1 / 25

Ch 15. Group 15

Ch 15. Group 15. N 2 / O 2 separation. BP MW main uses N 2 77K 28 inert gas/coolant O 2 90K 32 fuel/medial. N 2 B(N ≡N) = 946 KJ/mol (kinetically inert) N 2 fixation: N 2 + 3 H 2  2 NH 3 Haber process, industrial source of all N compounds.

honey
Télécharger la présentation

Ch 15. Group 15

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Ch 15. Group 15

  2. N2 / O2 separation BP MW main uses N2 77K 28 inert gas/coolant O2 90K 32 fuel/medial

  3. N2 B(N≡N) = 946 KJ/mol (kinetically inert) N2 fixation: N2 + 3 H2 2 NH3 Haber process, industrial source of all N compounds 400C, 200 atm, Fe cat Elemental Forms

  4. bacteria cat = nitrogenase N2 chemistry 6 Li + N2 2 Li3N [Ru(NH3)5(H2O)]2+ (aq)  Cat process to N cmpds? N2 NH4+ enzyme w/ Fe4S4 cage + MoFe7S8 cofactors (ferrodoxins)

  5. P allotropes black P white P Molecular, Td, rapidly oxidized to phosphate in air red P many polymorphs, air stable hexagonal puckered sheets prep from high P or Bi flux, air stable

  6. History From “The 13th Element: The Sordid Tale of Murder, Fire, and Phosphorus” by John Emsley

  7. Elemental forms As, Sb, Bi  incr. metallic character Single vs. multiple bonds D(E-E) D(E=E) D(E≡E) N 163 409 946 NN P 201 -P-P- O 142 447 O=O S 264 431 -S-S- generally in the p-block, -bonds are uncommon except with period 2 elements

  8. Halides almost all group 15 halides are air sensitive: PCl3 + ½O2 O = PCl3 oxidation PCl3 + 4H2O  H3PO4 + 3HCl + H2 oxidation + hydrolysis all pentahalides hydrolyze rapidly and generate HX N forms endoergic halides NF3 to “NI3” show decreasing stability NF4+ is isostructural to ammonium and is the only stable N(V) halide P to Bi MX3 MX5 MX6all are known for X = F, most for Cl, some for Br,I C3v D5h Oh

  9. Halides PF5 to BiF5 show increasing Lewis acidity ex : PF5 + F PF6ΔH = - 340kJ/mol SbF5 + F SbF6- 500kJ/mol SbF5 is an oligomeric, viscous, colorless liquid Heavier congeners tend to higher CN (SbF5)4

  10. Group 15 Frost diagrams

  11. Group 15 redox trends • NO3 and Bi(V) are strong oxidants • NO3should be the strongest oxidant from general periodic trend down a group (higher χ and higher IE result in less stable high oxidation state). But there is no regular trend. • Bi(III) is unusually stable due to inert pair effect • PO43 is unusually stable due to strong P=O bonding • Low pH increases oxidation strength of nitrogen oxoanions and also often increases rate (via protonation of N-O bonds) • most reactions are slow and many species are kinetically stable • ex: NO2 , N2O, NO, NO2  N2O4

  12. N oxides N2O4 is isoelectronic w C2O42 (oxalate). Since C has lower χthan N, oxalate has a stronger M-M bond and there is no appreciable equ w/ monomer

  13. N oxides

  14. N oxides 4 HNO3 (aq)  4 NO2 (aq) + O2 (g) + 2 H2O (l) More rapid for conc. HNO3 due to presence of undissociated acid Easier to break N-OH vs N=O N2O (g) + 2 H+ (aq) + 2 e- N2 (g) + H2O (l) E = + 1.77 V at pH = 0, but it’s a poor oxidant due to slow reaction kinetics NO+ (solv) + e- NO (g) E ~ + 1.1 V, nitrosyl cation is a facile oxidant with rapid kinetics

  15. Ox state -3 -1 -2 Ammonia hydroxylamine hydrazine pKb 4.8 8.2 7.9 Low oxidation state N also N3- (azide) which is isoelectronic with CO2 and N2O NaN3  Na (m) + 3/2N2 (g)

  16. Pourbaix diagrams

  17. P oxides

  18. Phosphates

  19. P oxides mostly strong reducing agents (except for P(V)), especially in base Generally labile reactions Ox state +1 H2PO2 (hypophosphite) H3PO2 is monoprotic +3 HPO32 (phosphite) H3PO3 is diprotic +5 PO43 (phosphate) Td H3PO4 is triprotic Anhydride acid P4O6 H3PO3 P4O10 H3PO4 H2O

  20. Sb2O4

  21. PS compounds Matches: P4S3 + KClO3 + filler/glue/water = strike anywhere KClO3 (head) and red P (stripe) = safety P4S3

  22. Note that –P=N- is isoelectronic with –Si=O- (siloxanes) nPCl3 + nNH4Cl  (Cl2PN)n + 4n HCl n = 3 or 4 dichlorophosphazene trimer or tetramer oligomer  290 C + Lewis acid initiator (Cl2PN)n polydichlorophosphazene, elastomeric at RT  2n NaOR (can be OR , NR2) [(RO)2PN]n 130 C PN compounds These hydrolyze in air to form phosphate and HCl P4(NR)6 planar but not aromatic An air stable poly-phosphazene

  23. Arsine ligand 4 As + 6 CH3I → 3 (CH3)2AsI + AsI3 (CH3)2AsI + Na → Na+(CH3)2As- + NaI Na+(CH3)2As- → o-C6H4(As(CH3)2)2 soft LB, bidentate o-C6H4Cl2 / THF [PdCl6]2-

  24. Organoarsine chemistry As(CH3)3 + CH3Br → As(CH3)4+Br- oxidative addition As(III) -> As(V) For As(Ph)3 , this does not work Ph3As=O + PhMgBr → Ph4As+Br- + MgO acid-base exchange (Td) LiPh AsPh5 + LiBr

  25. As-As bonding 2As(CH3)2Br + Zn → (CH3)2As-As(CH3)2 + ZnBr2 As5(CH3)5

More Related