compounds (food, medication, poison enter a cell?), pharma, etc...
Meanwhile, I am not active in all the other aspects of catalysis anymore (catalyst design, catalytic reactor engineering, etc.). So I don't look at the 50 m scale of catalytic reactors in an oil refinery or chemical plant, or on the 30 cm scale of a three-way catalyst in a car. I look at what happens on the 0.2 nm scale: the thickness of 1 layer of atoms.
helene_t, on 2015-April-06, 08:47, said:
But when you say that tobaco was the main source of lead in the blood, do you mean lead in adult blood or children's blood or overall?
I really don't know.
helene_t, on 2015-April-06, 08:47, said:
By the way, isn't it so that lead in tobaco comes from lead in the atmosphere which in turn comes from petrol?
No!! I should have mentioned that immediately. The lead on tobacco leafs comes from natural sources: It comes from the natural radioactive decay of radon gas. (Simply put: Radon -> lead + 2 alpha particles). And apparently tobacco leafs are pretty good at adsorbing lead.
Remember that tobacco is grown in Kentucky, not in L.A.
Rik
I want my opponents to leave my table with a smile on their face and without matchpoints on their score card - in that order.
The most exciting phrase to hear in science, the one that heralds the new discoveries, is not “Eureka!” (I found it!), but “That’s funny…” – Isaac Asimov
The only reason God did not put "Thou shalt mind thine own business" in the Ten Commandments was that He thought that it was too obvious to need stating. - Kenberg