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Chlorine (, , meaning "pale green"), is the
chemical element with atomic number 17 and symbol
Cl. It is a
halogen, found in the
periodic table in
periodic table group 17 (formerly VIIa or VIIb). As the chloride ion, which is part of common salt and other compounds, it is abundant in nature and necessary to most forms of life, including
humans. In its common elemental form (Cl2 or "dichlorine") under
standard conditions, it is a pale green gas about 2.5 times as dense as air. It has a disagreeable, suffocating odor that is detectable in concentrations as low as 3.5 ppm
Merck Index of Chemicals and Drugs, 9th ed., monograph 2065 and is poisonous. Chlorine is a powerful oxidation and is used in Bleach (chemical) and disinfectants. As a common disinfectant, it is used in
swimming pools to keep them clean. In the upper atmosphere, chlorine based molecules have been implicated in the ozone depletion of the
ozone layer.
Notable characteristics
Chlorine gas is diatomic, with the formula Cl2. It combines readily with nearly all other elements, although it is not as extremely reactive as
fluorine. At 10°
Celsius and atmospheric pressure, one liter of water dissolves 3.10 L of gaseous chlorine, and at 30°C, 1 L of water dissolves only 1.77 liters of chlorine.
This element is a member of the
salt-forming halogen series and is extracted from chlorides through
oxidation often by
electrolysis. As the chloride ion, Cl−, it is also the most abundant dissolved ion in ocean water.
History
Chlorine was discovered in 1774 by Swedish chemist Carl Wilhelm Scheele, who called it
dephlogisticated muriatic acid (see
phlogiston theory) and mistakenly thought it contained oxygen. Chlorine was given its current name in 1810 by
Sir Humphry Davy, who insisted that it was in fact an element.
World War I
Chlorine gas, also known as
bertholite, was first
chemical warfare in World War I by Germany on April 22, 1915 in the
Second Battle of Ypres. As described by the soldiers it had a distinctive smell of a mixture between pepper and pineapple. It also tasted metallic and stung the back of the throat and chest. It was pioneered by a German scientist later to be a Nobel laureate,
Fritz Haber of the Kaiser Wilhelm Institute in Berlin, in collaboration with the German chemical conglomerate
IG Farben, who developed methods for discharging chlorine gas against an
trench enemy. It is alleged that Haber's role in the use of chlorine as a deadly weapon drove his wife, Clara Immerwahr, to suicide. After its first use, chlorine was utilized by both sides as a chemical weapon, but it was soon replaced by the more deadly gases
phosgene and
mustard gas.
Iraq War
Chlorine gas has also been used by insurgents in the Iraq War as
Chlorine bomb to terrorize the local population and coalition forces. On March 17,
2007, for example, three chlorine filled trucks were detonated in the Anbar province killing 2 and sickening over 350. Other chlorine bomb attacks resulted in higher death tolls, with more than 30 deaths on two separate occasions. Most of the deaths were caused by the force of the explosions rather than the effects of chlorine, since the toxic gas is readily dispersed and diluted in the atmosphere by the blast. The principal objective of the insurgents is to create widespread panic. The Iraqi authorities have tightened up security for chlorine, which is essential for providing safe drinking water for the population.
Occurrence
See also :Category:Halide minerals.
In nature, chlorine is found primarily as the
chloride ion, a component of the
salt that is deposited in the earth or dissolved in the oceans — about 1.9% of the mass of seawater is chloride ions. Even higher concentrations of chloride are found in the
Dead Sea and in underground brine deposits. Most chloride salts are soluble in water, thus, chloride-containing minerals are usually only found in abundance in dry climates or deep underground. Common chloride minerals include
halite (sodium chloride),
sylvite (
potassium chloride), and
carnallite (potassium magnesium chloride hexahydrate). Over 2000 naturally-occurring organic chlorine compounds are known.
Industrially, elemental chlorine is usually produced by the electrolysis of sodium chloride dissolved in water. Along with chlorine, this chloralkali process yields
hydrogen gas and
sodium hydroxide, according to the following chemical equation:
2
sodium chloride + 2
water → Cl2 + hydrogen + 2 sodium hydroxide
Isotopes
Chlorine has isotopes with
mass numbers ranging from 32 to 40. There are two principal stable
isotopes, 35Cl (75.77%) and 37Cl (24.23%), giving chlorine atoms in bulk an apparent atomic weight of 35.5 g/mol.
36Cl
Trace amounts of radioactive Chlorine-36 exist in the environment, in a ratio of about 7x10−13 to 1 with stable isotopes. 36Cl is produced in the atmosphere by
spallation of 36argon by interactions with
cosmic ray protons. In the subsurface environment, 36Cl is generated primarily as a result of neutron capture by 35Cl or
muon capture by 40
calcium. 36Cl decays to 36
sulfur and to 36argon, with a combined
half-life of 308,000 years. The half-life of this
hydrophilic nonreactive isotope makes it suitable for
geologic dating in the range of 60,000 to 1 million years. Additionally, large amounts of 36Cl were produced by irradiation of seawater during atmospheric detonations of
nuclear weapons between 1952 and 1958. The residence time of 36Cl in the atmosphere is about 1 week. Thus, as an event marker of 1950s water in
soil and
ground water, 36Cl is also useful for dating waters less than 50 years before the present. 36Cl has seen use in other areas of the geological sciences, including dating ice and sediments.
