Sarah Webb

Skip to content

Navigation

  • Home
  • About Sarah
  • Projects
  • Clips
  • Editing
  • Contact
May 23, 2009 By Sarah Webb

Molecule of the Week: Polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs)

structure of PCBs via Wikimedia Commons, GNU Free Documentation license
structure of PCBs via Wikimedia Commons, GNU Free Documentation license


The molecule of the week
is actually a collection of 209 different possible versions of this molecule that have multiple chlorine atoms connected in different combinations along the hexagonal segments of the structure– like charms on a bracelet.

Though these chemicals are highly heat resistant (used as flame retardants in electronics manufacturing until the late 1970s, more info at the EPA website), they are now considered possible cancer causing agents, may cause developmental problems, and persist in the environment for years. They also bioaccumulate, increasing in concentration in larger animals as they eat smaller ones.

PCBs are particularly problematic in the Hudson River, where more than 1 million pounds of the chemicals were dumped in the upper part of the river from 2 General Electric factories for 30 years before the chemicals were banned. For the last 25 years, 197 miles of the river– reaching all the way to New York Harbor have been considered an EPA Superfund site. On, May 15, the dredging clean-up began— in an area upstream of Albany, New York, near where the chemicals were originally dumped.

Share
Permalink environment health Molecule of the Week science dredging Hudson river PCBs remediation

Sidebar

  • Recent Posts
  • Popular Posts
  • Recent Comments
  • Tags
  • Inside Griffith Observatory
    Standard
    Inside Griffith Observatory
    August 30, 2016
  • At home among the natives
    Gallery
    At home among the natives
    September 1, 2015
  • View from "The Last Frontier"
    Standard
    View from “The Last Frontier”
    August 28, 2015
  • brian
    Here's a really great recording of some racketts. https://youtu.be/HGI4zG-Zddw
  • Mai invitare un chimico in pizzeria. | il blog della SCI
    [...] http://sarahannewebb.webbofscience.com/2009/01/29/pizza-chemistry/ [...]
  • Sarah Webb
    Thanks, Matt. Though I have to note that I have a "shady" past when it comes to SEC sports (I'm…
  • academia AMNH Blogging 'Bout Boys blue whale cancer carbon dioxide Cassini cat Chattanooga chemistry Christopher Clark climate change DNA education experiment FDA fish flexibility gorilla H1N1 influenza Jennifer Fink journalism Mars May blogathon Mother's day music NASA Nature New York City Nobel Prize NY harbor Opportunity physics problem solving protein rat rovers science writing Spirit swine flu virus water whales women in science
  • LinkedIn
  • Twitter

Copyright © 2025 Sarah Webb. Powered by WordPress and Ravel.