Dictionary Definition
chlorine n : a common nonmetallic element
belonging to the halogens; best known as a heavy yellow irritating
toxic gas; used to purify water and as a bleaching agent and
disinfectant; occurs naturally only as a salt (as in sea water)
[syn: Cl, atomic
number 17]
User Contributed Dictionary
Noun
- a toxic, green, gaseous chemical element (symbol Cl) with an atomic number of 17.
Derived terms
- antichlor, antichlore
- chlor-, chloro-
- chloral
- chlorane
- chloric
- chloride
- chlorinate
- chlorination
- chlorine-35
- chlorine-36
- chlorine-37
- chlorine dioxide
- chlorine fluoride
- chlorine monofluoride
- chlorine oxide
- chlorine pentafluoride
- chlorine trifluoride
- chlorine water
- chloriniferous
- chlorinise, chlorinize
- chlorinous
- chlorite
- chloroid
- chlorous
- chloruret
- dichlorine
- organochlorine
Related terms
Translations
- Afrikaans: chloor
- Albanian: hlor
- Arabic: (kulú:r)
- Armenian: քլոր (k‘lor)
- Basque: kloroa
- Belarusian: хлор (khlor)
- Bosnian: hlor
- Breton: klor
- Bulgarian: хлор (khlor)
- Catalan: clor
- Chinese: 氯 (lǜ)
- Cornish: cloryn
- Croatian: klor
- Czech: chlór
- Danish: klor
- Dutch: chloor
- Esperanto: kloro
- Estonian: kloor
- Faroese: klor
- Finnish: kloori
- French: chlore
- West Frisian: gloor
- Friulian: clôr
- Galician: cloro
- Georgian: ქლორი (k‘lori)
- German: Chlor
- Greek, Modern: χλώριο (khlório)
- Hebrew: כלור (klor)
- Hungarian: klór
- Icelandic: klór
- Interlingua: chloro
- Irish: clóirín
- Italian: cloro
- Japanese: 塩素 (えんそ, enso)
- Kashmiri: chlor
- Kazakh: хлор (khlor)
- Korean: 염소 (鹽素, yeomso)
- Latvian: hlors
- Lithuanian: chloras
- Luxembourgish: chlor
- Macedonian: хлор (khlor)
- Malay: klorin
- Maltese: kloru
- Manx: cloreen
- Mongolian: хлор (khlor)
- Norwegian: klor
- Polish: chlor
- Portuguese: cloro
- Romanian: clor
- Russian: хлор (khlor)
- Scottish Gaelic: clòirin
- Serbian: хлор (hlor)
- Slovak: chlór
- Slovenian: klor
- Spanish: cloro
- Swedish: klor
- Tajik: hlor
- Tamil: குளோரின் (kuļōrin)
- Thai: (khlorīn)
- Turkish: klor
- Ukrainian: хлор (khlor)
- Uzbek: хлор (khlor)
- Vietnamese: clo
- Welsh: clorin
External links
For etymology and more information refer to: http://elements.vanderkrogt.net/elem/be.html (A lot of the translations were taken from that site with permission from the author)Synonyms
- E925 when used as a food additive
See also
Extensive Definition
Chlorine (, from the Greek word
'χλωρóς' (khlôros) meaning 'green'), is the chemical
element with atomic
number 17 and symbol Cl. It is a halogen, found in the periodic
table in group
VII (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 and is poisonous. Chlorine is a powerful
oxidant and is used in
bleaching
and disinfectants. As a common disinfectant, chlorine compounds are
used in swimming
pools to keep them clean and sanitary. In the upper
atmosphere, chlorine-containing molecules have been implicated
in the destruction
of the ozone
layer.
Characteristics
Production
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 itself, 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−
- Mercury cell electrolysis
The mercury process is the least energy-efficient
of the three main technologies (mercury,
diaphragm and membrane) and there are also
concerns about mercury
emissions.
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
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 is 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 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 electrolysis apparatus
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
Furthermore, electrolysis of fused
chloride salts (Downs process)
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
copper(II)
chloride (CuCl2) as a catalyst and is performed at
high temperature (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. Recently Sumitomo patented
a catalyst for the Deacon process using ruthenium(IV)
oxide (RuO2).
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.
Another method for producing small amounts of
chlorine gas in a lab is 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 simultaneously produces sodium hydroxide (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
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 levels 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 bothchlorate anions and sulfate anions, and either have
a treatment system in place, or purging of the brine loop to
maintain safe levels, since chlorate anions can diffuse
through the membranes
and contaminate the caustic, while sulfate anions can damage the
anode surface
coating.
- Cell room
Direct
current is supplied via a rectified power source. Plant
load is controlled by varying the current to the cells. As the
current is increased,
flow rates for brine and
caustic and deionized
water are increased, while lowering the feed
temperatures.
- Cooling and drying
- Compression and liquefaction
- Storage and loading
- Caustic handling, evaporation, storage and loading
- Hydrogen handling
- 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.
Compounds
- See also Chlorine compounds
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
Chlorine exists in all odd numbered oxidation states 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:
Each step is accompanied at the cathode by
- 2H2O + 2e− → 2OH− + H2 −0.83 volts
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 bacteria 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 1,2-dichloroethane.