Chlorine gas extraction
Chlorine can be manufactured by
electrolysis of a sodium chloride solution (brine). The production of chlorine results in the co-products caustic soda (
sodium hydroxide, NaOH) and
hydrogen gas (H2). These two products, as well as chlorine are highly reactive. Chlorine can also be produced by the electrolysis of a solution of potassium chloride, in which case the co-products are hydrogen and caustic potash (potassium hydroxide). There are three industrial methods for the extraction of chlorine by electrolysis of chloride solutions, all proceeding according to the following equations:
Cathode: 2 H+ (aq) + 2 e− → H2 (g)
Anode: 2 Cl− (aq) → Cl2 (g) + 2 e−
Overall process: 2 NaCl (or KCl) + 2 H2O → Cl2 + H2 + 2 NaOH (or KOH)
Mercury cell electrolysis
mercury (element) cell
electrolysis, also known as the
Castner-Kellner process, was the first method used at the end of the nineteenth century to produce chlorine on an industrial scale.Pauling, Linus,
General Chemistry, 1970 ed., Dover publications The "rocking" cells used have been improved over the years. Today, in the "primary cell", titanium anodes (formerly
graphite ones) are placed in a sodium (or potassium) chloride solution flowing over a liquid mercury cathode. When a potential difference is applied and current flows, chlorine is released at the titanium anode and sodium (or potassium) dissolves in the mercury cathode forming an amalgam. This flows continuously into a separate reactor ("denuder" or "secondary cell"), where it is usually converted back to mercury by reaction with water, producing hydrogen and sodium (or potassium) hydroxide at a commercially useful concentration (50% by weight). The mercury is then recycled to the primary cell.
The mercury process is the least energy-efficient of the three main technologies (mercury, diaphragm and membrane) and there are also concerns about mercury
Pollution.
It is estimated that there are still around 100 mercury-cell plants operating worldwide. In Japan, mercury-based
chloralkali production was virtually phased out by 1987 (except for the last two potassium chloride units shut down in 2003). In the United States, there will be only five mercury plants remaining in operation by the end of 2008. In Europe, mercury cells accounted for 43% of capacity in 2006 and Western European producers have committed to closing or converting all remaining chloralkali mercury plants by 2020.
Diaphragm cell electrolysis
In diaphragm cell electrolysis, an
asbestos (or polymer-fiber) diaphragm separates cathode and anode, preventing the chlorine forming at the anode from re-mixing with the sodium hydroxide and the hydrogen formed at the cathode. This technology was also developed at the end of the nineteenth century. There are several variants of this process: the
Le Sueur cell (1893), the
Hargreaves-Bird cell (1901), the Gibbs cell (1908), and the Townsend cell (1904). The cells vary in construction and placement of the diaphragm, with some having the diaphragm in direct contact with the cathode.
The salt solution (brine) is continuously fed to the anode compartment and flows through the diaphragm to the cathode compartment, where the caustic alkali is produced and the brine partially depleted.
As a result, diaphragm methods produce alkali that is quite dilute (about 12%) and of lower purity than do mercury cell methods. But diaphragm cells are not burdened with the problem of preventing mercury discharge into the environment. They also operate at a lower voltage, resulting in an energy savings over the mercury cell method, but large amounts of steam are required if the caustic has to be evaporated to the commercial concentration of 50%.
Membrane cell electrolysis
Development of this technology began in the 1970s. The electrolysis cell is divided into two "rooms" by a cation permeable membrane acting as an
ion exchanger. Saturated sodium (or potassium) chloride solution is passed through the anode compartment, leaving at a lower concentration. Sodium (or potassium) hydroxide solution is circulated through the cathode compartment, exiting at a higher concentration. A portion of the concentrated sodium hydroxide solution leaving the cell is diverted as product, while the remainder is diluted with deionized water and passed through the electrolyzer again.
This method is more efficient than the diaphragm cell and produces very pure sodium (or potassium) hydroxide at about 32% concentration, but requires very pure brine.
Other electrolytic processes
Although a much lower production scale is involved, electrolytic diaphragm and membrane technologies are also used industrially to recover chlorine from hydrochloric acids solutions, producing hydrogen (but no caustic alkali) as a co-product.
Furthermore, electrolysis of fused chloride salts (Downs Cell) also enables chlorine to be produced, in this case as a by-product of the manufacture of metallic sodium or
magnesium.
Other methods
Before electrolytic methods were used for chlorine production, the direct oxidation of
hydrogen chloride with oxygen or air was exercised in the Deacon process:
4 HCl + O2 → 2 Cl2 + 2 H2O
This reaction is accomplished with the use of CuCl2 as a
catalyst and is performed at high temperarature (about 400°C). The amount of extracted chlorine is approximately 80%. Due to the extremely corrosive reaction mixture, industrial use of this method is difficult and several pilot trials failed in the past. Nevertheless, recent developments are promising.
Another earlier process to produce chlorine was to heat brine with acid and
manganese dioxide.
2 NaCl + 2H2SO4 + MnO2 → Na2SO4 + MnSO4 + 2 H2O + Cl2
Using this process, chemist
Carl Wilhelm Scheele was the first to isolate chlorine in a laboratory. The manganese can be recovered by the
Weldon process.
Small amounts of chlorine gas can be made in the laboratory by putting concentrated hydrochloric acid in a flask with a side arm and rubber tubing attached. Manganese dioxide is then added and the flask stoppered. The reaction is not greatly exothermic. As chlorine is denser than air, it can be easily collected by placing the tube inside a flask where it will displace the air. Once full, the collecting flask can be stoppered.
In the laboratory, small amounts of chlorine gas can also be created by adding concentrated hydrochloric acid (typically about 5M) to sodium hypochlorite or
sodium chlorate solution.
Industrial production
Large-scale production of chlorine involves several steps and many pieces of equipment. The description below is typical of a membrane plant. The plant also produces simultaneously sodium hydroxide (referred to in the industry as caustic soda) and hydrogen gas. A typical plant consists of brine production/treatment, cell operations, chlorine cooling & drying, chlorine compression & liquefaction, liquid chlorine storage & loading, caustic handling, evaporation, storage & loading and hydrogen handling.
Brine
Key to the production of chlorine is the operation of the brine saturation/treatment system. Maintaining a properly saturated solution with the correct purity is vital, especially for membrane cells. Many plants have a salt pile which is sprayed with recycled brine. Others have slurry tanks that are fed raw salt.
