The P-Block Elements (Compounds Of Group 17 Elements)
Chlorine
Chlorine ($Cl_2$) is a highly reactive greenish-yellow gas belonging to the halogen group.
Preparation
1. Laboratory Preparation:
- Action of $HCl$ on Oxidizing Agents: Reacting concentrated $HCl$ with oxidizing agents like manganese dioxide ($MnO_2$), potassium permanganate ($KMnO_4$), or potassium dichromate ($K_2Cr_2O_7$).
- Action of $HCl$ on Bleaching Powder:
$MnO_2(s) + 4HCl(conc.) \xrightarrow{heat} MnCl_2(aq) + Cl_2(g) + 2H_2O(l)$
$2KMnO_4(s) + 16HCl(conc.) \rightarrow 2KCl(aq) + 2MnCl_2(aq) + 5Cl_2(g) + 8H_2O(l)$
$CaOCl_2(s) + 2HCl(aq) \rightarrow CaCl_2(aq) + H_2O(l) + Cl_2(g)$
2. Commercial Production (Electrolysis of Brine): This is the most important industrial method.
Diaphragm Cell Process / Chlor-alkali Process: Electrolysis of brine (concentrated aqueous solution of $NaCl$) produces chlorine gas at the anode, hydrogen gas at the cathode, and sodium hydroxide in the solution.
Anode (Oxidation): $2Cl^-(aq) \rightarrow Cl_2(g) + 2e^-$
Cathode (Reduction): $2H_2O(l) + 2e^- \rightarrow H_2(g) + 2OH^-(aq)$
Overall Reaction: $2NaCl(aq) + 2H_2O(l) \xrightarrow{electrolysis} 2NaOH(aq) + Cl_2(g) + H_2(g)$
Other Methods:
- Electrolysis of molten $NaCl$ (produces $Na$ metal at cathode and $Cl_2$ at anode).
- Deacon's process (oxidation of $HCl$ using air with $CuCl_2$ catalyst), though less common now.
Properties
Physical Properties:
- Greenish-yellow gas.
- Pungent, suffocating smell.
- Denser than air.
- Can be liquefied at room temperature under pressure (boiling point 239 K / -34°C).
- Moderately soluble in water, forming chlorine water. It disproportionates slightly in water.
- Reacts with $SO_2$ in presence of water to form $HCl$ and $H_2SO_4$.
$Cl_2(g) + H_2O(l) \rightleftharpoons HCl(aq) + HOCl(aq)$
$Cl_2(g) + SO_2(g) + 2H_2O(l) \rightarrow 2HCl(aq) + H_2SO_4(aq)$
Chemical Properties:
1. Oxidizing Agent: Chlorine is a strong oxidizing agent due to its high electronegativity and tendency to gain an electron.
- With Metals: Combines vigorously with most metals to form metal chlorides.
- With Non-metals:
- With Hydrogen Sulfide:
- With Ammonia: Reacts to form nitrogen and hydrogen chloride. With excess ammonia, it can form nitrogen trichloride ($NCl_3$), which is explosive.
- With Organic Compounds: Undergoes substitution and addition reactions with hydrocarbons.
$2Fe(s) + 3Cl_2(g) \rightarrow 2FeCl_3(s)$
$P_4(s) + 6Cl_2(g) \rightarrow 4PCl_3(l)$
$PCl_3(l) + Cl_2(g) \rightarrow PCl_5(s)$
$2H_2(g) + Cl_2(g) \xrightarrow{UV \ light \ or \ heat} 2HCl(g)$
$Cl_2(g) + H_2S(g) \rightarrow 2HCl(g) + S(s)$
$2NH_3(g) + 3Cl_2(g) \rightarrow N_2(g) + 6HCl(g)$
$NH_3(g) + 3Cl_2(g) \rightarrow NCl_3(l) + 3HCl(g)$
2. Bleaching Agent: Chlorine acts as a bleaching agent in the presence of moisture. The bleaching action is due to the liberation of nascent oxygen.
$Cl_2 + H_2O \rightarrow HCl + HOCl$ (Hypochlorous acid)
$[O]$ (nascent oxygen) + Coloured matter $\rightarrow$ Colourless matter
3. Formation of Acids:
- Forms hydrogen chloride ($HCl$) with hydrogen.
- Forms hypochlorous acid ($HOCl$) and hydrochloric acid ($HCl$) in water.
- Forms oxoacids like $HClO_3$ (chloric acid) and $HClO_4$ (perchloric acid) when reacted with water under specific conditions or by reacting with bases.
Uses:
- Disinfectant and bleaching agent.
