**A synthetic fibre is also a chain of small
units joined together. Each small unit is actually a chemical substance. Many
such small units combine to form a large single unit called a polymer.
**Cotton, for example, is a
polymer called cellulose. Cellulose is made up of a large number of glucose units.
**silk fibre obtained from silkworm was
discovered in China
**Although rayon is obtained from a
natural source, wood pulp.
**Nylon, it
was made without using any natural raw material (from plant or animal). It was
the first fully synthetic fibre.
**Polyester (Poly+ester) is actually
made up of the repeating units of a chemical called an ester. Esters are the
chemicals which give fruits their smell. Fabrics are sold by names like polycot,
polywool, terrycot etc. As the name suggests, these are made by mixing two
types of fibres. Polycot is a mixture of polyester and cotton. Polywool is a
mixture of polyester and wool.
**Many of these are actually not made
from natural wool, though they appear to resemble wool. These are prepared from
called acrylic.
**synthetic fibres melt on heating. This
is actually a disadvantage of synthetic fibres. If the clothes catch fire, it
can be disastrous.
**All the synthetic fibres are prepared by
a number of processes using raw materials of petroleum origin, called petrochemicals.
**plastic which gets deformed easily on
heating and can be bent easily are known as thermoplastics. Polythene and PVC are some of the examples of thermoplastics.
**plastics which when moulded once, can not
be softened by heating. These are called thermosetting plastics. Two examples are bakelite and melamine. Bakelite is a poor
conductor of heat and electricity. Melamine is a versatile material. It resists
fire and can tolerate heat better than other plastics.
**Teflon is a special plastic on which oil
and water do not stick. It is used for nonstick coating on cookwares.
**Fire-proof plastics: Although synthetic
fibre catches fire easily, it is interesting to know that the uniforms of
firemen have coating of melamine plastic to make them flame resistant.
**Special plastic cookware is used in
microwave ovens for cooking food. In microwave ovens, the heat cooks the food
but does not affect the plastic vessel
**Serious diseases like polio and chicken
pox are also caused by viruses. Diseases like dysentery and malaria are caused
by protozoans whereas
typhoid and tuberculosis (TB) are bacterial
diseases.
**Microorganisms may be single-celled like
bacteria, some algae and protozoa, or multicellular, such as algae and fungi.
Microorganisms like amoeba can live alone, while
fungi and bacteria may live in colonies.
**the bacterium Lactobacillus promotes the formation of curd. It multiplies in milk and converts it
into curd.
**process of conversion of sugar into alcohol
is known as fermentation.
**Streptomycin, tetracycline and erythromycin are some of the commonly
known antibiotics which are made from fungi and bacteria.
**Edward Jenner discovered the vaccine
for smallpox in 1798.
**Anopheles mosquito, which carries the parasite of malaria. Female Aedes mosquito acts as carrier of dengue virus.
**Robert Köch (1876) discovered the
bacterium (Bacillus
anthracis) which causes anthrax disease.
**Foot and mouth disease of cattle is
caused by a virus.
**Sodium benzoate and sodium
metabisulphite are common preservatives.
**Rhizobium lives in the root nodules of leguminous plants
**In humans the sound is produced by the
voice box or the larynx.
**The vocal cords in men are about 20mm
long. In women these are about 5mm shorter. Children have very short vocal
cords.
**The sound cannot travel through
vacuum.
**Above 80 dB the noise becomes physically
painful.
**naphthalene balls used to repel moths and
other insects are also obtained from coal tar.
**The world’s first oil well was drilled
in Pennsylvania, USA, in 1859. Eight years later, in 1867, oil was stuck at Makum
in Assam.
**Due to its great commercial importance,
petroleum is also called ‘black gold’.
Human Disease
|
Causative
Microorganism
|
Mode of
Transmission
|
Preventive measures
(General)
|
Tuberculosis
|
Bacteria
|
Air
|
Keep the patient in complete
|
Measles
|
Virus
|
Air
|
isolation. Keep the personal
belongings of the patient away
|
Chicken Pox
|
Virus
|
Air/Contact
|
from those of
the others.
Vaccination to
be
given
at
|
Polio
|
Virus
|
Air/Water
|
suitable age.
|
Cholera Typhoid
|
Bacteria Bacteria
|
Water/Food Water
|
Maintain personal hygiene
and good sanitary
habits. Consume
properly cooked food and boiled
drinking water. Vaccination.
|
Hepatitis B
|
Virus
|
Water
|
Drink boiled drinking water. Vaccination.
|
Malaria
|
Protozoa
|
Mosquito
|
Use mosquito net and repellents. Spray insecticides
and control breeding of mosquitoes by not allowing
water to collect in the surroundings.
|
Plant Diseases
|
Micro- organism
|
Mode of Transmission
|
Citrus canker
|
Bacteria
|
Air
|
Rust of wheat
|
Fungi
|
Air,
seeds
|
Yellow vein mosaic of bhindi (Okra)
|
Virus
|
Insect
|
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