The raw brine is partially or totally treated with sodium hydroxide,
sodium carbonate and a flocculant to reduce calcium,
magnesium and other impurities. The brine proceeds to a large clarifier or a filter where the impurities are removed. The total brine is additionally filtered before entering ion exchangers to further remove impurities. At several points in this process, the brine is tested for hardness and strength.
After the ion exchangers the brine is considered pure, and is transferred to storage tanks to be pumped into the cell room. Brine fed to the cell line is heated to the correct temperature to control exit brine temperatures according to the electrical load. Brine exiting the cell room must be treated to remove residual chlorine and control pH before being returned to the saturation stage. This can be accomplished via dechlorination towers with acid and sodium bisulfite addition. Failure to remove chlorine can result in damage to the cells. Brine should be monitored for accumulation of chlorate and sulfate and either have treatment systems in place or purging of the brine loop to maintain safe levels, since chlorate can diffuse through the membranes and contaminate the caustic, while sulfate can damage the anode surface coating.
Cell room
The building that houses the many electrolytic cells is usually called a cell room or cell house, although some plants are built outdoors. This building contains support structures for the cells, connections for supplying electrical power to the cells and piping for the fluids. Monitoring and control of the temperatures of the feed caustic and brine is done to control exit temperatures. Also monitored are the voltages of each cell which vary with the electrical load on the cell room that is used to control the rate of production. Monitoring and control of the pressures in the chlorine and hydrogen headers is also done via pressure control valves.
Direct electrical current is supplied via rectifiers. Plant load is controlled by varying the current to the cells. As the current is increased flow rates for brine, caustic and deionized water are increased while lowering the feed temperatures.
Cooling and drying
Chlorine gas exiting the cell line must be cooled and dried since the exit gas can be over 80º C and contains moisture that allows chlorine gas to be corrosive to iron piping. Cooling the gas allows for a large amount of moisture from the brine to condense out of the gas stream. Cooling also improves the efficiency of the compression and liquefaction stage that follows. Chlorine exiting is ideally between 18º C and 25º C. After cooling the gas stream passes through a series of towers with counter flowing
sulfuric acid. These towers progressively remove any remaining moisture from the chlorine gas. After exiting the drying towers the chlorine is filtered to remove any sulfuric acid droplets.
Compression and liquefaction
Several methods of compression may be used: liquid ring, reciprocating compressor, or centrifugal compressor. The chlorine gas is compressed at this stage and may be further cooled by inter- and after-coolers. After compression it flows to the liquefiers, where it is cooled enough to liquefy. Non condensible gases and remaining chlorine gas are vented off as part of the pressure control of the liquefaction systems. These gases are routed to a gas scrubber, producing sodium hypochlorite, or used in the production of
hydrochloric acid (by combustion with hydrogen) or
ethylene dichloride (by reaction with ethylene).
Storage and loading
Liquid chlorine is typically gravity-fed to storage tanks. It can be loaded into rail or road tankers via pumps or padded with compressed dry gas.
Caustic handling, evaporation, storage and loading
Caustic fed to the cell room flows in a loop that is simultaneously bled off to storage with a part diluted with deionized water and returned to the cell line for strengthening within the cells. The caustic exiting the cell line must be monitored for strength, to maintain safe concentrations. Too strong or too weak a solution may damage the membranes. Membrane cells typically produce caustic in the range of 30% to 33% by weight. The feed caustic flow is heated at low electrical loads to control its exit temperature. Higher loads require the caustic to be cooled, to maintain correct exit temperatures. The caustic exiting to storage is pulled from a storage tank and may be diluted for sale to customers who require weak caustic or for use on site. Another stream may be pumped into a multiple effect evaporator set to produce commercial 50% caustic. Rail cars and tanker trucks are loaded at loading stations via pumps.
Hydrogen handling
Hydrogen produced may be vented unprocessed directly to the atmosphere or cooled, compressed and dried for use in other processes on site or sold to a customer via pipeline, cylinders or trucks. Some possible uses are hydrochloric acid or hydrogen peroxide production, desulfurization of petroleum oils and use as a fuel in boilers or fuel cells.
Energy consumption
Production of chlorine is extremely energy intensive. Energy consumption per unit weight of product is not far below that for iron and steel manufacture and greater than for the production of glass or cement.
Since electricity is an indispensable raw material for the production of chlorine, the energy consumption corresponding to the electrochemical reaction cannot be reduced. Energy savings arise primarily through applying more efficient technologies and reducing ancillary energy use.
Applications and uses
Production of industrial and consumer products
Chlorine's principal applications are in the production of a wide range of industrial and consumer products. For example, it is used in making plastics, solvents for dry cleaning and metal degreasing, textiles, agrochemicals and pharmaceuticals, insecticides, dyestuffs, etc.
Purification and disinfection
Chlorine is an important chemical for
water purification, in
disinfectants, and in
bleach. It is used (in the form of
hypochlorous acid) to kill
bacterium and other microbes in drinking water supplies and public
swimming pools. However, in most private swimming pools chlorine itself is not used, but rather
sodium hypochlorite (household bleach), formed from chlorine and sodium hydroxide, or solid tablets of chlorinated isocyanurates. Even small water supplies are now routinely chlorinated. (
See also chlorination)
Chemistry
Elemental chlorine is an oxidizer. It undergoes halogen substitution reactions with lower halide salts. For example, chlorine gas bubbled through a solution of bromide or iodide anions oxidizes them to bromine and iodine respectively.
Like the other halogens, chlorine participates in
free-radical substitution reactions with hydrogen-containing organic compounds. This reaction is often – but not invariably – non-regioselective, and hence may result in a mixture of isomeric products. It is often difficult to control the degree of substitution as well, so multiple substitutions are common. If the different reaction products are easily separated, e.g. by distillation, substitutive free-radical chlorination (in some cases accompanied by concurrent thermal dehydrochlorination) may be a useful synthetic route. Industrial examples of this are the production of methyl chloride, methylene chloride,
chloroform and
carbon tetrachloride from methane,
allyl chloride from propylene, and trichloroethylene and tetrachloroethylene from
ethylene dichloride.
