- Halocarbon
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Halocarbon compounds are chemicals in which one or more carbon atoms are linked by covalent bonds with one or more halogen atoms (fluorine, chlorine, bromine or iodine) resulting in the formation of organofluorine compounds, organochlorine compounds, organobromine compounds, and organoiodine compounds. Chlorine halocarbons are the most common and are called organochlorides.
Many synthetic organic compounds such as plastic polymers, and a few natural ones, contain halogen atoms; they are known as halogenated compounds or organohalogens. Organochlorides are the most common industrially used organohalides, although the other organohalides are used commonly in organic synthesis. Except for extremely rare cases, organohalides are not produced biologically, but many pharmaceuticals are organohalides. Notably, many pharmaceuticals such as Prozac have trifluoromethyl groups.
For information on inorganic halide chemistry, see halide
Contents
Chemical families
Halocarbons are typically classified in the same ways as the similarly structured organic compounds that have hydrogen atoms occupying the molecular sites of the halogen atoms in halocarbons. Among the chemical families are:
- haloalkanes -- compounds with carbon atoms linked by single bonds
- haloalkenes -- compounds with one or more double bonds between carbon atoms
- haloaromatics -- compounds with carbons linked in one or more aromatic rings with a delocalised donut shaped pi cloud.
The halogen atoms in halocarbon molecules are often called "substituents," as though those atoms had been substituted for hydrogen atoms. However halocarbons are prepared in many ways that do not involve direct substitution of halogens for hydrogens.
Origins
A few halocarbons, including methyl chloride, are produced in large amounts by natural interactions between halogen salts and debris from plants and animals, but most are created in anything more than minuscule traces only through human efforts. English and French chemists, among others, began to synthesize halocarbons in the 1820s and 1830s and soon discovered halocarbon polymers as well, molecules with long chains of halocarbon groups linked by covalent bonds.
Natural halocarbons
A large amount of the naturally occurring halocarbons are created by wood fire, dioxine for example, or volcanic activities. A second large source are marine algae which produce several chlorinated methane and ethane derivates. There are several thousand more complex halocarbons known, produced mainly by marine species. Although chlorine compounds are the majority of the discovered compounds, bromides iodides and fluorides have also been found. The tyrian purple, which is a dibromoindigo, is representative of the bromides, while the thyroxine secreted from the thyroid gland, is an iodide, and the highly toxic fluoroacetate is one of the rare organofluorides. These three representatives, thyroxine from humans, tyrian purple from snails and fluoroacetate from plants, also show that unrelated species use halocarbons for several purposes.[1][2][3]
Organoiodine compounds, including biological derivatives
Main article: Organoiodine compoundsOrganoiodine compounds, called organic iodides, are similar in structure to organochlorine and organobromine compounds, but the C-I bond is weaker. Many organic iodides are known, but few are of major industrial importance. Iodide compounds are mainly produced as nutritional supplements.[4]
The thyroxin hormones are essential for human health, hence the usefulness of iodized salt.
Six mg of iodide a day can be used to treat patients with hyperthyroidism due to its ability to inhibit the organification process in thyroid hormone synthesis, the so-called Wolff-Chaikoff Effect. Prior to 1940, iodides were the predominant antithyroid agents. In large doses, iodides inhibit proteolysis of thyroglobulin, which permits TH to be synthesized and stored in colloid, but not released into the bloodstream.
This treatment is seldom used today as a stand-alone therapy despite the rapid improvement of patients immediately following administration. The major disadvantage of iodide treatment lies in the fact that excessive stores of TH accumulate, slowing the onset of action of thioamides (TH synthesis blockers). In addition, the functionality of iodides fades after the initial treatment period. An "escape from block" is also a concern, as extra stored TH may spike following discontinuation of treatment.
Uses
The first halocarbon commercially used was Tyrian purple a natural organobromide of the Murex brandaris marine snail.
