What is Chlorine? | It's Natural | It's Useful Did you know that chlorine is one of just 20 or so elements that make up all living things? Or that chlorine and chlorine-related chemicals as disinfectants and pharmaceuticals have saved more lives than any other chemical in the history of human kind? Get to know chlorine-one of the most useful and versatile chemical substances on Earth. Of the 112 elements that make up the world we live in, 99 percent of the Earth's crust, atmosphere and oceans
are comprised of just 12 elements by weight. They are oxygen, silicon, aluminum, iron, calcium, sodium, potassium,
magnesium, hydrogen, phosphorous, carbon, and chlorine. In fact, chlorine accounts for more than two percent by
weight of all seawater alone. Chlorine has an unusual ability to bind to other elements and compounds to form new matter. Chlorine's outer shell is missing one electron, which makes it highly attractive to other atoms and electrons. This is why chlorine is so useful in producing many man-made products, from thousands of consumer goods to pharmaceuticals and PVC pipes. Chlorine is part of our natural ecosystem. From inorganic forms such as salt to numerous organic forms, there are more than 1,500 chlorine compounds produced naturally. For many of these organisms, plants and animals, organic chlorine compounds (or organochlorines) are critical to survival, playing important roles in metabolism, chemical defense systems, growth, and even sex. A frog in Ecuador, for example, secretes a chlorinated alkaloid 500 times more powerful than morphine as a painkiller. Humans, like many mammals, produce hypochlorite to fight infection and hydrochloric acid for proper digestion. We also use chloride ions for proper muscle and nerve function. And sodium chloride (or salt), which is essential to our diets, is found in our blood, sweat and tears. Of the approximately 14 million tons of chlorine produced in the U.S. every year, the greatest volume, approximately 90 percent, is used the production of other important chemicals-everything from pharmaceuticals to disinfectants. In fact, chlorine is used in about half of all commercial chemistry. Did you know--
In 1908, Jersey City, N.J., began to use chlorine on a large scale to treat its water. Soon after, other
major cities around the country began to purify water with chlorine. After chlorine's introduction into public
water supplies, deaths from typhoid in the United States dropped dramatically from 25,000 in 1900 to less than
20 in 1960. The only water disinfection method that cleans and protects all the way to the tap, chlorination is credited with increasing Americans' life expectancy by more than 50 percent. Chlorine compounds provide disinfection for swimming pools and Jacuzzis, keeping our recreational waters free of, and us safe from, infectious microorganisms. Chlorine is also integral to the manufacture of 85 percent of all pharmaceuticals, including drugs that treat heart disease, hypertension, ulcers arthritis, pneumonia, allergies and symptoms of the common cold.
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