Message from @Snake
Discord ID: 499995196793028609
Lol
>screenshot of a meme
why do these fucking mad men even screenshot memes just download them
Toto - Africa
> adidas
looks like we got ourselves a *slav*
Here’s a ping bud
when @stewie steals your meme you posted literally today
EPIC
I know .. so awesome
shitposting sheriff ...
lol 😃
Should put a starbucks coffee in their hand too
I should edit it.. yep
He took t he pics down
@Gopnik_Conscript CFC’s are chlorofluorocarbons. There are used for high pressure (and low pressure) refrigerants for residential and commercial air conditioning. The use of the chemical is condensing and evaporating to result in a desired heat transfer due to the evaporating and condensing process. The concept of why CFC’s are bad for the ozone isn’t a mystery and it’s viable. When CFC’s are released in the atmosphere they break down from UV rays, usually this only happens after they are lifted higher up in the atmosphere such as the stratosphere where the ozone layer is located. When the CFC molecule breaks down it isolates the chlorine atom. When chlorine isn’t paired it is unstable and seeks pairing with oxygen. It will take an oxygen atom from ozone (o3) and turn the ozone into o2 (what we breathe) and the chlorine will turn into chlorine monoxide. Chlorine monoxide is also unstable as well, the oxygen atom in the molecule wants to pair with another oxygen atom so when there is a free oxygen atom the oxygen will split from the chlorine and form o2. This process repeats over and over again millions of times. o2 in that scale is not beneficial but the depletion of ozone is detrimental.
Now don’t get me wrong, I’m not a big believer in carbon being the devil, but the ozone is worth being concerned about.
There are replacements of CFC’s (HCFC’s) but they do the same thing, the only difference is they have a hydrogen molecule paired which makes the molecule more stable and takes much longer for the molecule to be broken down by UV. It still ends up happening regardless though. We still use CFC’s (R22 refrigerant) and HCFC’s (R410a) to this day in the HVAC field and for consumer window units (and high efficient portables) as well.
Kek