(Redirected from Organohalogen)'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. There are also compounds such as methylammonium chloride that include
carbon atoms and
noncovalent halogen atoms, also called
inorganic halogens. Unlike halocarbon halogens, noncovalent
halogen atoms will usually
dissociate and
ionize in
water.
Halocarbons are a class of organic compounds containing covalently bonded fluorine, chlorine, bromine, or iodine.
Many synthetic organic compounds such as
plastic polymers, and a few natural ones, contain halogen atoms; they are known as ''halogenated'' compounds. Chlorine is by far the most abundant of the halogens, and the only one needed in relatively large amounts (as chloride ions) by humans. For example, chloride ions play a key role in brain function by mediating the action of the inhibitory transmitter
GABA and are also used by the body to produce stomach acid. Iodine is needed in trace amounts for the production of
thyroid hormones such as
thyroxine. On the other hand, neither fluorine nor bromine are believed to be really essential for humans, although small amounts of fluoride does make teeth enamel somewhat more resistant to attack.
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 alternating single and
double bonds
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 abount of the naturally occuring halocarbons are created by wood fire,
dioxine for example, or vulcanic 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 clorine 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]
Uses
The first halocarbon comercialy used was
Tyrian purple an 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 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
PCN manufacturing suffering from
chloracne , and by the late 1930s it was known that workers exposed to
PCNs could die from
liver disease and that
DDT would kill
mosquitos and other
insects . 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" .
In 1962 a book by U.S. biologist
Rachel Carson 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 . 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 . 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.
[4]
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 . 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 , 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
★
Halogenation
References
★ , settled between the parties, reviewed in
★
★
★
★
★
★ , cited in
Chemical Industry Archives, Anniston Case, by Environmental Working Group, Washington, DC, 2002
★
★
★
★
★
1. Naturally Occurring Organohalogen Compounds, Gordon W. Gribble, , , Acc. Chem. Res., 1998
2. The diversity of naturally occurring organobromine compounds, Gordon W. Gribble, , , Chemical Society Reviews, 1999
3. Naturally Occurring Organofluorines, Gordon W. Gribble, , , Organofluorines, 2002
4. Climate Change 2007: The Physical Science Basis. Summary for Policymakers, page 3