Like the other halides, chlorine undergoes electrophilic additions reactions, most notably, the chlorination of alkenes and aromatic compounds with a Lewis acid catalyst. Organic chlorine compounds tend to be less reactive in nucleophilic substitution reactions than the corresponding bromine or iodine derivatives, but they tend to be cheaper. They may be activated for reaction by substituting with a tosylate group, or by the use of a catalytic amount of
sodium iodide.
Chlorine is used extensively in organic chemistry and
inorganic chemistry as an oxidizing agent and in
substitution reactions because chlorine often imparts many desired properties to an
organic compound, due to its electronegativity.
Chlorine compounds are used as intermediates in the production of a number of important commercial products that do not contain chlorine. Examples are:
polycarbonates, polyurethanes, silicones,
polytetrafluoroethylene, carboxymethyl cellulose and propylene oxide.
Other uses
Chlorine is used in the manufacture of numerous organic chlorine compounds, the most significant of which in terms of production volume are 1,2-dichloroethane and vinyl chloride, intermediates in the production of
PVC. Other particularly important organochlorines are methyl chloride,
methylene chloride,
chloroform,
vinylidene chloride, trichloroethylene,
perchloroethylene,
allyl chloride, epichlorohydrin,
chlorobenzene,
dichlorobenzenes and
trichlorobenzenes.
Chlorine is also used in the production of chlorates and in
bromine extraction.
Compounds
See also :Category:Chlorine compounds
For general references to the chloride ion (Cl−), including references to specific chlorides, see
chloride. For other chlorine compounds see chlorate (ClO3−), chlorite (ClO2−), hypochlorite(ClO−), and perchlorate(ClO4−), and chloramine (NH2Cl).
Other chlorine-containing compounds include:
- Fluorides: chlorine monofluoride (ClF), chlorine trifluoride (ClF3), chlorine pentafluoride (ClF5)
- Oxides: chlorine dioxide (ClO2), dichlorine monoxide (Cl2O), dichlorine heptoxide (Cl2O7)
- Acids: hydrochloric acid (HCl), chloric acid (HClO3), and perchloric acid (HClO4)
Oxidation states
{| class="wikitable" align="right"! Oxidation
state !! Name !! Formula !! width="200" | Example compounds|-| align="center" | −1 || chlorides ]|-| align="center" | 0 || chlorine || align="center" | Cl2 || elemental chlorine|-| align="center" | +1 || hypochlorites ], calcium hypochlorites || align="center" | ClO2− || [sodium chlorites || align="center" | ClO3− || [sodium chlorate, potassium chlorate, chloric acids || align="center" | ClO4− || [potassium perchlorate, perchloric acid, organic perchlorates, ammonium perchlorate, magnesium perchlorate from −1 to +7, as well as the elemental state of zero. Progressing through the states, [hydrochloric acid can be oxidized using manganese dioxide, or
hydrogen chloride gas oxidized catalytically by air to form elemental chlorine gas. The solubility of chlorine in water is increased if the water contains dissolved alkali hydroxide. This is due to
disproportionation:
Cl2 + 2OH− → Cl− + ClO− + H2O
In hot concentrated alkali solution disproportionation continues:
2ClO− → Cl− + ClO2−
ClO− + ClO2− → Cl− + ClO3−
Sodium chlorate and
potassium chlorate can be crystallized from solutions formed by the above reactions. If their crystals are heated, they undergo the final disproportionation step.
4ClO3− → Cl− + 3ClO4−
This same progression from chloride to perchlorate can be accomplished by electrolysis. The anode reaction progression is:Cotton, F. Albert and Wilkinson, Geoffrey,
Advanced Inorganic Chemistry 2nd ed. John Wiley & sons, p568
{| class="wikitable" align="left"
! Reaction !! Electrode
potential|-| align="center" | Cl− + 2OH− → ClO− + H2O + 2e− || +0.89 volts|-| align="center" | ClO− + 2OH− → ClO2− + H2O + 2e− || +0.67 volts|-| align="center" | ClO2− + 2OH− → ClO3− + H2O + 2e− || +0.33 volts|-| align="center" | ClO3− + 2OH− → ClO4− + H2O + 2e− || +0.35 volts|}
Each step is accompanied at the cathode by
2H2O + 2e− → 2OH− + H2 −0.83 volts
Safety
Chlorine is a toxic gas that irritates the respiratory system. Because it is heavier than air, it tends to accumulate at the bottom of poorly ventilated spaces. Chlorine gas is a strong oxidizer, which may react with flammable materials." Chlorine."
MSDS. Issued on October 23,
1997; Revised on
November 1,
1999; Retrieved on
September 8, 2007.
Never use ABC Dry Chemical to fight a chlorine fire, the resulting chemical reaction with the ammonium phosphate will release toxic gases and/or result in an explosion. Water fogs/
Compressed Air Foam System should be used to extinguish the material.
See also
References
External links
- Chlorine Institute - Trade association and lobby group representing the interests of the chlorine industry
- Chlorine Online - Chlorine Online is an information resource produced by Eurochlor - the business association of the European chlor-alkali industry
- Computational Chemistry Wiki
- Chlorine Production Using Mercury, Environmental Considerations and Alternatives
- National Pollutant Inventory - Chlorine
- National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health - Chlorine Page
Chlorine (, , meaning "pale green"), is the
chemical element with atomic number 17 and symbol
Cl. It is a halogen, found in the
periodic table in
periodic table group 17 (formerly VIIa or VIIb). As the chloride ion, which is part of common salt and other compounds, it is abundant in nature and necessary to most forms of life, including
humans. In its common elemental form (Cl2 or "dichlorine") under standard conditions, it is a pale green gas about 2.5 times as dense as air. It has a disagreeable, suffocating odor that is detectable in concentrations as low as 3.5 ppm
Merck Index of Chemicals and Drugs, 9th ed., monograph 2065 and is
poisonous. Chlorine is a powerful
oxidation and is used in Bleach (chemical) and disinfectants. As a common disinfectant, it is used in
swimming pools to keep them clean. In the upper atmosphere, chlorine based molecules have been implicated in the ozone depletion of the ozone layer.
