Dictionary Definition
fluorine n : a nonmetallic univalent element
belonging to the halogens; usually a yellow irritating toxic
flammable gas; a powerful oxidizing agent; recovered from fluorite
or cryolite or fluorapatite [syn: F, atomic
number 9]
User Contributed Dictionary
Noun
- The chemical element (symbol F) with an atomic number of 9.
Derived terms
- fluorian
- fluo-
- fluor-, fluoro-
- fluoride
- fluorinate
- fluorination
- fluorine-18
- fluorine-19
- fluorine dating
- fluorine method
- fluorine oxide
- fluorine test
Related terms
Translations
chemical element
- Afrikaans: fluoor
- Albanian: fluor
- Arabic: (filú:r)
- Armenian: ֆտոր (ftor)
- Basque: fluoroa
- Belarusian: фтор (ftor)
- Bosnian: fluor
- Breton: fluor
- Bulgarian: флуор (fluor)
- Catalan: fluor
- Chinese: 氟 (fú)
- Cornish: fluryn
- Croatian: fluor
- Czech: fluor
- Danish: fluor
- Dutch: fluor
- Esperanto: fluoro
- Estonian: fluor
- Faroese: flúr
- Finnish: fluori
- French: fluor
- Friulian: fluôr
- Galician: flúor
- Georgian: ფთორი (p't'ori)
- German: Fluor
- Greek, Modern: φθόριο (fthório)
- Hebrew: פלואור (fluor)
- Hungarian: fluor
- Icelandic: flúr
- Interlingua: fluor
- Irish: fluairín
- Italian: fluoro
- Japanese: フッ素 (fusso)
- Kashmiri: fluòr
- Kazakh: фтор (ftor)
- Korean: 플루오르 (peulluoreu), 불소 (弗素, bulso)
- Latvian: fluors
- Lithuanian: fluoras
- Luxembourgish: fluor
- Macedonian: флуор (fluor)
- Malay: fluorin
- Maltese: fluoru
- Manx: fluoreen
- Mongolian: фтор (ftor)
- Norwegian: fluor
- Polish: fluor
- Portuguese: flúor
- Romanian: fluor
- Russian: фтор (ftor)
- Scottish Gaelic: fluairin
- Serbian: флуор (fluor)
- Slovak: fluór
- Slovene: fluor
- Spanish: flúor
- Swedish: fluor
- Tajik: ftor
- Tamil: வினைவியம் (vinaiviyam)
- Thai: (flūorīn)
- Turkish: fluor
- Ukrainian: фтор (ftor)
- Uzbek: фтор (ftor)
- Vietnamese: flo
- Welsh: fflworin
- West Frisian: fluor
See also
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)Extensive Definition
Fluorine (, lang-la fluere, meaning "to flow"), is
the chemical
element with the symbol F and atomic
number 9. Atomic fluorine is univalent and is the most
chemically reactive and electronegative
of all the elements. In its elementally isolated (pure) form,
fluorine is a poisonous,
pale, yellowish brown gas, with chemical formula F2. Like other
halogens, molecular
fluorine is highly dangerous; it causes severe chemical burns on
contact with skin.
Fluorine's large electronegativity and small
atomic radius gives it interesting bonding characteristics,
particularly in conjunction with carbon, with which it forms stable
compounds with a wide range of industrial applications. See
covalent radius of fluorine, fluorocarbon, Perfluorocarbon,
and fluoropolymer.
Notable characteristics
Pure fluorine (F2) is a corrosive pale yellow or brown gas that is a powerful oxidizing agent. It is the most reactive and most electronegative of all the elements (4.0), and readily forms compounds with most other elements. It has an oxidation number -1, except when bonded to another fluorine in F2 which gives it an oxidation number of 0. Fluorine even combines with argon, krypton, xenon, and radon. Even in dark, cool conditions, fluorine reacts explosively with hydrogen. The reaction with hydrogen occurs even at extremely low temperatures, using liquid hydrogen and solid fluorine. It is so reactive that metals, and even water, as well as other substances, burn with a bright flame in a jet of fluorine gas. It is far too reactive to be found in elemental form. In moist air it reacts with water to form also-dangerous hydrofluoric acid.Fluorides are
compounds that combine fluorine with some positively charged
counterpart. They often consist of crystalline ionic salts.
Fluorine compounds with metals are among the most stable of
salts.
Hydrogen
fluoride is a weak acid when
dissolved in water. Consequently, fluorides of alkali metals
produce basic solutions.
Applications
Chemical uses:- Atomic fluorine and molecular fluorine are used for plasma etching in semiconductor manufacturing, flat panel display production and MEMS (microelectromechanical systems) fabrication. Xenon difluoride is also used for this last purpose.
