Chlorine
Chlorine is (at room temperature) a greenish-yellow gas that can be readily liquefied
at 5170 Tarr or 6.8 atmospheres, at 20 C (68 F), and has a very disagreeable odor. It's
Element Symbol is Cl, atomic number is 17, and atomic mass is 35.453. Chlorine's melting
point is -101 C or 149.8 F. The boiling point is -34.05 C or -29.29 F, at one atmosphere
pressure. Chlorine is a member of the halogen group. Chlorine was discovered by Swedish
scientist Karl Wilhelm in 1784, but he first thought it was a compound, rather than an
element. In 1810, Sir Humphrey Davy named it Chlorine, from the Greek word meaning
"greenish-yellow".
Chlorine is used in bleaching agents, disinfectants, monomers (plastics), solvents, and
pesticides. It is also used for bleaching paper pulp and other organic materials,
preparing bromine, (a poisonous element that at room temperature is a dark,
reddish-brown), tetraethyl lead, and killing germs in water, particularly in swimming
pools and hot tubs.
Like every member of the halogen group, chlorine has a tendency to gain one electron and
become a chloride ion. Chlorine strongly reacts with metals to form mostly water-soluble
chlorides. Chlorine also strongly reacts with nonmetals such as sulfur, phosphorus, and
other halogens. If you were to mix hydrogen and chlorine gases and keep them in a cool
dark place, the mixture would be stable, but if it were exposed to sunlight, it would
cause a strong explosion. If a burning candle were placed in a sealed container of
chlorine, it would keep burning, and it would produce thick, black, smoke, leaving behind
soot. There are five oxides that chlorine can form: chlorine monoxide; dichloride
monoxide; chlorine dioxide; chlorine heptoxide; and chlorine hexoxide.
Chlorine is used in bleaching agents, disinfectants, monomers (plastics), solvents, and
pesticides. It is also used for bleaching paper pulp and other organic materials,
preparing bromine, (a poisonous element that at room temperature is a dark,
reddish-brown), tetraethyl lead, and killing germs in water, particularly in swimming
pools and hot tubs.
Electron Dot Model
Cl
Additional Information
Chlorine was the first substance used as a poisonous gas in World War I (1914-1919) ,
along with gases like tear gas, phosgene (a lung irritant), and mustard gas.
Flame-throwers were also tried, but at first were thought ineffective because of their
short range, but when napalm (made up of palmitic and napthenic acids), a sort of thick,
sticky gasoline, was developed, flame throwers were quite useful in World War II.
Most Chlorine is made by electrolysis of a salt solution, with a by-product of sodium
hydroxide. Some industrial chlorine is made by oxidizing hydrogen chloride (a colorless,
corrosive, nonflammable gas with a penetrating, suffocating odor.) .
Bibliography
? Microsoft ? Encarta. Copyright ? 1994 Microsoft Corporation. Copyright ? 1994 Funk &
Wagnalls Corporation.
? Asimov, Isaac, Building Blocks of the Universe, rev. ed. (1974); Downs, A. J., The
Chemistry of Chlorine, Bromine, Iodine and Astatine (1975); Hamilton, E. I., The
Chemical Elements and Man (1978); Nechamkin, Howard, Chemistry of the Elements (1968);
Ruben, Samuel, Handbook of the Elements, 2d ed. (1967; repr. 1985); Trifonov, D. N.,
Chemical Elements: How They Were Discovered (1985).
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