Notable characteristics
Chlorine gas is
diatomic, with the formula Cl2. It combines readily with nearly all other elements, although it is not as extremely reactive as
fluorine. At 10°
Celsius and atmospheric pressure, one liter of
water dissolves 3.10 L of gaseous chlorine, and at 30°C, 1 L of water dissolves only 1.77 liters of chlorine.
This element is a member of the
salt-forming halogen series and is extracted from chlorides through oxidation often by
electrolysis. As the chloride ion, Cl−, it is also the most abundant dissolved ion in ocean water.
History
Chlorine was discovered in
1774 by Swedish chemist
Carl Wilhelm Scheele, who called it
dephlogisticated muriatic acid (see phlogiston theory) and mistakenly thought it contained
oxygen. Chlorine was given its current name in 1810 by
Sir Humphry Davy, who insisted that it was in fact an element.
World War I
Chlorine gas, also known as
bertholite, was first
chemical warfare in
World War I by Germany on April 22, 1915 in the Second Battle of Ypres. As described by the soldiers it had a distinctive smell of a mixture between pepper and pineapple. It also tasted metallic and stung the back of the throat and chest. It was pioneered by a German scientist later to be a Nobel laureate, Fritz Haber of the Kaiser Wilhelm Institute in Berlin, in collaboration with the German chemical conglomerate
IG Farben, who developed methods for discharging chlorine gas against an trench enemy. It is alleged that Haber's role in the use of chlorine as a deadly weapon drove his wife,
Clara Immerwahr, to suicide. After its first use, chlorine was utilized by both sides as a chemical weapon, but it was soon replaced by the more deadly gases phosgene and mustard gas.
Iraq War
Chlorine gas has also been used by insurgents in the
Iraq War as
Chlorine bomb to terrorize the local population and coalition forces. On March 17,
2007, for example, three chlorine filled trucks were detonated in the Anbar province killing 2 and sickening over 350. Other chlorine bomb attacks resulted in higher death tolls, with more than 30 deaths on two separate occasions. Most of the deaths were caused by the force of the explosions rather than the effects of chlorine, since the toxic gas is readily dispersed and diluted in the atmosphere by the blast. The principal objective of the insurgents is to create widespread panic. The Iraqi authorities have tightened up security for chlorine, which is essential for providing safe drinking water for the population.
Occurrence
See also :Category:Halide minerals.
In nature, chlorine is found primarily as the chloride ion, a component of the
salt that is deposited in the earth or dissolved in the
oceans — about 1.9% of the mass of seawater is chloride ions. Even higher concentrations of chloride are found in the Dead Sea and in underground brine deposits. Most chloride salts are soluble in water, thus, chloride-containing minerals are usually only found in abundance in dry climates or deep underground. Common chloride minerals include
halite (sodium chloride),
sylvite (potassium chloride), and
carnallite (potassium magnesium chloride hexahydrate). Over 2000 naturally-occurring organic chlorine compounds are known.
Industrially, elemental chlorine is usually produced by the
electrolysis of sodium chloride dissolved in water. Along with chlorine, this
chloralkali process yields
hydrogen gas and sodium hydroxide, according to the following chemical equation:
2 sodium chloride + 2 water → Cl2 + hydrogen + 2
sodium hydroxide
Isotopes
Chlorine has isotopes with mass numbers ranging from 32 to 40. There are two principal stable
isotopes, 35Cl (75.77%) and 37Cl (24.23%), giving chlorine atoms in bulk an apparent atomic weight of 35.5 g/mol.
36Cl
Trace amounts of
radioactive Chlorine-36 exist in the environment, in a ratio of about 7x10−13 to 1 with stable isotopes. 36Cl is produced in the atmosphere by
spallation of 36
argon by interactions with cosmic ray protons. In the subsurface environment, 36Cl is generated primarily as a result of
neutron capture by 35Cl or muon capture by 40
calcium. 36Cl decays to 36sulfur and to 36
argon, with a combined
half-life of 308,000 years. The half-life of this
hydrophilic nonreactive isotope makes it suitable for geologic dating in the range of 60,000 to 1 million years. Additionally, large amounts of 36Cl were produced by irradiation of seawater during atmospheric detonations of nuclear weapons between 1952 and 1958. The residence time of 36Cl in the atmosphere is about 1 week. Thus, as an event marker of 1950s water in soil and ground water, 36Cl is also useful for dating waters less than 50 years before the present. 36Cl has seen use in other areas of the geological sciences, including dating ice and sediments.
Chlorine gas extraction
Chlorine can be manufactured by
electrolysis of a sodium chloride solution (brine). The production of chlorine results in the co-products caustic soda (
sodium hydroxide, NaOH) and hydrogen gas (H2). These two products, as well as chlorine are highly reactive. Chlorine can also be produced by the electrolysis of a solution of potassium chloride, in which case the co-products are hydrogen and caustic potash (potassium hydroxide). There are three industrial methods for the extraction of chlorine by electrolysis of chloride solutions, all proceeding according to the following equations:
Cathode: 2 H+ (aq) + 2 e− → H2 (g)
Anode: 2 Cl− (aq) → Cl2 (g) + 2 e−
Overall process: 2 NaCl (or KCl) + 2 H2O → Cl2 + H2 + 2 NaOH (or KOH)
Mercury cell electrolysis
mercury (element) cell
electrolysis, also known as the Castner-Kellner process, was the first method used at the end of the nineteenth century to produce chlorine on an industrial scale.Pauling, Linus,
General Chemistry, 1970 ed., Dover publications The "rocking" cells used have been improved over the years. Today, in the "primary cell",
titanium anodes (formerly graphite ones) are placed in a sodium (or potassium) chloride solution flowing over a liquid mercury cathode. When a potential difference is applied and current flows, chlorine is released at the titanium anode and sodium (or potassium) dissolves in the mercury cathode forming an amalgam. This flows continuously into a separate reactor ("denuder" or "secondary cell"), where it is usually converted back to mercury by reaction with water, producing hydrogen and sodium (or potassium) hydroxide at a commercially useful concentration (50% by weight). The mercury is then recycled to the primary cell.