- Production of $HCl$, $CO$, $CCl_4$, $CHCl_3$, $CFCs$.
- In the manufacture of plastics (PVC), pesticides, refrigerants, and pharmaceuticals.
- Used for producing precious metals from their ores.
Hydrogen Chloride
Hydrogen chloride ($HCl$) is a colorless gas, and its aqueous solution is known as hydrochloric acid, a strong acid.
Preparation
1. Laboratory Preparation:
- Reaction of Sodium Chloride with Concentrated Sulfuric Acid: This is the most common method. Heating sodium chloride ($NaCl$) with concentrated sulfuric acid ($H_2SO_4$) produces hydrogen chloride gas.
- If $NaCl$ is heated with excess concentrated $H_2SO_4$ at higher temperatures, sodium sulfate ($Na_2SO_4$) is formed.
- The gas produced is dried by passing it through concentrated sulfuric acid.
$NaCl(s) + H_2SO_4(conc.) \xrightarrow{heat} NaHSO_4(s) + HCl(g)$
$2NaCl(s) + H_2SO_4(conc.) \xrightarrow{high \ T} Na_2SO_4(s) + 2HCl(g)$
2. Commercial Production:
- Direct combination of hydrogen and chlorine gases.
- As a by-product during the chlorination of organic compounds.
$H_2(g) + Cl_2(g) \xrightarrow{UV \ light \ or \ heat} 2HCl(g)$
Properties
Physical Properties:
- Colorless gas.
- Pungent, suffocating odor.
- Denser than air.
- Highly soluble in water, forming hydrochloric acid.
- Liquefies at 240 K (-33°C) and solidifies at 159 K (-114°C).
Chemical Properties:
1. Acidic Nature: Hydrochloric acid ($HCl$ solution) is a strong acid, completely ionizing in water.
$HCl(g) + H_2O(l) \rightarrow H_3O^+(aq) + Cl^-(aq)$
- Reacts with bases to form chlorides and water (neutralization).
- Reacts with active metals to produce hydrogen gas.
- Reacts with metal carbonates and hydrogencarbonates to produce carbon dioxide gas.
- Reacts with metal sulfides to produce hydrogen sulfide gas.
- Reacts with metal sulfites to produce sulfur dioxide gas.
$NaOH(aq) + HCl(aq) \rightarrow NaCl(aq) + H_2O(l)$
$Zn(s) + 2HCl(aq) \rightarrow ZnCl_2(aq) + H_2(g)$
$CaCO_3(s) + 2HCl(aq) \rightarrow CaCl_2(aq) + H_2O(l) + CO_2(g)$
$FeS(s) + 2HCl(aq) \rightarrow FeCl_2(aq) + H_2S(g)$
$Na_2SO_3(s) + 2HCl(aq) \rightarrow 2NaCl(aq) + H_2O(l) + SO_2(g)$
2. Oxidizing Action: Concentrated $HCl$ can act as an oxidizing agent, although it is weaker than nitric acid.
- Oxidizes $MnO_2$, $KMnO_4$, $K_2Cr_2O_7$.
$MnO_2(s) + 4HCl(conc.) \rightarrow MnCl_2(aq) + Cl_2(g) + 2H_2O(l)$
3. Aqua Regia: Concentrated $HCl$ mixed with concentrated $HNO_3$ (3:1 ratio) forms aqua regia, which dissolves noble metals like gold and platinum.
Uses:
- Manufacture of chlorides of other metals.
- In steel industry for pickling (removing rust and scale).
- In medicine as a digestive aid.
- In food processing (gelatin production).
- Used in laboratories as a common reagent.
Oxoacids Of Halogens
Halogens, especially chlorine, bromine, and iodine, form a series of oxoacids where the halogen atom is bonded to oxygen atoms.
General Characteristics:
- The central halogen atom exhibits positive oxidation states ($+1, +3, +5, +7$).
- The general formulas are $HXO$, $HXO_2$, $HXO_3$, $HXO_4$.
- The acidity and oxidizing strength generally increase with the oxidation state of the halogen.
Oxoacids of Chlorine:
- Hypochlorous Acid ($HOCl$): Chlorine in $+1$ oxidation state. Weak acid, strong oxidizing and bleaching agent.
- Chlorous Acid ($HClO_2$): Chlorine in $+3$ oxidation state. Uncommon, unstable acid. Forms chlorites ($ClO_2^-$).
- Chloric Acid ($HClO_3$): Chlorine in $+5$ oxidation state. Strong acid and strong oxidizing agent. Forms chlorates ($ClO_3^-$).
