'Phosphorus', (, meaning "light", and ''phoros'' meaning "bearer"), is the
chemical element that has the symbol 'P' and
atomic number 15. A
multivalent nonmetal of the
nitrogen group, phosphorus is commonly found in inorganic
phosphate rocks.
Due to its high reactivity, phosphorus is never found as a free element in nature. One form of phosphorus (white phosphorus) emits a faint glow upon exposure to
oxygen (hence its Greek derivation and the
Latin light-bearer meaning the planet
Venus as
dawn-bearer or "Morning Star").
Phosphorus is a component of
DNA and
RNA and essential element for all
living cells. The most important commercial use of phosphorus-based chemicals is the production of
fertilizers.
Phosphorus compounds are also widely used in
explosives,
nerve agents, friction
matches,
fireworks,
pesticides,
toothpaste, and
detergents.
Characteristics and allotropes
Elemental phosphorus as prepared artificially exists in several
allotropes, most commonly white, red and black.
White phosphorus (P
4) exists as individual molecules made up of only four atoms in a
tetrahedral arrangement, resulting in very high
ring strain and instability. It contains 6 single bonds.
White phosphorus is a yellow, waxy transparent solid. For this reason it is also called yellow phosphorus. It glows greenish in the dark (when exposed to oxygen), is highly
flammable and
pyrophoric (self-igniting) upon contact with air as well as
toxic (causing severe liver damage on ingestion). The odor of combustion of this form has a characteristic garlic smell, and samples are commonly coated with white "(di)phosphorus pentoxide", which actually consists of P
4O
10 tetrahedra with oxygen inserted between the phosphorus atoms and at their vertices. White phosphorus is insoluble in water but soluble in carbon disulfide.
The white allotrope can be produced using several different methods. In one process,
calcium phosphate, which is derived from phosphate rock, is heated in an electric or fuel-fired furnace in the presence of
carbon and
silica. Elemental phosphorus is then liberated as a vapor and can be collected under
phosphoric acid. This process is similar to the first synthesis of phosphorus from calcium phosphate in urine.
Red phosphorus may be formed by heating white phosphorus to 250°C (482°F) or by exposing white phosphorus to sunlight. Phosphorus after this treatment exists as an
amorphous network of atoms which reduces strain and gives greater stability, further heating results in the red phosphorus becoming crystaline. Red phosphorus does not catch fire in air at temperatures below 240°C whereas white phosphorus ignites at about 40°C.
In
1865 Hittorf discovered that when phosphorus was recrystalised from molten
lead a red/purple form is obtained. This purple form is sometimes known as "Hittorf's phosphorus", in addition a fibrous form with similar phosphorus cages. Below is shown a chain of phosphorus atoms which exhibits both the purple and fibrous forms.
One of the forms of red/black phosphorus is a
cubic solid.
[1]
Black phosphorus has an
orthorhombic structure (C
mca) and is the least reactive allotrope, it consists of many six membered rings which are interlinked. Each atom is bonded to three other atoms.
[2][3] A recent synthesis of black phosphorus using metal salts as catylsts has been reported.
[4]
Glow
The glow from phosphorus was the attraction of its discovery around
1669, but the mechanism for that glow was not fully described until
1974.
[5] It was known from early times that the glow would persist for a time in a stoppered jar but then cease.
Robert Boyle in the
1680s ascribed it to "debilitation" of the air. In fact it is oxygen being consumed. By the
18th century it was known that in pure oxygen phosphorus does not glow at all,
[6] there is only a range of
partial pressure where it does, too high or too low and the reaction stops. Heat can be applied to drive the reaction at higher pressures.
[7]
In
1974 the glow was explained by R. J. van Zee and A. U. Khan.
A reaction with oxygen takes place at the surface of the solid (or liquid) phosphorus, forming the short-lived molecules HPO and P
2O
2 that both emit visible light. The reaction is slow and only very little of the intermediates is required to produce the luminescence, hence the extended time the glow continues in a stoppered jar.