The mercury process is the least energy-efficient of the three main technologies (mercury, diaphragm and membrane) and there are also concerns about mercury
Pollution.
It is estimated that there are still around 100 mercury-cell plants operating worldwide. In Japan, mercury-based chloralkali production was virtually phased out by 1987 (except for the last two potassium chloride units shut down in 2003). In the United States, there will be only five mercury plants remaining in operation by the end of 2008. In Europe, mercury cells accounted for 43% of capacity in 2006 and Western European producers have committed to closing or converting all remaining chloralkali mercury plants by 2020.
Diaphragm cell electrolysis
In
diaphragm cell electrolysis, an asbestos (or polymer-fiber) diaphragm separates cathode and anode, preventing the chlorine forming at the anode from re-mixing with the sodium hydroxide and the hydrogen formed at the cathode. This technology was also developed at the end of the nineteenth century. There are several variants of this process: the
Le Sueur cell (1893), the Hargreaves-Bird cell (1901), the Gibbs cell (1908), and the
Townsend cell (1904). The cells vary in construction and placement of the diaphragm, with some having the diaphragm in direct contact with the cathode.
The salt solution (brine) is continuously fed to the anode compartment and flows through the diaphragm to the cathode compartment, where the caustic alkali is produced and the brine partially depleted.
As a result, diaphragm methods produce alkali that is quite dilute (about 12%) and of lower purity than do mercury cell methods. But diaphragm cells are not burdened with the problem of preventing mercury discharge into the environment. They also operate at a lower voltage, resulting in an energy savings over the mercury cell method, but large amounts of steam are required if the caustic has to be evaporated to the commercial concentration of 50%.
Membrane cell electrolysis
Development of this technology began in the 1970s. The electrolysis cell is divided into two "rooms" by a cation permeable membrane acting as an ion exchanger. Saturated sodium (or potassium) chloride solution is passed through the anode compartment, leaving at a lower concentration. Sodium (or potassium) hydroxide solution is circulated through the cathode compartment, exiting at a higher concentration. A portion of the concentrated sodium hydroxide solution leaving the cell is diverted as product, while the remainder is diluted with deionized water and passed through the electrolyzer again.
This method is more efficient than the diaphragm cell and produces very pure sodium (or potassium) hydroxide at about 32% concentration, but requires very pure brine.
Other electrolytic processes
Although a much lower production scale is involved, electrolytic diaphragm and membrane technologies are also used industrially to recover chlorine from hydrochloric acids solutions, producing hydrogen (but no caustic alkali) as a co-product.
Furthermore, electrolysis of fused chloride salts (Downs Cell) also enables chlorine to be produced, in this case as a by-product of the manufacture of metallic
sodium or magnesium.
Other methods
Before electrolytic methods were used for chlorine production, the direct oxidation of
hydrogen chloride with oxygen or air was exercised in the
Deacon process:
4 HCl + O2 → 2 Cl2 + 2 H2O
This reaction is accomplished with the use of CuCl2 as a catalyst and is performed at high temperarature (about 400°C). The amount of extracted chlorine is approximately 80%. Due to the extremely corrosive reaction mixture, industrial use of this method is difficult and several pilot trials failed in the past. Nevertheless, recent developments are promising.
Another earlier process to produce chlorine was to heat brine with acid and
manganese dioxide.
2 NaCl + 2H2SO4 + MnO2 → Na2SO4 + MnSO4 + 2 H2O + Cl2
Using this process, chemist Carl Wilhelm Scheele was the first to isolate chlorine in a laboratory. The manganese can be recovered by the
Weldon process.
Small amounts of chlorine gas can be made in the laboratory by putting concentrated
hydrochloric acid in a flask with a side arm and rubber tubing attached. Manganese dioxide is then added and the flask stoppered. The reaction is not greatly exothermic. As chlorine is denser than air, it can be easily collected by placing the tube inside a flask where it will displace the air. Once full, the collecting flask can be stoppered.
In the laboratory, small amounts of chlorine gas can also be created by adding concentrated
hydrochloric acid (typically about 5M) to
sodium hypochlorite or
sodium chlorate solution.
Industrial production
Large-scale production of chlorine involves several steps and many pieces of equipment. The description below is typical of a membrane plant. The plant also produces simultaneously sodium hydroxide (referred to in the industry as caustic soda) and
hydrogen gas. A typical plant consists of brine production/treatment, cell operations, chlorine cooling & drying, chlorine compression & liquefaction, liquid chlorine storage & loading, caustic handling, evaporation, storage & loading and hydrogen handling.
Brine
Key to the production of chlorine is the operation of the
brine saturation/treatment system. Maintaining a properly saturated solution with the correct purity is vital, especially for membrane cells. Many plants have a salt pile which is sprayed with recycled brine. Others have slurry tanks that are fed raw salt.
The raw brine is partially or totally treated with
sodium hydroxide, sodium carbonate and a flocculant to reduce calcium,
magnesium and other impurities. The brine proceeds to a large clarifier or a filter where the impurities are removed. The total brine is additionally filtered before entering ion exchangers to further remove impurities. At several points in this process, the brine is tested for hardness and strength.