- Perchloric Acid ($HClO_4$): Chlorine in $+7$ oxidation state. Strongest oxoacid of chlorine. Very strong oxidizing agent, especially when hot and concentrated. Forms perchlorates ($ClO_4^-$).
$Cl_2 + H_2O \rightleftharpoons HCl + HOCl$
$3Cl_2 + 6NaOH \rightarrow 5NaCl + NaClO_3 + 3H_2O$
$HClO_4$ is the most stable and strongest oxoacid of chlorine.
Oxoacids of Other Halogens:
- Fluorine: Does not form oxoacids because it is the most electronegative element and cannot exhibit positive oxidation states by bonding with oxygen. It forms only one oxide, $OF_2$, where oxygen is $+2$ and fluorine is $-1$.
- Bromine and Iodine: Form oxoacids analogous to chlorine, but they are generally less stable and weaker acids and oxidizing agents. Examples: $HBrO$, $HBrO_3$, $HIO$, $HIO_3$, $HIO_4$.
Acidity Order: For oxoacids with the same halogen, acidity increases with the number of oxygen atoms attached to the halogen ($HOX < HClO_2 < HClO_3 < HClO_4$).
Oxidizing Strength Order: For oxoacids with the same halogen, oxidizing strength generally follows the same trend as acidity.
Interhalogen Compounds
Definition: Interhalogen compounds are molecules that contain bonds between two different halogen atoms. They are formed when halogens react with each other.
Types: Based on the stoichiometry, they can be classified as:
- XY type: Formed between a larger halogen and a smaller, more electronegative halogen (e.g., $ClF$, $BrF$, $ICl$, $IBr$).
- $XY_3$ type: Formed between a larger halogen and a smaller halogen with three atoms (e.g., $ClF_3$, $BrF_3$, $IF_3$).
- $XY_5$ type: Formed between a larger halogen and a smaller halogen with five atoms (e.g., $ClF_5$, $BrF_5$, $IF_5$).
- $XY_7$ type: Formed only by Iodine ($IF_7$).
Formation: Generally formed by the direct combination of halogens, often with one halogen in excess or under specific conditions (temperature, catalyst).
General Trends:
- The more electronegative halogen acts as the central atom in $XY$ and $XY_3$ type compounds (except $BrF_3$).
- Fluorine is the most electronegative halogen, so it appears as the central atom in many interhalogen compounds, or as the surrounding atom in $XY$, $XY_3$, $XY_5$, $XY_7$ types.
Preparation
Direct Combination: Halogens are mixed in specific ratios and sometimes heated or reacted in the presence of a catalyst.
- $Cl_2 + F_2 \rightarrow 2ClF$
- $Br_2 + 3F_2 \rightarrow 2BrF_3$
- $I_2 + 5F_2 \rightarrow IF_5$
- $I_2 + 7F_2 \rightarrow IF_7$
Reaction with Fluorine: Fluorine is the most reactive halogen and readily reacts with other halogens to form interhalogen compounds.
Properties
1. Physical State:
- XY type: Mostly gases or volatile liquids.
- $XY_3$ type: Liquids or solids.
- $XY_5$ type: Solids.
- $XY_7$ type: Gas.
2. Reactivity:
- Interhalogen compounds are generally more reactive than the individual halogens (except fluorine).
- Their reactivity decreases as the electronegativity difference between the constituent halogens decreases.
- Fluorinating agents are stronger than chlorinating, brominating, or iodinating agents.
3. Structure and Geometry: Their structures can be predicted using VSEPR theory.
- XY type: Linear (e.g., $ClF$, $ICl$). $sp^3d$ hybridization of the central atom.
- $XY_3$ type: T-shaped (e.g., $ClF_3$, $BrF_3$). $sp^3d$ hybridization.
- $XY_5$ type: Square pyramidal (e.g., $IF_5$). $sp^3d^2$ hybridization.
- $XY_7$ type: Pentagonal bipyramidal (e.g., $IF_7$). $sp^3d^3$ hybridization.
4. Hydrolysis: Most interhalogen compounds hydrolyze readily in water to form halide ions, hypohalous acids (or oxoacids), and other products.
- $ClF + H_2O \rightarrow HF + HOCl$
- $IF_3 + 3H_2O \rightarrow 3HF + H_3BO_3$ (This is incorrect for $IF_3$, it forms $HIO_3$ and $HF$). Correct: $IF_3 + 3H_2O \rightarrow HIO_3 + 3HF$
Uses:
- Some interhalogen compounds like $ClF_3$ and $BrF_3$ are powerful fluorinating agents.
- Used in organic synthesis.