- Hydrofluoric acid (chemical formula HF) is used to etch glass in light bulbs and other products.
- Fluorine is indirectly used in the production of low friction plastics such as Teflon (or polytetrafluoroethylene), and in halons such as freon.
- Along with some of its compounds, fluorine is used in the production of pure uranium from uranium hexafluoride and in the synthesis of numerous commercial fluorochemicals, including vitally important pharmaceuticals, agrochemical compounds, lubricants, and textiles.
- Fluorochlorohydrocarbons are used extensively in air conditioning and in refrigeration. Chlorofluorocarbons have been banned for these applications because they contribute to ozone destruction and the ozone hole. Interestingly, since it is chlorine and bromine radicals which harm the ozone layer, not fluorine, compounds which do not contain chlorine or bromine but contain only fluorine, carbon and hydrogen (called hydrofluorocarbons) are not on the EPA list of ozone-depleting substances, and have been widely used as replacements for the chlorine- and bromine-containing fluorocarbons. Hydrofluorocarbons do have a greenhouse effect, but a small one compared with carbon dioxide and methane.
- Sulfur hexafluoride is an extremely inert and nontoxic gas, very useful as an insulator in high-voltage electrical equipment. It does not occur in nature, so it is a useful tracer gas, though as an exceptionally potent greenhouse gas its use in unenclosed systems is inadvisable.
- Sodium hexafluoroaluminate (cryolite), is used in the electrolysis of aluminium.
- In much higher concentrations, sodium fluoride has been used as an insecticide, especially against cockroaches.
- Fluorides have been used in the past to help molten metal flow, hence the name.
- Some researchers including US space scientists in the early 1960s have studied elemental fluorine gas as a possible rocket propellant due to its exceptionally high specific impulse. The experiments failed because fluorine proved difficult to handle, and its combustion products proved extremely toxic and corrosive.
- Compounds of fluorine such as fluoropolymers, potassium fluoride and cryolite are utilized in applications such as anti-reflective coatings and dichroic mirrors on account of their unusually low refractive index.
Dental and medical uses:
- Compounds of fluorine, including sodium fluoride (NaF), stannous fluoride (SnF2) and sodium MFP, are used in toothpaste to prevent dental cavities. These compounds are also added to municipal water supplies, a process called water fluoridation, though a number of health concerns has sometimes led to controversy.
- Many important agents for general anesthesia such as sevoflurane, desflurane, and isoflurane are hydrofluorocarbon derivatives.
- The fluorinated antiinflammatories dexamethasone and triamcinolone are among the most potent of the synthetic corticosteroids class of drugs.
- Fludrocortisone ("Florinef") is one of the most common mineralocorticoids, a class of drugs which mimics the actions of aldosterone.
- Fluconazole is a triazole antifungal drug used in the treatment and prevention of superficial and systemic fungal infections.
- Fluoroquinolones are a family of broad-spectrum antibiotics.
- SSRI antidepressants, except in a few instances, are fluorinated molecules. These include citalopram,escitalopram oxalate,fluoxetine,fluvoxamine maleate, and paroxetine. A notable exception is sertraline. Because of the difficulty of biological systems in dealing with metabolism of fluorinated molecules, fluorinated antibiotics and antidepressants are among the major fluorinated organics found in treated city sewage and wastewater.
- 18F, a radioactive isotope that emits positrons, is often used in positron emission tomography, because its half-life of 110 minutes is long by the standards of positron-emitters.
Compounds
Fluorine forms a variety of very different compounds, owing to its small atomic size and covalent behavior, and on the other hand, its oxidizing ability and extreme electronegativity. For example, hydrofluoric acid is extremely dangerous, while in synthetic drugs incorporating an aromatic ring (e.g. flumazenil), fluorine is used to prevent toxication or to delay metabolism.The fluoride ion is basic, therefore hydrofluoric
acid is a weak acid in
water solution. However, water is not an inert solvent in this
case: when less basic solvents such as anhydrous acetic acid
are used, hydrofluoric acid is the strongest of the hydrohalogenic
acids. Also, owing to the basicity of the fluoride ion, soluble
fluorides give basic water solutions. The fluoride ion is a
Lewis
base, and has a high affinity to certain elements such as
calcium and silicon. For example, deprotection of silicon protecting
groups is achieved with a fluoride. The fluoride ion is
poisonous.
Fluorine as a freely reacting oxidant gives the
strongest oxidants known. Chlorine
trifluoride, for example, can burn water and sand, both
compounds of a weaker oxidant, oxygen.
Fluorine compounds involving noble gases were
first synthesised by Neil
Bartlett in 1962—xenon hexafluoroplatinate, XePtF6, being the
first. Fluorides of krypton and radon have also been prepared.