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
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.
Use as a weapon
- World War I
- Iraq War
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.History
Chlorine was discovered in 1774 by Swedish chemist Carl Wilhelm Scheele, who called it dephlogisticated marine acid (see phlogiston theory) and mistakenly thought it contained oxygen. Scheele isolated chlorine by reacting MnO2 with HCl.- 4 HCl + MnO2 → MnCl2 + 2 H2O + Cl2
Scheele observed several of the properties of
chlorine. The bleaching effect on litmus and the deadly effect on
insects additional to the yellow green colour and the smell similar
to aqua
regia. Chlorine was given its current name in 1810 by Sir
Humphry Davy, who insisted that it was in fact an
element.
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 is detectable in concentrations of as
low as 1 ppm. Coughing and vomiting may occur at 30 ppm and lung
damage at 60 ppm. About 1000 ppm can be fatal after a few deep
breaths of the gas. Breathing lower concentrations can aggravate
the respiratory system, and exposure to the gas can irritate the
eyes.
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 or
CAFS should be used to extinguish the material.
The number of people allergic to chlorine is very
small. People who are allergic to chlorine cannot drink tap water,
bathe in tap water or swim in pools. Dechlorinating bath salts are
used to neutralize the chlorine in bath water. Otherwise, fresh
water is boiled and cooled.
Chlorine cracking
The element is widely used for purifying water owing to its powerful oxidising properties, especially potable water supplies and water used in swimming pools. However, some polymers are sensitive to attack, including acetal resin and polybutene. Both materials were used in hot and cold water domestic supplies, and stress corrosion cracking cause widespread failures in the USA in the 1980's and 90's. One example shows an acetal joint in a water supply system, which when it fractured, caused substantial physical damage to computers in the labs below the supply. The cracks started at injection moulding defects in the joint and grew slowly until finally triggered. The fracture surface shows iron and calcium salts which were deposited in the leaking joint from the water supply before failureSee 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 in Afrikaans: Chloor
chlorine in Arabic: كلور
chlorine in Asturian: Cloru
chlorine in Azerbaijani: Xlor
chlorine in Bengali: ক্লোরিন
chlorine in Belarusian: Хлор
chlorine in Bosnian: Hlor
chlorine in Bulgarian: Хлор
chlorine in Catalan: Clor
chlorine in Chuvash: Хлор
chlorine in Czech: Chlór
chlorine in Corsican: Cloru
chlorine in Welsh: Clorin
chlorine in Danish: Klor
chlorine in German: Chlor
chlorine in Estonian: Kloor
chlorine in Modern Greek (1453-): Χλώριο
chlorine in Spanish: Cloro
chlorine in Esperanto: Kloro
chlorine in Basque: Kloro
chlorine in Persian: کلر
chlorine in French: Chlore
chlorine in Friulian: Clôr
chlorine in Irish: Clóirín
chlorine in Manx: Cloreen
chlorine in Galician: Cloro
chlorine in Korean: 염소 (원소)
chlorine in Armenian: Քլոր
chlorine in Hindi: क्लोरीन
chlorine in Croatian: Klor
chlorine in Ido: Kloro
chlorine in Indonesian: Klor
chlorine in Icelandic: Klór
chlorine in Italian: Cloro
chlorine in Hebrew: כלור
chlorine in Swahili (macrolanguage):
Chlorini
chlorine in Haitian: Klò
chlorine in Latin: Chlorum
chlorine in Latvian: Hlors
chlorine in Luxembourgish: Chlor
chlorine in Lithuanian: Chloras
chlorine in Lingala: Koloki
chlorine in Lojban: kliru
chlorine in Hungarian: Klór
chlorine in Macedonian: Хлор
chlorine in Malayalam: ക്ലോറിന്
chlorine in Maori: Hau māota
chlorine in Malay (macrolanguage): Klorin
chlorine in Dutch: Chloor
chlorine in Japanese: 塩素
chlorine in Norwegian: Klor
chlorine in Norwegian Nynorsk: Klor
chlorine in Novial: Klore
chlorine in Occitan (post 1500): Clòr
chlorine in Uzbek: Xlor
chlorine in Low German: Chlor
chlorine in Polish: Chlor
chlorine in Portuguese: Cloro
chlorine in Romanian: Clor
chlorine in Quechua: Kluru
chlorine in Russian: Хлор
chlorine in Albanian: Klori
chlorine in Simple English: Chlorine
chlorine in Slovak: Chlór
chlorine in Slovenian: Klor
chlorine in Serbian: Хлор
chlorine in Serbo-Croatian: Hlor
chlorine in Saterfriesisch: Chlor
chlorine in Finnish: Kloori
chlorine in Swedish: Klor
chlorine in Tamil: குளோரின்
chlorine in Thai: คลอรีน
chlorine in Vietnamese: Clo
chlorine in Tajik: Хлор
chlorine in Turkish: Klor
chlorine in Ukrainian: Хлор
chlorine in Contenese: 氯
chlorine in Samogitian: Chluors
chlorine in Chinese: 氯