1 / 33

CHEM 2017 2008 lect 7 + 8 F chemicals

CHEM 2017 2008 lect 7 + 8 F chemicals. HYDROGEN FLUORIDE INORGANIC FLUORIDES FLUORINE. CALCIUM FLUORIDE KNOWN TO LOWER THE MELTING POINT OF MINERALS (16th C) Early chemists: HF – glass apparatus attacked F realised to be similar to Cl (1813), but not isolated

diallo
Download Presentation

CHEM 2017 2008 lect 7 + 8 F chemicals

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. CHEM 2017 2008lect 7 + 8F chemicals

  2. HYDROGEN FLUORIDE • INORGANIC FLUORIDES • FLUORINE

  3. CALCIUM FLUORIDE • KNOWN TO LOWER THE MELTING POINT OF MINERALS (16th C) • Early chemists: HF – glass apparatus attacked • F realised to be similar to Cl (1813), but not isolated • HF first clearly prepared only in 1850s

  4. HF • First made by slowly heating POTASSIUM HYDROGEN FLUORIDE • EARLY USE OF HF IN ETCHING GLASS • 1930S INTRODUCTION OF CHLOROFLUOROCARBONS AS REFRIGERANTS

  5. MANHATTEN PROJECT • USE OF UF6 FOR 235U ENRICHMENT • 235U vs 238U • GAS CENTRIFUGES – SLIGHTLY DIFFERENT DIFFUSION RATES • CONTAINMENT VESSELS – FOR CORROSIVE F-CONTAINING COMPOUNDS – PERFLUORO ORGANIC COMPOUNDS FOUND TO BE SUITABLE

  6. CFCs - environmental problems • CFCs relatively stable • When released rise through earth’s atmosphere unchanged • In the stratosphere generate Cl radicals, that destroy ozone in a catalytic action • Montreal Protocol • Replace CFCs with HCFCs • Less stable in the atmosphere – decompose at lower levels

  7. FLUORSPAR • CALCIUM FLUORIDE – VARIABLE PURITY • USED IN STEEL MAKING SINCE 1860s • Metallurgical grade: 60-80% • Ceramic grade (glass) 85-95% • Acid grade: 97+% (HF manufacture)

  8. FLUORSPAR • Helps separation of metal in steel production from slag and impurities such as P, S, Si removed as their oxides • Also used in Cu, Sn, Zn refining • Used in glass (small crystals of calcium fluoride render glass milky) - also fluorides can be added to adjust coefficients of expansion of glass

  9. PRODUCTION OF HF • HF - ANHYDROUS OR AQUEOUS SOLUTION • CaF2 + H2SO4 CaSO4 + 2HF • 30m long reactor for 20kt yr-1 • Crude acid purified • Calcium sulphate: neutralise with lime – historically sent to landfill; now more uses examined e.g. self-levelling floor coatings

  10. HF • Very highly corrosive • Extreme precautions needed in handling to avoid contact with skin – eats into bones – very serious burns and bone damage • Fairly volatile b pt: 19C

  11. CFC / HCFCs • Programme of replacing CFCs well organised depending on application • Catalytic processes being developed to convert old product to new product • Fluorinated chromia

  12. CFC conversion • Equilibrium limited by HCl formation • Separate desired product from HCl and recycle • Conversion per pass 10-20% but selectivity is high - very few by-products

  13. Other uses of HF • Electrochemical fluorination: • Aliphatic hydrocarbon conversion to perfluoro-substituted systems by electrolysis using liquid anhydrous HF • e.g. C8H17SO2F  C8F17SO2F as an intermediate for surfactants, textile treatments, surface coatings • e.g. C7F15COF used in teflon manufacture

  14. TEFLON • Poly(C2H4) = polyethylene • Poly(C2F4) = teflon

  15. Perfluorohydrocarbon derivatives • More stable than hydrocarbon equivalents • Thermal shock resistance is higher (COMPUTER CHIP TESTING) • COOLING FOR SUPERCOMPUTERS • SYNTHETIC OXYGEN CARRIERS (Artificial blood in surgical procedures)

  16. HF • Aromatic fluorocarbons • Balz-Schiemann diazotation reaction as a procedure for introducing F onto an aromatic ring • Used in drug synthesis

  17. HF • In aluminium production: • Synthetic cryolite, Na3(AlF6) as the fused salt used to dissolve alumina in Al manufacture • As an acid catalyst in hydrocarbon conversions: • Petroleum refining, C4 branched C8 alkanes for high octane gasoline

  18. HF refining catalysts • HF more efficient catalyst than sulphuric acid, 0.068kg rather than 0.23kg • Fewer by-products • Easier separation • [Solid acid catalysts even more desirable – ease of handling, less dangerous]

  19. HF MISCELLANEOUS USES • Scale removal from stainless steel • Oil-well acidification: improved flow rate of oil as wells become depleted • Etching of electronic chips • UF6 production (nuclear fuel) • Frosted light-bulbs • Manufacture of various inorganic fluorides

  20. INORGANIC FLUORIDES • F is highly reactive • High electronegativity: high oxidation state of metals reached easily • F- anion very small, so high coordination number possible • Wide range of M-F bond strengths possible so very diverse range of compounds possible

  21. FLUORINE AND FLUORIDES IN SOUTH AFRICA • NECSA • Experience gained in U enrichment • Now more widely applied to manufacture of F-containing chemicals

More Related