Although the term
phosphorescence is derived from phosphorus, the reaction is properly called luminescence (glowing by its own reaction, in this case
chemoluminescence), not phosphorescence (re-emitting light that previously fell on it).
Applications
Concentrated
phosphoric acids, which can consist of 70% to 75% P
2O5 are very important to
agriculture and farm production in the form of
fertilizers. Global demand for fertilizers led to large increases in
phosphate (PO
43-) production in the second half of the
20th century. Other uses;
★ Phosphates are utilized in the making of special
glasses that are used for
sodium lamps.
★ Bone-ash,
calcium phosphate, is used in the production of
fine china.
★
Sodium tripolyphosphate made from phosphoric acid is used in laundry detergents in several countries, and banned for this use in others.
★ Phosphoric acid made from elemental phosphorus is used in food applications such as soda beverages. The acid is also a starting point to make food grade phosphates
[8]. These include mono-calcium phosphate which is employed in
baking powder and
sodium tripolyphosphate and other sodium phosphates
. Among other uses these are used to improve the characteristics of processed meat and cheese. Others are used in toothpaste
.
Trisodium phosphate is used in cleaning agents to
soften water and for preventing pipe/boiler tube
corrosion.
★ Phosphorus is widely used to make
organophosphorus compounds, through the intermediates
phosphorus chlorides and the two phosphorus sulfides:
phosphorus pentasulfide, and
phosphorus sesquisulfide.
Organophosphorus compounds have many applications, including in
plasticizers,
flame retardants,
pesticides,
extraction agents, and water treatment.
★ Phosphorus is also an important component in
steel production, in the making of
phosphor bronze, and in many other related products.
★
White phosphorus is used in
military applications as
incendiary bombs, for
smoke-screening as smoke pots and
smoke bombs, and in
tracer ammunition.
★ Red phosphorus is essential for manufacturing matchbook strikers, flares,
, safety
matches, pharmaceutical grade and street
methamphetamine, and is used in
cap gun caps.
★ Phosphorus sesquisulfide is used in heads of strike-anywhere
matches
.
★ In trace amounts, phosphorus is used as a
dopant for
N-type semiconductors.
★
32P and
33P are used as radioactive tracers in biochemical laboratories (see
Isotopes).
Biological role
Phosphorus is a key element in all known forms of
life. Inorganic phosphorus in the form of the phosphate PO
43- plays a major role in biological molecules such as
DNA and
RNA where it forms part of the structural framework of these molecules. Living cells also utilize phosphate to transport cellular energy via
adenosine triphosphate (ATP). Nearly every cellular process that uses energy gets it in the form of ATP. ATP is also important for
phosphorylation, a key regulatory event in cells.
Phospholipids are the main structural components of all cellular membranes.
Calcium phosphate salts are used by
animals to stiffen their
bones.
An average person contains a little less than 1 kg of phosphorus, about three quarters of which is present in bones and teeth in the form of
apatite. A well-fed adult in the industrialized world consumes and excretes about 1-3 g of phosphorus per day in the form of phosphate. Phosphorus is an essential
macromineral, which is studied extensively in
soil conservation in order to understand plant uptake from soil systems.
In
ecological terms, phosphorus is often a limiting
nutrient in many environments, i.e. the availability of phosphorus governs the rate of growth of many organisms. In
ecosystems an excess of phosphorus can be problematic, especially in aquatic systems, see
eutrophication and
algal blooms.
History
Phosphorus (
Greek ''phosphoros'' was the ancient name for the planet
Venus, but in
Greek mythology,
Hesperus and
Eosphorus could be confused with Phosphorus) was discovered by German
alchemist Hennig Brand in
1669 through a preparation from
urine, which naturally contains considerable quantities of dissolved phosphates from normal metabolism. Working in
Hamburg, Brand attempted to
distill some
salts by evaporating urine, and in the process produced a white material that glowed in the dark and burned brilliantly. Since that time,
phosphorescence has been used to describe substances that shine in the dark without burning.
Phosphorus was first made commercially, for the match industry, in the
19th century, by distilling off phosphorus vapour from precipitated phosphates heated in a
retort. The precipitated phosphates were made from ground-up
bones that had been de-greased and treated with strong acids
. This process became obsolete in the late
1890s when the
electric arc furnace was adapted to reduce phosphate rock
.