After the ion exchangers the brine is considered pure, and is transferred to storage tanks to be pumped into the cell room. Brine fed to the cell line is heated to the correct temperature to control exit brine temperatures according to the electrical load. Brine exiting the cell room must be treated to remove residual chlorine and control pH before being returned to the saturation stage. This can be accomplished via dechlorination towers with acid and sodium bisulfite addition. Failure to remove chlorine can result in damage to the cells. Brine should be monitored for accumulation of chlorate and sulfate and either have treatment systems in place or purging of the brine loop to maintain safe levels, since chlorate can diffuse through the membranes and contaminate the caustic, while sulfate can damage the anode surface coating.
Cell room
The building that houses the many electrolytic cells is usually called a cell room or cell house, although some plants are built outdoors. This building contains support structures for the cells, connections for supplying electrical power to the cells and piping for the fluids. Monitoring and control of the temperatures of the feed caustic and brine is done to control exit temperatures. Also monitored are the voltages of each cell which vary with the electrical load on the cell room that is used to control the rate of production. Monitoring and control of the pressures in the chlorine and hydrogen headers is also done via pressure control valves.
Direct
electrical current is supplied via rectifiers. Plant load is controlled by varying the current to the cells. As the current is increased flow rates for brine, caustic and deionized water are increased while lowering the feed temperatures.
Cooling and drying
Chlorine gas exiting the cell line must be cooled and dried since the exit gas can be over 80º C and contains moisture that allows chlorine gas to be corrosive to iron piping. Cooling the gas allows for a large amount of moisture from the brine to condense out of the gas stream. Cooling also improves the efficiency of the compression and liquefaction stage that follows. Chlorine exiting is ideally between 18º C and 25º C. After cooling the gas stream passes through a series of towers with counter flowing sulfuric acid. These towers progressively remove any remaining moisture from the chlorine gas. After exiting the drying towers the chlorine is filtered to remove any sulfuric acid droplets.
Compression and liquefaction
Several methods of compression may be used:
liquid ring, reciprocating compressor, or centrifugal compressor. The chlorine gas is compressed at this stage and may be further cooled by inter- and after-coolers. After compression it flows to the liquefiers, where it is cooled enough to liquefy. Non condensible gases and remaining chlorine gas are vented off as part of the pressure control of the liquefaction systems. These gases are routed to a gas scrubber, producing
sodium hypochlorite, or used in the production of hydrochloric acid (by combustion with hydrogen) or
ethylene dichloride (by reaction with ethylene).
Storage and loading
Liquid chlorine is typically gravity-fed to storage tanks. It can be loaded into rail or road tankers via pumps or padded with compressed dry gas.
Caustic handling, evaporation, storage and loading
Caustic fed to the cell room flows in a loop that is simultaneously bled off to storage with a part diluted with deionized water and returned to the cell line for strengthening within the cells. The caustic exiting the cell line must be monitored for strength, to maintain safe concentrations. Too strong or too weak a solution may damage the membranes. Membrane cells typically produce caustic in the range of 30% to 33% by weight. The feed caustic flow is heated at low electrical loads to control its exit temperature. Higher loads require the caustic to be cooled, to maintain correct exit temperatures. The caustic exiting to storage is pulled from a storage tank and may be diluted for sale to customers who require weak caustic or for use on site. Another stream may be pumped into a multiple effect evaporator set to produce commercial 50% caustic. Rail cars and tanker trucks are loaded at loading stations via pumps.
Hydrogen handling
Hydrogen produced may be vented unprocessed directly to the atmosphere or cooled, compressed and dried for use in other processes on site or sold to a customer via pipeline, cylinders or trucks. Some possible uses are hydrochloric acid or hydrogen peroxide production, desulfurization of petroleum oils and use as a fuel in boilers or fuel cells.
Energy consumption
Production of chlorine is extremely energy intensive. Energy consumption per unit weight of product is not far below that for iron and steel manufacture and greater than for the production of glass or cement.
Since electricity is an indispensable raw material for the production of chlorine, the energy consumption corresponding to the electrochemical reaction cannot be reduced. Energy savings arise primarily through applying more efficient technologies and reducing ancillary energy use.
Applications and uses
Production of industrial and consumer products
Chlorine's principal applications are in the production of a wide range of industrial and consumer products. For example, it is used in making plastics, solvents for dry cleaning and metal degreasing, textiles, agrochemicals and pharmaceuticals, insecticides, dyestuffs, etc.
Purification and disinfection
Chlorine is an important chemical for water purification, in
disinfectants, and in bleach. It is used (in the form of hypochlorous acid) to kill
bacterium and other microbes in drinking water supplies and public
swimming pools. However, in most private swimming pools chlorine itself is not used, but rather sodium hypochlorite (household bleach), formed from chlorine and
sodium hydroxide, or solid tablets of chlorinated isocyanurates. Even small water supplies are now routinely chlorinated. (
See also chlorination)
Chemistry
Elemental chlorine is an
oxidizer. It undergoes halogen substitution reactions with lower halide salts. For example, chlorine gas bubbled through a solution of bromide or iodide anions oxidizes them to bromine and iodine respectively.
Like the other halogens, chlorine participates in
free-radical substitution reactions with hydrogen-containing organic compounds. This reaction is often – but not invariably – non-regioselective, and hence may result in a mixture of isomeric products. It is often difficult to control the degree of substitution as well, so multiple substitutions are common. If the different reaction products are easily separated, e.g. by distillation, substitutive free-radical chlorination (in some cases accompanied by concurrent thermal dehydrochlorination) may be a useful synthetic route. Industrial examples of this are the production of
methyl chloride,
methylene chloride,
chloroform and
carbon tetrachloride from methane, allyl chloride from propylene, and trichloroethylene and tetrachloroethylene from ethylene dichloride.
Like the other halides, chlorine undergoes electrophilic additions reactions, most notably, the chlorination of alkenes and aromatic compounds with a Lewis acid catalyst. Organic chlorine compounds tend to be less reactive in nucleophilic substitution reactions than the corresponding bromine or iodine derivatives, but they tend to be cheaper. They may be activated for reaction by substituting with a tosylate group, or by the use of a catalytic amount of
sodium iodide.
