Inert gas

An inert gas is a gas which does not undergo chemical reactions under a set of given conditions. The noble gases often do not react with many substances. Inert gases are used generally to avoid unwanted chemical reactions degrading a sample. These undesirable chemical reactions are often oxidation and hydrolysis reactions with the oxygen and moisture in air. The term inert gas is context-dependent because several of the noble gases can be made to react under certain conditions.

Purified argon and nitrogen gases are most commonly used as inert gases due to their high natural abundance (78% N2, 1% Ar in air) and low relative cost.

Unlike noble gases, an inert gas is not necessarily elemental and is often a compound gas. Like the noble gases the tendency for non-reactivity is due to the valence, the outermost electron shell, being complete in all the inert gases. This is a tendency, not a rule, as noble gases and other "inert" gases can react to form compounds.

Production

The inert gases are obtained by fractional distillation of air. For specialized applications, purified inert gas may be produced by specialized generators on-site. They are often used aboard chemical tankers and product carriers (smaller vessels). Benchtop specialized generators are also available for laboratories.

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Latest News for: inert gases

Louisiana uses nitrogen gas for first time in death row execution

AOL 19 Mar 2025
Last-minute appeals for a reprieve failed when the US supreme court declined to take Hoffman’s petition ... “Airgas has not and will not supply nitrogen or other inert gases to induce hypoxia for the purpose of human execution,” the company said ... .

Louisiana to use nitrogen execution method it bans for cats and dogs

AOL 17 Mar 2025
Related ... “A large number of dogs were put into a concrete bunker and gassed ... Airgas, which is owned by the French multinational Air Liquide, told the Guardian that it would not supply nitrogen or other inert gases “for the purpose of human execution”. .
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