Also argon
fluorohydride has been prepared, although it is only stable at
cryogenic temperatures.
The carbon-fluoride bond is covalent and very stable. The
use of a fluorocarbon polymer, poly(tetrafluoroethene) or Teflon,
is an example: it is thermostable and waterproof enough to be used
in frying pans. Organofluorines may be safely used in applications
such as drugs, without the risk of release of toxic fluoride. In
synthetic drugs, toxication can be prevented.
For example, an aromatic
ring is useful but presents a safety problem: enzymes in the body metabolize
some of them into poisonous epoxides. When the para position
is substituted with fluorine, the aromatic ring is protected and
epoxide is no longer produced. The substitution of hydrogen for fluorine in
organic compounds offers a very large number of compounds.
An estimated fifth of pharmaceutical compounds and 30% of
agrochemical compounds contain fluorine.http://www.icis.com/Articles/2006/09/30/2016413/fluorines-treasure-trove.html
The -CF3 and -OCF3 moieties provide further variation, and more
recently the -SF5 group.http://www.f2chemicals.co.uk/sdf.php
For a list of fluorine compounds, see here.
History
Fluorine in the form of fluorspar (also called fluorite, calcium fluoride) was described in 1530 by Georgius Agricola for its use as a flux, which is a substance that is used to promote the fusion of metals or minerals. In 1670 Schwanhard found that glass was etched when it was exposed to fluorspar that was treated with acid. Carl Wilhelm Scheele and many later researchers, including Humphry Davy, Caroline Menard, Gay-Lussac, Antoine Lavoisier, and Louis Thenard all would experiment with hydrofluoric acid, easily obtained by treating calcium fluoride (fluorspar) with concentrated sulfuric acid.It was eventually realized that hydrofluoric acid
contained a previously unknown element. This element was not
isolated for many years after this, due to its extreme reactivity;
fluorine can only be prepared from its compounds electrolytically,
and then it immediately attacks any susceptible materials in the
area. Finally, in 1886, elemental fluorine was isolated by Henri
Moissan after almost 74 years of continuous effort by other
chemists. The derivation of elemental fluorine from hydrofluoric
acid is exceptionally dangerous, killing or blinding several
scientists who attempted early experiments on this halogen. These
men came to be referred to as "fluorine martyrs". For Moissan, it
earned him the 1906 Nobel Prize in chemistry (Moissan himself lived
to be 54, and it is not clear whether his fluorine work shortened
his life).
The first large-scale production of fluorine was
needed for the atomic bomb
Manhattan
project in World War
II where the compound uranium
hexafluoride (UF6) was needed as a gaseous carrier of uranium
to separate the 235U and 238U isotopes of uranium. Today both the gaseous
diffusion process and the gas
centrifuge process use gaseous UF6 to produce enriched
uranium for nuclear
power applications. In the Manhattan Project, it was found that
elemental fluorine was present whenever UF6 was, due to the
spontaneous decomposition of this compound into UF4 and F2. The
corrosion problem due to the F2 was eventually solved by
electrolytically coating all UF6 carrying piping with nickel metal,
which resists fluorine's attack. Joints and flexible parts were
made from teflon,
then a very recently discovered fluorocarbon plastic which
was not attacked by F2.