Common uses for halocarbons have been as solvents, pesticides, refrigerants, fire-resistant oils, ingredients of elastomers, adhesives and sealants, electrically insulating coatings, plasticizers, and plastics. Many halocarbons have specialized uses in industry.
Before they became strictly regulated, the general public often encountered haloalkanes as paint and cleaning solvents such as trichloroethane (1,1,1-trichloroethane) and carbon tetrachloride (tetrachloromethane), pesticides like 1,2-dibromoethane (EDB, ethylene dibromide), and refrigerants like Freon-22 (duPont trademark for chlorodifluoromethane). Some haloalkanes are still widely used for industrial cleaning, such as methylene chloride (dichloromethane), and as refrigerants, such as R-134a (1,1,1,2-tetrafluoroethane).
Haloalkenes have also been used as solvents, including perchloroethylene (Perc, tetrachloroethene), widespread in dry cleaning, and trichloroethylene (TCE, 1,1,2-trichloroethene). Other haloalkenes have been chemical building blocks of plastics such as polyvinyl chloride ("vinyl" or PVC, polymerized chloroethene) and Teflon (duPont trademark for polymerized tetrafluoroethene, PTFE).
Haloaromatics include the former Aroclors (Monsanto Company trademark for polychlorinated biphenyls, PCBs), once widely used in power transformers and capacitors and in building caulk, the former Halowaxes (Union Carbide trademark for polychlorinated naphthalenes, PCNs), once used for electrical insulation, and the chlorobenzenes and their derivatives, used for disinfectants, pesticides such as dichloro-diphenyl-trichloroethane (DDT, 1,1,1-trichloro-2,2-bis(p-chlorophenyl)ethane), herbicides such as 2,4-D (2,4-dichlorophenoxyacetic acid), askarel dielectrics (mixed with PCBs, no longer used in most countries), and chemical feedstocks.
A few halocarbons, including acid halides like acetyl chloride, are highly reactive; these are rarely found outside chemical processing. The widespread uses of halocarbons were often driven by observations that most of them were more stable than other substances. They may be less affected by acids or alkalis; they may not burn as readily; they may not be attacked by bacteria or molds; or they may not be affected as much by sun exposure.
Hazards
The stability of halocarbons tended to encourage beliefs that they were mostly harmless, although in the mid-1920s physicians reported workers in polychlorinated naphthalene manufacturing suffering from chloracne (Teleky 1927), and by the late 1930s it was known that workers exposed to PCNs could die from liver disease (Flinn & Jarvik 1936) and that DDT would kill mosquitos and other insects (Müller 1948). By the 1950s, there had been several reports and investigations of workplace hazards. In 1956, for example, after testing hydraulic oils containing PCBs, the U.S. Navy found that skin contact caused fatal liver disease in animals and rejected them as "too toxic for use in a submarine" (Owens v. Monsanto 2001).
In 1962 a book by U.S. biologist Rachel Carson (Carson 1962) started a storm of concerns about environmental pollution, first focused on DDT and other pesticides, some of them also halocarbons. These concerns were amplified when in 1966 Swedish chemist Soren Jensen reported widespread residues of PCBs among Arctic and sub-Arctic fish and birds (Jensen 1966). In 1974, U.S. chemists Mario Molina and Sherwood Rowland predicted that common halocarbon refrigerants, the chlorofluorocarbons (CFCs), would accumulate in the upper atmosphere and destroy protective ozone (Molina & Rowland 1974). Within a few years, ozone depletion was being observed above Antarctica, leading to bans on production and use of chlorofluorocarbons in many countries. In 2007, the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) said halocarbons were a direct cause of global warming.[5]
Since the 1970s there have been longstanding, unresolved controversies over potential health hazards of trichloroethylene (TCE) and other halocarbon solvents that had been widely used for industrial cleaning (Anderson v. Grace 1986) (Scott & Cogliano 2000) (U.S. National Academies of Science 2004) (United States 2004). More recently perfluorooctanoic acid (PFOA), a precursor in the most common manufacturing process for Teflon and also used to make coatings for fabrics and food packaging, has become a health and environmental concern (United States 2006), suggesting that halocarbons thought to be among the most inert may also present hazards.