Early
matches used white phosphorus in their composition, which was dangerous due to its toxicity. Murders, suicides and accidental
poisonings resulted from its use. (An apocryphal tale tells of a woman attempting to murder her husband with white phosphorus in his food, which was detected by the stew giving off luminous steam.)
In addition, exposure to the vapors gave match workers a
necrosis of the
bones of the jaw, the infamous "
phossy jaw." When a safe process for manufacturing red phosphorus was discovered, with its far lower flammability and toxicity, laws were enacted, under a
Berne Convention, requiring its adoption as a safer alternative for match manufacture.
The electric furnace method allowed production to increase to the point phosphorus could be used in weapons of war.
In
World War I it was used in
incendiaries,
smoke screens and
tracer bullets. A special incendiary bullet was developed to shoot at
hydrogen-filled
Zeppelins over
Britain (hydrogen of course being highly
inflammable if it can be ignited)
. During
World War II,
Molotov cocktails of
benzene and phosphorus were distributed in Britain to specially selected civilians within the British Resistance Operation, for defence; and phosphorus incendiary bombs were used in War on a large scale. Burning phosphorus is difficult to extinguish and if it splashes onto human skin it has horrific effects (see
precautions below). People covered in it have been known to commit suicide due to the torment.
Today phosphorus production is larger than ever, used as a precursor for various chemicals,
[9] in particular the herbicide
glyphosate sold under the brand name
Roundup. Production of white phosphorus takes place at large facilities and is transported heated in liquid form. Some major accidents have occurred during transportation, train derailments at
Brownston, Nebraska and
Miamisburg, Ohio lead to large fires. The worst accident in recent times though was an environmental one in
1968 when phosphorus spilt into the sea from a plant at
Placentia Bay, Newfoundland.
Occurrence
Due to its reactivity to air and many other
oxygen containing substances, phosphorus is not found free in nature but it is widely distributed in many different
minerals. Phosphate rock, which is partially made of
apatite (an impure tri-
calcium phosphate
mineral), is an important commercial source of this element. Large deposits of apatite are located in
China,
Russia,
Morocco,
Florida,
Idaho,
Tennessee,
Utah, and elsewhere.
Albright and Wilson in the United Kingdom and their
Niagara Falls plant, for instance, were using phosphate rock in the
1890s and
1900s from
Connetable, Tennessee and Florida; however, by 1950 they were using phosphate rock mainly from Tennessee and North Africa
. In the early 1990s Albright and Wilson's purified wet phosphoric acid business was being affected by phosphate rock sales by China and the entry of their long standing Moroccan phosphate suppliers into the purified wet
phosphoric acid
business
[10].
''See also .''
Precautions
Organic compounds of phosphorus form a wide class of materials, some of which are extremely toxic.
Fluorophosphate esters are among the most potent
neurotoxins known. A wide range of organophosphorus compounds are used for their toxicity to certain organisms as
pesticides (
herbicides,
insecticides,
fungicides etc) and
weaponized as
nerve agents. Most inorganic phosphates are relatively nontoxic and essential nutrients. For environmentally adverse effects of phosphates see
eutrophication and
algal blooms.
The allotrope, white phosphorus, should be kept under water at all times as it presents a significant
fire hazard due to its extreme reactivity to atmospheric oxygen, and it should only be manipulated with forceps since contact with
skin can cause severe burns. Chronic white phosphorus poisoning of unprotected workers leads to
necrosis of the jaw called "
phossy-jaw". Ingestion of white phosphorus may cause a medical condition known as "Smoking Stool Syndrome".
[11]
When the white form is exposed to sunlight or when it is heated in its own vapor to 250°C, it is transmuted to the red form, which does not phosphoresce in air. The red allotrope does not spontaneously ignite in air and is not as dangerous as the white form. Nevertheless, it should be handled with care because it does revert to white phosphorus in some temperature ranges and it also emits highly
toxic fumes that consist of phosphorus
oxides when it is heated.