Preparation
Industrial fluorine production starts with fluorspar (CaF2), which is heated with sulfuric acid (H2SO4) to produce anhydrous hydrogen fluoride (HF). The hydrogen fluoride is added to potassium fluoride (KF) to make potassium bifluoride (KHF2). Electrolysis of potassium bifluoride produces fluorine gas at the anode, and hydrogen gas at the cathode. This is essentially the same method employed by Moissan in 1886; the use of potassium bifluoride rather than hydrogen fluoride itself aids electrolysis by greatly increasing the conductivity.- 2 CaF2 + H2SO4 → 2 HF + CaSO4
- HF + KF → KHF2
- 2 KHF2 → 2 KF + H2 + F2
- HF + KF → KHF2
In 1986, when preparing for a conference to
celebrate the 100th anniversary of the discovery of fluorine,
Karl
Christe discovered a purely chemical preparation involving the
reaction of solutions in anhydrous HF, K2MnF6, and SbF5
at 150 °C:
- F6 + 2F5 → 2F6 + F3 + ½F2
Safety
Elemental fluorine
Elemental fluorine (fluorine gas) is a highly toxic, corrosive oxidant, which can cause organic material, combustibles, or other flammable materials to ignite. It must be handled with great care and any contact with skin and eyes should be strictly avoided. Fluorine gas has a characteristic pungent odor that is detectable in concentrations as low as 20 ppb. As it is so reactive, all materials of construction must be carefully selected. All metal surfaces must be passivated before exposure to fluorine.Fluoride ion
Fluoride ions are also highly toxic and must also be handled with great care and any contact with skin and eyes should be strictly avoided.Hydrogen fluoride and hydrofluoric acid
Contact of exposed skin with hydrofluoric acid solutions poses one of the most extreme and insidious industrial threats—one which is exacerbated by the fact that hydrofluoric acid damages nerves in such a way as to make such burns initially painless. The HF molecule is a weaker acid which is significantly non-dissociated in water, and the intact molecule is capable of rapidly migrating through lipid layers of cells which would ordinarily stop an ion or partly ionized acid, and the burns it produces are typically deep. HF may react with calcium, permanently damaging the bone . More seriously, HF reaction with the body's calcium inside cells can cause cardiac arrhythmias, followed by cardiac arrest brought on by sudden chemical changes within the body (hypocalcaemia). These cannot always be prevented with local or intravenous injection of calcium salts. Hydrofluoric acid spills over just 2.5% of the body's surface area (about 75 in2 or 5 dm2), despite copious immediate washing, have been fatal. If the patient survives, hydrofluoric acid burns typically produce open wounds of an especially slow-healing nature.Anhydrous hydrogen
fluoride will rapidly form hydrofluoric acid on contact with
moisture; its physiological effects are then the same.
Organic fluorides
Perfluorocarbons are generally inert and nontoxic, but there are many other fluorine compounds that have physiological effects, both good and bad. For example, fluoroacetic acid (one of the very few natural fluorine compounds) is very poisonous, while fluorouracil is an anti-cancer drug.References
External links
fluorine in Afrikaans: Fluoor
fluorine in Arabic: فلور
fluorine in Asturian: Flúor
fluorine in Azerbaijani: Flüor
fluorine in Bengali: ফ্লুরিন
fluorine in Min Nan: Fluorine
fluorine in Bosnian: Fluor
fluorine in Bulgarian: Флуор
fluorine in Catalan: Fluor
fluorine in Chuvash: Фтор
fluorine in Czech: Fluor
fluorine in Corsican: Fluoru
fluorine in Welsh: Fflworin
fluorine in Danish: Fluor
fluorine in German: Fluor
fluorine in Estonian: Fluor
fluorine in Modern Greek (1453-): Φθόριο
fluorine in Spanish: Flúor
fluorine in Esperanto: Fluoro
fluorine in Basque: Fluor
fluorine in Persian: فلوئور
fluorine in French: Fluor
fluorine in Galician: Flúor (elemento)
fluorine in Korean: 플루오린
fluorine in Armenian: Ֆտոր
fluorine in Hindi: फ्लोरिन
fluorine in Croatian: Fluor
fluorine in Ido: Fluoro
fluorine in Indonesian: Fluor
fluorine in Icelandic: Flúor
fluorine in Italian: Fluoro
fluorine in Hebrew: פלואור
fluorine in Swahili (macrolanguage):
Florini
fluorine in Haitian: Fliyò
fluorine in Kurdish: Fluor
fluorine in Latin: Fluor
fluorine in Latvian: Fluors
fluorine in Luxembourgish: Fluor
fluorine in Lithuanian: Fluoras
fluorine in Lojban: li'orkliru
fluorine in Hungarian: Fluor
fluorine in Macedonian: Флуор
fluorine in Malayalam: ഫ്ലൂറിന്
fluorine in Maori: Hau kōwhai
fluorine in Marathi: फ्लोरिन
fluorine in Dutch: Fluor
fluorine in Japanese: フッ素
fluorine in Norwegian: Fluor
fluorine in Norwegian Nynorsk: Fluor
fluorine in Novial: Fluore
fluorine in Occitan (post 1500): Fluor
fluorine in Uzbek: Ftor
fluorine in Polish: Fluor
fluorine in Portuguese: Flúor
fluorine in Romanian: Fluor
fluorine in Quechua: Flur
fluorine in Russian: Фтор
fluorine in Sicilian: Fluoru
fluorine in Simple English: Fluorine
fluorine in Slovak: Fluór
fluorine in Slovenian: Fluor
fluorine in Serbian: Флуор
fluorine in Serbo-Croatian: Fluor
fluorine in Finnish: Fluori
fluorine in Swedish: Fluor
fluorine in Tamil: ஃவுளூரின்
fluorine in Thai: ฟลูออรีน
fluorine in Vietnamese: Flo
fluorine in Tajik: Фтор
fluorine in Turkish: Flor
fluorine in Ukrainian: Флуор
fluorine in Chinese: 氟