Halocarbons, including those that might not be hazards in themselves, can present waste disposal issues. Because they do not readily degrade in natural environments, halocarbons tend to accumulate. Incineration and accidental fires can create corrosive byproducts like hydrochloric acid and hydrofluoric acid and poisons like halogenated dioxins and furans.
See also
Notes
- ^ Gordon W. Gribble (1998), "Naturally Occurring Organohalogen Compounds", Acc. Chem. Res. 31 (3): 141–152, doi:10.1021/ar9701777.
- ^ Gordon W. Gribble (1999), "The diversity of naturally occurring organobromine compounds", Chemical Society Reviews 28 (5): 335, doi:10.1039/a900201d.
- ^ Gordon W. Gribble (2002), Neilson, A. H., ed., "Naturally Occurring Organofluorines", Organofluorines 3n: 121–136, doi:10.1007/10721878.
- ^ Phyllis A. Lyday "Iodine and Iodine Compounds" in Ullmann's Encyclopedia of Industrial Chemistry, Wiley-VCH, Weinheim, 2005.doi:10.1002/14356007.a14_381
- ^ Climate Change 2007: The Physical Science Basis. Summary for Policymakers, page 3
References
- Anderson v. Grace, Massachusetts, USA (1986), 628 F. Supp. 1219, settled between the parties, reviewed in Harr, J., Ed.; Asher, M., Ed. (1996), A Civil Action, Minneapolis, MN, USA: Sagebrush Education Resources
- Carson, R. (1962), Silent Spring, Boston, MA, USA: Houghton Mifflin
- Flinn, F.B.; Jarvik, N.E. (1936), "Action of certain chlorinated naphthalenes on the liver", Proceedings of the Society for Experimental Biology and Medicine 35: 118
- Jensen, S. (1966), "Report of a new chemical hazard", New Scientist 32: 612
- Molina, M.J.; Rowland, F.S. (1974), "Stratospheric sink for chlorofluoromethanes: chlorine atom-catalysed destruction of ozone", Nature 249: 810
- Müller, P.H. (1948), "Dichloro-diphenyl-trichloroethane and newer insecticides", Nobel Lecture, http://nobelprize.org/medicine/laureates/1948/muller-lecture.pdf
- Owens v. Monsanto, Alabama, USA (2001), 96-CV-440, Exhibit 3A03F, http://www.chemicalindustryarchives.org/search/pdfs/anniston/19570121_171.pdf, cited in Chemical Industry Archives, Anniston Case, by Environmental Working Group, Washington, DC, 2002
- Scott, C.S., Ed.; Cogliano, V.J., Ed. (2000), "Trichloroethylene Health Risks--State of the Science", Environmental Health Perspectives 108 (S2), http://ehp.niehs.nih.gov/docs/2000/suppl-2/toc.html
- Teleky, L. (1927), "Die pernakrankheit", Klinische Wochenschrift (Berlin: Springer) Jahrgänge 6: 845
- U.S. National Academies of Science, Current Projects System (2004), Assessing the Human Health Risks of Trichloroethylene, http://www4.nas.edu/webcr.nsf/0/1dc1b9eb32716bf685256f7f00622ec2?OpenDocument&Highlight=0,trichloroethylene
- United States, Environmental Protection Agency (2004), Integrated Risk Information System, Trichloroethylene (CASRN 79-01-6), http://www.epa.gov/iris/subst/0199.htm#refinhal
- United States, Environmental Protection Agency (2006), PFOA Stewardship Program, http://www.epa.gov/opptintr/pfoa/pfoastewardship.htm[dead link]
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