Chlorine is used extensively in organic chemistry and
inorganic chemistry as an oxidizing agent and in
substitution reactions because chlorine often imparts many desired properties to an
organic compound, due to its electronegativity.
Chlorine compounds are used as intermediates in the production of a number of important commercial products that do not contain chlorine. Examples are:
polycarbonates, polyurethanes, silicones, polytetrafluoroethylene,
carboxymethyl cellulose and
propylene oxide.
Other uses
Chlorine is used in the manufacture of numerous organic chlorine compounds, the most significant of which in terms of production volume are 1,2-dichloroethane and vinyl chloride, intermediates in the production of
PVC. Other particularly important organochlorines are
methyl chloride, methylene chloride, chloroform, vinylidene chloride,
trichloroethylene,
perchloroethylene,
allyl chloride, epichlorohydrin,
chlorobenzene, dichlorobenzenes and
trichlorobenzenes.
Chlorine is also used in the production of chlorates and in
bromine extraction.
Compounds
See also :Category:Chlorine compounds
For general references to the chloride ion (Cl−), including references to specific chlorides, see
chloride. For other chlorine compounds see
chlorate (ClO3−), chlorite (ClO2−),
hypochlorite(ClO−), and perchlorate(ClO4−), and
chloramine (NH2Cl).
Other chlorine-containing compounds include:
Oxidation states
{| class="wikitable" align="right"! Oxidation
state !! Name !! Formula !! width="200" | Example compounds|-| align="center" | −1 || chlorides ]|-| align="center" | 0 || chlorine || align="center" | Cl2 || elemental chlorine|-| align="center" | +1 ||
hypochlorites ],
calcium hypochlorites || align="center" | ClO2− || [sodium chlorites || align="center" | ClO3− || [sodium chlorate,
potassium chlorate,
chloric acids || align="center" | ClO4− || [potassium perchlorate, perchloric acid, organic perchlorates, ammonium perchlorate,
magnesium perchlorate from −1 to +7, as well as the elemental state of zero. Progressing through the states, [hydrochloric acid can be oxidized using manganese dioxide, or hydrogen chloride gas oxidized catalytically by air to form elemental chlorine gas. The solubility of chlorine in water is increased if the water contains dissolved alkali hydroxide. This is due to disproportionation:
Cl2 + 2OH− → Cl− + ClO− + H2O
In hot concentrated alkali solution disproportionation continues:
2ClO− → Cl− + ClO2−
ClO− + ClO2− → Cl− + ClO3−
Sodium chlorate and potassium chlorate can be crystallized from solutions formed by the above reactions. If their crystals are heated, they undergo the final disproportionation step.
4ClO3− → Cl− + 3ClO4−
This same progression from chloride to perchlorate can be accomplished by
electrolysis. The anode reaction progression is:Cotton, F. Albert and Wilkinson, Geoffrey,
Advanced Inorganic Chemistry 2nd ed. John Wiley & sons, p568
{| class="wikitable" align="left"
! Reaction !! Electrode
potential|-| align="center" | Cl− + 2OH− → ClO− + H2O + 2e− || +0.89 volts|-| align="center" | ClO− + 2OH− → ClO2− + H2O + 2e− || +0.67 volts|-| align="center" | ClO2− + 2OH− → ClO3− + H2O + 2e− || +0.33 volts|-| align="center" | ClO3− + 2OH− → ClO4− + H2O + 2e− || +0.35 volts|}
Each step is accompanied at the cathode by
2H2O + 2e− → 2OH− + H2 −0.83 volts
Safety
Chlorine is a toxic gas that irritates the respiratory system. Because it is heavier than air, it tends to accumulate at the bottom of poorly ventilated spaces. Chlorine gas is a strong oxidizer, which may react with flammable materials." Chlorine."
MSDS. Issued on October 23, 1997; Revised on
November 1, 1999; Retrieved on
September 8, 2007.
Never use
ABC Dry Chemical to fight a chlorine fire, the resulting chemical reaction with the ammonium phosphate will release toxic gases and/or result in an explosion. Water fogs/Compressed Air Foam System should be used to extinguish the material.
See also
References
External links
- Chlorine Institute - Trade association and lobby group representing the interests of the chlorine industry
- Chlorine Online - Chlorine Online is an information resource produced by Eurochlor - the business association of the European chlor-alkali industry
- Computational Chemistry Wiki
- Chlorine Production Using Mercury, Environmental Considerations and Alternatives
- National Pollutant Inventory - Chlorine
- National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health - Chlorine Page
Chlorine - Life Depends On It
Provides information about chlorine, the benefits of chlorine, what chlorine is, who makes chlorine and who uses chlorine.
Chlorine - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Chlorine (IPA: /ˈklɔəriːn/, from the Greek word 'χλωρóς' (khlôros)(meaning 'pale green'), is the chemical element with atomic number 17 and symbol Cl.
Definition: chlorine from Online Medical Dictionary
The Online Medical Dictionary is a searchable dictionary of definitions from medicine, science and technology.
Safety (MSDS) data for chlorine
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Visual Elements - Chlorine
Discovered : 1774 by C.W. Scheele Isolated in Uppsala, Sweden Origin : The name is derived from the Greek ‘chloros’, meaning pale green. Description
CHLORINE 6pp A5 LFT(1)
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Chlorine Chemistry Division : Chlorine Chemistry Division
The Chlorine Chemistry Division of the American Chemistry Council (ACC) represents the major producers and users of chlorine in the US. Chlorine and its derivatives affect ... ...
Chlorine Chemistry Division : What is Chlorine
Chlorine is a natural chemical element, one of the basic building blocks of matter. Scattered throughout the rocks of Earth’s continents and concentrated in her salty oceans ...
How is chlorine made: chlorine production, caustic soda, membrane cell ...
How is chlorine made? - information about chlorine production using caustic soda and details of the membrane cell process from Eurochlor.