|
General |
|
|---|---|
| Name | Vinyl chloride, chloroethene |
| Chemical formula | CH2=CHCl |
| Appearance | Colorless gas |
|
Physical |
|
| Formula weight | 62.5 u |
| Melting point | 119 K (−154 °C) |
| Boiling point | 259 K (−13 °C) |
| Density | 0.91g/cm³ (liquid) |
| Solubility | insoluble in water |
|
Thermochemistry |
|
| ΔfH0gas | -28.45 kJ/mol |
| ΔfH0liquid | ? kJ/mol |
| ΔfH0solid | ? kJ/mol |
| S0gas, 1 bar | ? J/(mol·K) |
| S0liquid, 1 bar | ? J/(mol·K)] |
| S0solid | ? J/(mol·K) |
|
Safety | |
| Ingestion | May cause nausea, vomiting, severe stomach pain. |
| Inhalation | Can cause dizziness, drowsiness, confusion, unconsciousness, and respiratory failure. Long-term effects such as asthma may result. |
| Skin | Frostbite and irritation can result from skin contact with the refrigerated liquid. |
| Eyes | Possible irritant. |
| More info | Hazardous Chemical Database |
| SI units were used where possible. Unless otherwise stated, standard conditions were used. | |
Vinyl chloride, also known as chloroethene in IUPAC nomenclature, is an important industrial chemical chiefly used to produce its polymer, polyvinyl chloride (PVC). At room temperature, it is a toxic, colorless gas with a sweet odor.
In 1912, Fritz Klatte, a German chemist working for Griesheim-Elektron, patented a means to produce vinyl chloride from acetylene and hydrogen chloride using mercuric chloride as a catalyst. While this method was widely used during the 1930's and 1940's, it has since been superseded by more economical processes.
Typically, this reaction is conducted in a bath of boiling ethylene dichloride. When then heated to 500 °C at 15–30 atm (1.5 to 3 MPa) pressure, the ethylene dichloride decomposes to produce vinyl chloride and hydrogen chloride.
In industrial practice, the hydrogen chloride produced in this step is mixed with oxygen and then reacted with additional ethylene on a copper(II) chloride catalyst to produce even more ethylene dichloride via the reaction
The hydrogen chloride consumed in this step exactly balances that produced in the second step, and the resulting balanced process neither requires hydrogen chloride as an input nor produces it as a waste. Due to the economical advantages of this process, most vinyl chloride has been produced via this technique since the late 1950s.
Vinyl chloride's toxicity limits its use in consumer goods, though it has been historically (until 1974) utilized as an aerosol spray propellant; carcinogenic potential has long been established and the prospective legal liability is comparable to that of asbestos (implicated in the causality of mesothelioma). Accumulation of vinyl chloride vapor in hair salons readily exceeded the NOAEL (NO Adverse Effect Level) exposure guidelines, its high index of mutagenicity possibly responsible for an increase of an order of magnitude of the occurrence of cancer in the most severely affected occupations.
It was briefly used as an inhalational anaesthetic, in a similar vein to ethyl chloride, though its toxicity forced this practice to be abandoned.
In laboratory animals, exposure to vinyl chloride during pregnancy has produced miscarriages and birth defects. Its effect on human reproduction is unknown.
Long-term exposure to vinyl chloride can cause chronic skin irritations and has also been linked to a painful inflammation of the extremities called Raynaud's syndrome. Vinyl chloride is considered to be a carcinogen and has in particular been linked to certain cancers of the liver—chiefly, hepatocellular carcinoma.
فينيل كلوريد | Vinylchlorid | Chlorure de vinyle | Cloruro di vinile | Vinilhlorīds | Vinylchloride | クロロエチレン | Vinylklorid
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"Vinyl chloride".
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