Upon exposure to elemental phosphorus, in the past it was suggested to wash the affected area with 2%
copper sulfate solution to form harmless compounds that can be washed away. According to the recent ''US Navy's Treatment of Chemical Agent Casualties and Conventional Military Chemical Injuries: FM8-285: Part 2 Conventional Military Chemical Injuries'', "Cupric (copper(II)) sulfate has been used by U.S. personnel in the past and is still being used by some nations. However, copper sulfate is toxic and its use will be discontinued. Copper sulfate may produce kidney and cerebral toxicity as well as intravascular hemolysis."
[12]
The manual suggests instead "a bicarbonate solution to neutralize phosphoric acid, which will then allow removal of visible WP. Particles often can be located by their emission of smoke when air strikes them, or by their phosphorescence in the dark. In dark surroundings, fragments are seen as luminescent spots." Then, "Promptly debride the burn if the patient's condition will permit removal of bits of WP which might be absorbed later and possibly produce systemic poisoning. DO NOT apply oily-based ointments until it is certain that all WP has been removed. Following complete removal of the particles, treat the lesions as thermal burns." As white phosphorus readily mixes with oils, any oily substances or ointments are disrecommended until the area is thoroughly cleaned and all white phosphorus removed.
Further warnings of toxic effects and recommendations for treatment can be found in the ''Emergency War Surgery NATO Handbook: Part I: Types of Wounds and Injuries: Chapter III: Burn Injury: Chemical Burns And White Phosphorus injury''.
[13]
DEA List I status
Phosphorus can reduce elemental
iodine to
hydroiodic acid, which is a reagent effective for reducing
ephedrine or
pseudoephedrine to methamphetamine.
[14] For this reason, two allotropes of elemental phosphorus—red phosphorus and white phosphorus—were designated by the United States
Drug Enforcement Administration as
List I precursor chemicals under
21 CFR 1310.02 effective November 17, 2001.
[15] As a result, in the
United States, handlers of red phosphorus or white phosphorus are subject to stringent regulatory controls pursuant to the
Controlled Substances Act in order to reduce diversion of these substances for use in clandestine production of controlled substances.
[16][17]
As an exception to the octet rule
The simple
Lewis structure for the
trigonal bipyramidal PCl5 molecule contains five
covalent bonds, implying a
hypervalent molecule with ten valence electrons contrary to the
octet rule.
An alternate description of the bonding, however, respects the octet rule by using
3-center-4-electron (3c-4e) bonds. In this model the octet on the P atom corresponds to six electrons which form three
Lewis (2c-2e) bonds to the three
equatorial Cl atoms, plus the two electrons in the
3-centre Cl-P-Cl bonding molecular orbital for the two
axial Cl electrons. The two electrons in the corresponding
nonbonding molecular orbital are not included because this orbital is localized on the two Cl atoms and does not contribute to the
electron density on P.
Isotopes
Radioactive isotopes of phosphorus include:
★
32P; a
beta-emitter (1.71 MeV) with a
half-life of 14.3 days which is used routinely in life-science laboratories, primarily to produce
radiolabeled
DNA and
RNA probes, ''e.g.'' for use in
Northern blots or
Southern blots. Because the high energy beta particles produced penetrate
skin and
corneas, and because any
32P ingested, inhaled, or absorbed is readily incorporated into
bone and
nucleic acids,
OSHA requires that a
lab coat,
disposable gloves, and
safety glasses or
goggles be worn when working with
32P, and that working directly over an open container be avoided in order to protect the eyes.
Monitoring personal, clothing, and surface contamination is also required. In addition, due to the high energy of the beta particles,
shielding this radiation with the normally used dense materials (''e.g.''
lead), gives rise to secondary emission of
X-rays via a process known as
Bremsstrahlung, meaning
braking radiation. Therefore shielding must be accomplished with low density materials, ''e.g.''
Plexiglas,
Lucite,
plastic,
wood, or
water.
[18]
★
33P; a beta-emitter (0.25 MeV) with a half-life of 25.4 days. It is used in life-science laboratories in applications in which lower energy beta emissions are advantageous such as DNA sequencing.
