kreosote - definição. O que é kreosote. Significado, conceito
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O que (quem) é kreosote - definição

TAR DISTILLATION BYPRODUCT USED AS WOOD PRESERVATIVE
Creosoting; Cremulsion; Creosote oil; Kreosote; Pitch oil; ATC code R05CA08; ATCvet code QR05CA08; Coal-tar creosote; Creosotes; Leaching of creosote into aquatic ecosystems; Secretion of Creosote Preservative into Aquatic Ecosystem; Secretion of creosote preservative into aquatic ecosystem; Creasote
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  • Bishop Berkeley]] by [[John Smybert]], 1727
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  • Broken creosote piling exposed by weathering
  • Wood railroad ties before (right) and after (left) infusion with creosote, being transported by railcar at a facility of the [[Santa Fe Railroad]], in [[Albuquerque, New Mexico]], in March 1943. This U.S. wartime governmental photo reports that "The steaming black ties in the [left of photo]… have just come from the retort where they have been infused with creosote for eight hours." Ties are "made of pine and fir... seasoned for eight months" [as seen in the untreated railcar load at right].<ref name=Delnao/>
  • Wooden street pavers in Chicago

Kreosote         
·noun ·see Creosote.
Creosote         
·vt To saturate or impregnate with creosote, as timber, for the prevention of decay.
II. Creosote ·noun Wood-tar oil; an oily antiseptic liquid, of a burning smoky taste, colorless when pure, but usually colored yellow or brown by impurity or exposure. It is a complex mixture of various phenols and their ethers, and is obtained by the distillation of wood tar, especially that of beechwood.
creosote         
¦ noun a dark brown oil containing various phenols and other compounds, used as a wood preservative.
¦ verb treat with creosote.
Origin
C19: coined in Ger. from Gk kreas 'flesh' + soter 'preserver', with ref. to its antiseptic properties.

Wikipédia

Creosote

Creosote is a category of carbonaceous chemicals formed by the distillation of various tars and pyrolysis of plant-derived material, such as wood, or fossil fuel. They are typically used as preservatives or antiseptics.

Some creosote types were used historically as a treatment for components of seagoing and outdoor wood structures to prevent rot (e.g., bridgework and railroad ties, see image). Samples may be found commonly inside chimney flues, where the coal or wood burns under variable conditions, producing soot and tarry smoke. Creosotes are the principal chemicals responsible for the stability, scent, and flavor characteristic of smoked meat; the name is derived from Greek κρέας (kreas) 'meat', and σωτήρ (sōtēr) 'preserver'.

The two main kinds recognized in industry are coal-tar creosote and wood-tar creosote. The coal-tar variety, having stronger and more toxic properties, has chiefly been used as a preservative for wood; coal-tar creosote was also formerly used as an escharotic, to burn malignant skin tissue, and in dentistry, to prevent necrosis, before its carcinogenic properties became known. The wood-tar variety has been used for meat preservation, ship treatment, and such medical purposes as an anaesthetic, antiseptic, astringent, expectorant, and laxative, though these have mostly been replaced by modern formulations.

Varieties of creosote have also been made from both oil shale and petroleum, and are known as oil-tar creosote when derived from oil tar, and as water-gas-tar creosote when derived from the tar of water gas. Creosote also has been made from pre-coal formations such as lignite, yielding lignite-tar creosote, and peat, yielding peat-tar creosote.