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Volatile organic compounds
Volatile organic compounds (VOCs) are organic
chemical compounds that have high enough vapor pressures under normal
conditions to significantly vaporize and enter the atmosphere. A wide range
of carbon-based molecules, such as aldehydes, ketones, and other light
hydrocarbons are VOCs. The term often is used in a legal or regulatory
context and in such cases the precise definition is a matter of law. These
definitions can be contradictory and may contain "loopholes"; e.g.
exceptions, exemptions, and exclusions. The United States Environmental
Protection Agency (EPA) defines a VOC as any organic compound that
participates in a photoreaction; others believe this definition is very
broad and vague as organics that are not volatile in the sense that they
vaporize under normal conditions can be considered volatile by this EPA
definition. The term may refer both to well characterized organic compounds
and to mixtures of variable composition |
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| Related pages................... External links Article/information contributed by.............. Let's Finish it Team This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License |
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