E-cigarette
An electronic cigarette (or e-cigarette, e-cig) is a cigarette substitute. It gives small amounts of the chemical nicotine without the tobacco or other chemicals from real cigarettes. The main substances making up in the liquid in the e-cigarettes are nicotine, propylene glycol, glycerin and some flavors or smells.
Function[edit | edit source]
An E-cigarette is made of 3 parts:
- a tank holding e-liquid
- an atomizer heating e-liquid
- a battery powering the atomizer
The e-liquid (propylene glycol and/or glycerin) is heated to make a vapour which looks like the smoke from real cigarettes. This caries the nicotine to the lungs where it is absorbed.
As of 2015, 3 generations of electonic cigarettes are known:
- cigalikes early e-cigarettes look like tobacco cigarettes. They're often thrown away after use.
- vapepens have replaceable cartridges or refillable tanks. The atomizer parts can be replaced.
- mods are powered by laptop cells. They feature complicated electronics or no electronics at all. Their atomizers can be rebuilt with heating wire and cotton.
History[edit | edit source]
The modern electronic cigarette was invented by Hon Lik (regarded as the 'father of the electronic cigarette'),[1] a Chinese pharmacist and inventor. Hon had himself quit smoking, after his father, also a heavy smoker, had died of lung cancer. Hon patented the modern e-cigarette design in 2003, and starting selling it domestically. Many versions made their way to the U.S., sold mostly over the Internet by small marketing firms.
However, many US and Chinese e-cig manufacturers copied his designs illegally, and as a result Hon Lik did not get the expected financial rewards for his invention (although some US manufacturers have recompensated him through out of court settlements).[1][2]
In 2008, this attracted the attention of the World Health Organization (WHO) who said that these e-cigarettes were not proper nicotine replacement therapy and that this mis-information had to be taken away from any sites or advertisements saying that they were.[3]
Starting 2012 Tobacco companies also want a piece of E-Cigarette-cake and work on their own products. Marlboro goes for heating tobacco, Philip Morris tests a fizz-like method while British American Tobacco tries a medical-like inhaler. Many big tobacco companies didn't do their own research or stopped at some point. Instead they bought smaller e-cig companies to enter the market.
E-Liquid[edit | edit source]
These devices have a battery powered heating element and tank that contains a liquid solution made by combining nicotine, vegetable glycol or propylene glycol and flavorings. The gadget that can be bought in a variety of shapes and sizes usually resembles a pen or a regular cigarette, and it works like a vaporizer. The liquid used in e-cigs is commonly made of propylene glycol, glycerin, distilled water, artificial (fake) flavors and optionally nicotine. It often tastes like tobacco, fruit, mint/menthol or sweets.[4]
Current UK laws state the sale of e-cigarettes and e-liquids is legal to over 18s only, but many shops allow minors over the age of 12 to purchase nicotine-free e-liquid as all the ingredients in it are safe compared to nicotine e-liquid. Technically it is illegal for a minor to purchase any vaping products or any items associated with e-cigarettes but it is perfectly legal for a minor to use an e-cigarette, nicotine or nicotine-free. These are UK laws only.
Legal History[edit | edit source]
Many countries are not approving electronic cigarettes as healthy thing. The sale of tobacco cigarettes with flavor (except menthol) has been stopped in some countries but not yet in Europe or the USA. The EU is testing if the product is bad to the health and safety of persons in general.[5] They are also researching if electronic cigarettes can be called a medical product. In 2009 the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) was provided authority by Congress to ban all sales of cigarettes with flavors, except menthol.[6]
Because many countries are not sure if electronic cigarettes are a medical product, each country has their own opinion and rules on e-cigarettes.
Health institutions are more and more interested in E-cigarettes because they are much cheaper than smoking regular ones, making them popular alternative.[7] In the United States of America, individual states have different rules on use and sale of electronic cigarettes.[8]
Apart from medical reasons e-cigarettes have also been banned in airport and other high population-density public places due to a number of incidents where they have been a cause of fire.[9][10]
"vaping" laws in Canada is by far the most complicated history. VAPING STARTED WIT NO LEGAL STATUS meaning anyone could do it NOW IT IS A CONTROLLED PRODUCT. so youth cannot buy it but after the age of 16 the safe way to go about obtaining e-cigarettes is to ask your friends because at the age of 16 you are legally able to make a conscious decision about your health and police are legally unable to confiscate tobacco products and e-cigarettes but if the individual who provide you with the vape if of age a.k.a 19 they themselves can be charged with giving controlled products to a minor
References[edit | edit source]
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 China's e-cigarette inventor fights for financial rewards AFP, By Tom HANCOCK Published October 01, 2013
- ↑ "The History of E-cigarettes". www.blacknote.com. Retrieved 2 May 2016.
- ↑ "WHO - Marketers of electronic cigarettes should halt unproved therapy claims". WHO.
- ↑ "What are E-Cigs?".
- ↑ "E-Cigarette Regulation: A Burning Legal Question". MT E-Cigarette. Retrieved 30 August 2013.
- ↑ "Recent Developments in Tobacco Use".
- ↑ http://electroniccigaretteb.com/electronic-cigarettes-taking-over-the-cigarette-market/
- ↑ "Fresh Vape Deals". Fresh Vape Deals.
- ↑ Jedi, Vapor (30 October 2015). "Vapor Jedi Industries Inc.: U.S. Bans E-cigarettes from Checked Baggage".
- ↑ "Best Vaporizer for Dry Herb 2017 (Portable) - Vaporizer Pen Reviews". e-cigarettepros.com. Retrieved 2017-05-26.
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