Spelling
According to the Oxford English Dictionary the correct spelling of the element is ''phosphorus''. The word ''phosphorous'' is the adjectival form for the P
3+ valency: so, just as
sulfur forms sulfur''ous'' and sulfur''ic'' compounds, phosphor''us'' forms phosphor''ous'' and phosphor''ic'' compounds.
Compounds
★
Ammonium phosphate ((NH
4)
3PO
4)
★
Calcium phosphate (Ca
3(PO
4)
2)
★
Calcium dihydrogen phosphate (Ca(H
2PO
4)
2)
★
Calcium phosphide (Ca
3P
2)
★
Iron(III) phosphate (FePO
4)
★
Iron(II) phosphate (Fe
3(PO
4)
2)
★
Gallium(III) phosphide (GaP)
★
Hypophosphorous acid (H
3PO
2)
★
Lawesson's reagent
★
Parathion
★
Phosphine (Phosphorus Trihydride PH
3)
★
Phosphoric acid (H
3PO
4)
★
Phosphorus pentabromide (PBr
5)
★
Phosphorus pentasulfide (P
2S
5)
★
Phosphorus pentoxide (P
4O
10)
★
Phosphorus sesquisulfide (P
4S
3)
★
Phosphorus tribromide (PBr
3)
★
Phosphorus trichloride (PCl
3)
★
Phosphorus triiodide (PI
3)
★
Sarin
★
Soman
★
Tabun
★
Triphenyl phosphine
★
Monopotassium phosphate (KH
2PO
4)
★
Trisodium phosphate (Na
3PO
4)
★
VX nerve gas
''See also ''
References
★
Los Alamos National Laboratory – Phosphorus
1. R. Ahuja, ''Physica Status Solidi, Sectio B: Basic Research'', 2003, '235', 282-287
2. A. Brown, S. Runquist, ''Acta Crystallogr.'', '19' (1965) 684
3. Cartz, L.;Srinivasa, S.R.;Riedner, R.J.;Jorgensen, J.D.;Worlton, T.G., ''Journal of Chemical Physics'', 1979, '71', 1718-1721
4. Stefan Lange, Peer Schmidt, and Tom Nilges, ''Inorganic Chemistry'', 2007, '46', 4028
5. Emsley, John (2000). ''The Shocking History of Phosphorus''. London: Macmillan. ISBN 0-330-39005-8
6. Nobel Prize in Chemistry 1956 - Presentation Speech, by Professor A. Ölander (committee member)
7. Phosphorus Topics page, at Lateral Science
8. Threlfall, R.E., (1951). ''100 years of Phosphorus Making: 1851 - 1951''. Oldbury: Albright and Wilson Ltd
9. The American Phosphorus Industry, Aall C. H., , , Industrial & Engineering Chemistry, 1952
10. Podger, Hugh, (2002). ''Albright & Wilson: The Last 50 Years''. Studley: Brewin Books. ISBN 1-85858-223-7
11. emedicine.com CBRNE - Incendiary Agents, White Phosphorus (Smoking Stool Syndrome)
12. US Navy's Treatment of Chemical Agent Casualties and Conventional Military Chemical Injuries: FM8-285: Part 2 Conventional Military Chemical Injuries
13. Emergency War Surgery NATO Handbook: Part I: Types of Wounds and Injuries: Chapter III: Burn Injury: Chemical Burns And White Phosphorus injury.
14. Skinner (1990). ''Methamphetamine Synthesis Via Hydriodic Acid/Red Phosphorus Reduction of Ephedrine''. Forensic Sci. Int'l, 48, 123-34.
15. 66 FR 52670—52675. 17 October 2001.
16. 21 CFR 1309
17. 21 USC, Chapter 13 (Controlled Substances Act)
18. http://www.oseh.umich.edu/TrainP32.pdf
External links
★
WebElements.com – Phosphorus
★
Entrez PubMed - Acute Yellow Phosphorus Poisoning
★
eMedicine.com - Article on White Phophorus as used as weapon