Bromine (from Gr. βρωμος (brómos), meaning "stench"; pronounced ), is a chemical element in the periodic table that has the symbol Br and atomic number 35. A halogen element, bromine is a red volatile liquid at standard room temperature which has a reactivity between chlorine and iodine. This element is corrosive to human tissue in a liquid state and its vapors irritate eyes and throat. Bromine vapors are very toxic upon inhalation.
Notable characteristics
Bromine is the only liquid
nonmetallic element at room temperature and one of five elements on the period table that are liquid at or close to room temperature. The pure chemical element has the physical form of a
diatomic molecule, Br
2. It is a heavy, mobile, reddish-brown liquid, that evaporates easily at
standard temperature and pressures in a red vapor (its color resembles
nitrogen dioxide) that has a strong disagreeable odor resembling that of
chlorine. A
halogen, bromine resembles chlorine chemically but is less active. It is more active than
iodine, however. Bromine is slightly
soluble in
water, and highly soluble in
carbon disulfide,
aliphatic alcohols (such as
methanol), and
acetic acid. It
bonds easily with many elements and has a strong
bleaching action.
Bromine is highly reactive and is a powerful
oxidizing agent in the presence of water. It reacts vigorously with
amines,
alkenes and
phenols as well as aliphatic and
aromatic hydrocarbons,
ketones and
acids (these are brominated by either
addition or
substitution reactions). With many of the metals and elements,
anhydrous bromine is less reactive than wet bromine; however, dry bromine reacts vigorously with
aluminium,
titanium,
mercury as well as
alkaline earth metals and
alkaline metals.
Applications
Elemental bromine is used to manufacture a wide variety of bromine compounds used in
industry and
agriculture. Traditionally the largest use of bromine was in the production of
1,2-dibromoethane which in turn was used as a
gasoline anti-
knock agent for
leaded gasolines before they were largely phased out due to environmental considerations.
Bromine is also used in the manufacture of fumigants, flameproofing agents, water purification compounds, dyes, medicines, sanitizers, inorganic bromides for photography, etc. It is also used to form intermediates in organic synthesis, where it is preferred to iodine due to its much lower cost.
Bromine is used to make brominated vegetable oil, which is used as an emulsifier in many citrus-flavored soft drinks.
Aqueous bromine is orange and can be used in tests for alkenes and phenols.
History
Bromine was discovered by
Antoine Balard at the
salt marshes of
Montpellier in
1826 but was not produced in quantity until
1860. The French chemist and physicist
Joseph-Louis Gay-Lussac suggested the name bromine due to the characteristic smell of the vapors.
Occurrence
Bromine occurs in nature as
bromide salts in very diffuse amounts in
crustal rock. Due to
leaching, bromide salts have accumulated in sea water (85
ppm), and may be economically recovered from brine wells and the
Dead Sea (up to 5000 ppm).
Approximately 500 million kilograms ($350 million USD) of bromine are produced per year (2001) worldwide with the United States and Israel being the primary producers. The largest bromine reserve in the United States is located in Columbia and Union County, Arkansas.
See also Halide minerals.
Precautions
Elemental bromine is a strong
irritant and, in concentrated form, will produce painful
blisters on exposed
skin and especially
mucous membranes. Even low concentrations of bromine vapor (from 10 ppm) can affect breathing, and inhalation of significant amounts of bromine can seriously damage the
respiratory system.
Accordingly, one should always wear safety goggles and ensure adequate ventilation when handling bromine.
Recycling
Because of its high cost, bromine is usually
recycled rather than disposed of into the
environment.
Compounds
Aluminium bromide (AlBr
3),
ammonium bromide (NH
4Br),
bromine monofluoride (BrF),
bromine pentafluoride (BrF
5),
bromine trifluoride (BrF
3),
tetrabromomethane (CBr
4),
hydrobromic acid (HBr),
iron(III) bromide (FeBr
3),
lithium bromide (LiBr),
phosphorus pentabromide (PBr
5),
phosphorus tribromide (PBr
3),
potassium bromide (KBr),
potassium bromate (KBrO
3),
silver bromide (AgBr),
sodium bromide (NaBr),
sodium bromate (NaBrO
3).
See also Bromine compounds.
References
External links
Chemical elements | Halogens
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