Hydrogen (, from : "water" and : "forming") is a chemical element in the periodic table that has the symbol H and atomic number 1. At standard temperature and pressure it is a colorless, odorless, nonmetallic, univalent, tasteless, highly flammable diatomic gas (H2). With an atomic mass of just 1.00794 g/mol, hydrogen is the lightest element of the universe. It is also the most abundant, constituting roughly 75% of all the universe's elemental matter.Hydrogen in the Universe, NASA Website. URL accessed on 2 June 2006. It is present in water, all organic compounds, and in all living organisms. Hydrogen is able to react chemically with most other elements. Stars in their main sequence are overwhelmingly composed of hydrogen in its plasma state. The element is currently used primarily in fossil fuel upgrading. Other uses include as a lifting gas, as an alternative fuel (see Hydrogen economy), and more recently as a power source in fuel cells.
Hydrogen is the most abundant element in the universe, making up 75% of normal matter by mass and over 90% by number of atoms. This element is found in great abundance in stars and gas giant planets. However, it is very rare in the Earth's atmosphere (1 ppm by volume). Its scarcity is due to the fact that hydrogen is the lightest gas, allowing it to escape Earth's gravity. When compounds are included, though, hydrogen is the tenth most abundant element on Earth. The most common source for this element on Earth is water, which is composed two parts hydrogen to one part oxygen (H2O). Other sources include most forms of organic matter including coal, natural gas, and other fossil fuels. Methane (CH4) is an increasingly important source of hydrogen.
Throughout the universe, hydrogen is mostly found in the plasma state whose properties are quite different from molecular hydrogen. As a plasma, hydrogen's electron and proton are not bound together, resulting in very high electrical conductivity. The charged particles are highly influenced by magnetic and electric fields. For example, in the solar wind they interact with the Earth's magnetosphere giving rise to Birkeland currents and the aurora.
Hydrogen is the only element that has different names for its isotopes. (During the early study of radioactivity, various heavy radioactive isotopes were given names, but such names are no longer used, although one element, radon, has a name that originally applied to only one of its isotopes.) The symbols D and T (instead of 2H and 3H) are sometimes used for deuterium and tritium, although IUPAC states that while this use is common it is not "preferred." (The symbol P is already in use for phosphorus and is not available for protium.)
At standard temperature and pressure, hydrogen exists as the diatomic gas, H2, with a boiling point of 20.27 K, and a melting point of 14.02 K. Under extreme pressures, such as those at the center of gas giants, the molecules lose their identity and the hydrogen becomes a metal (metallic hydrogen). Under the extremely low pressure in space — virtually a vacuum — the element tends to exist as individual atoms, simply because it is statistically unlikely for them to combine. However, clouds of H2 and possibly single hydrogen atoms are said to form in H I and H II regions and are associated with star formation. Hydrogen plays a vital role in powering stars through the proton–proton and carbon–nitrogen cycle. These are nuclear fusion processes, which release huge amounts of energy in stars and other hot celestial bodies as hydrogen atoms combine into helium atoms.
At high temperatures, hydrogen gas can exist as a mixture of atoms, protons, and negatively charged hydride ions. This mixture has a high emissivity and absorptivity in the visible light range, and such emanations give rise to the light from the sun and other stars.
The ground state energy level of the electron in a hydrogen atom is 13.6 eV, which is equivalent to an ultraviolet photon of roughly 92 nm.
With the Bohr Model the energy levels of hydrogen can be calculated fairly accurately. This is done by modeling the electron as revolving around the proton, much like the earth revolving around the sun, except that the sun holds earth in orbit with the force of gravity, but the proton holds the electron in orbit with the force of electromagnetism. Another difference between the Earth-Sun system and the electron-proton system is that, in this model, due to quantum mechanics the electron is allowed to only to be at specific distances from the proton. Today, the hydrogen atom is most accurately described by the use of a pure quantum mechanical model. This model uses Schrodinger's wave equation to calculate the probability density of the electron around the nucleus in a H-atom. Since the electron is treated not as a particle but as a matter wave, its dual properties agree very well with supposedly paradoxical results obtained by experiments which are unexplainable under Bohr Model. The wave features of electron are again well explained by de Broglie's equation hν = mV. This equation relates ν (frequency of the electron matter wave) to mV (the momentum of the material electron). In this way, electrons are treated at different times as either matter and as a wave, depending on the needs of the model. Modeling the hydrogen atom in this fashion yields the correct energy levels and spectrum. As an added feature, modeling the system fully using the reduced mass of nucleus and electron (as one would do in the two-body problem in celestial mechanics) yields an even better formula for the hydrogen spectra, and also the correct spectral shifts for the isotopes deuterium and tritium, which are induced by changes only in this parameter.
The electronic ground state energy level is split into hyperfine structure levels because of magnetic effects due to the quantum mechanical spin of the electron and proton. The energy of the atom when the proton and electron spins are aligned is 5.9 x 10-6 eV higher than when they are not aligned. The transition from the upper to lower levels can occur through emission of a photon through a magnetic dipole transition. A photon of this energy has a frequency of 1420.4 MHz and a wavelength of 21.1 cm. Astronomers observe this radiation with radio telescopes in order to map the distribution of hydrogen in the Galaxy.
The uncatalized interconversion between para and ortho H2 is slow enough that rapidly condensed H2 contains large quantities of the high-energy ortho form. The ortho/para ratio is important in the preparation and storage of liquid H2, since the ortho-para conversion produces more heat than the heat of its evaporation, which can cause much hydrogen to be lost by evaporation in this way for several days after liquefying. Therefore, catalysts for the ortho-para interconversion process (such as iron filings) are used during hydrogen cooling. The two forms have also slightly different physical properties. For example, the melting and boiling points of parahydrogen are about 0.1 K lower than of the "normal" form.
Elemental hydrogen can exist in over 50 different forms, arising from either ionized species such H+, H−, H2+…H1- , or from the three isotopes: H-1, H-2(D), H-3(T), and their corresponding ions which also include H with different nuclear spin isomers.
Furthermore, the corresponding simplicity of the hydrogen molecule and the corresponding cation H2+ allowed fuller understanding of the nature of the chemical bond, which followed shortly after the quantum mechanical treatment of the hydrogen atom had been developed in the mid-1920's.
Interestingly, one of the first quantum effects to be explicitly noticed (but not understood at the time) was Maxwell's observation, half a century before full quantum mechanical theory arrived, that the specific heat capacity of H2 unaccountably resembles that of a monatomic gas below room temperature. According to quantum theory, this behavior arises from the spacing of the (quantized) rotational energy levels, which are particularly wide-spaced in H2 due to its low mass. These widely spaced levels inhibit equal partition of heat energy into rotational motion in hydrogen at low temperatures. Diatomic gasses composed of heavier atoms do not have such widely spaced levels and do not exhibit the same effect.
Al produces H2 upon treatment with acids but also with base:
The electrolysis of water is a simple but expensive method of producing hydrogen. Typically the cathode electrode is made from platinum.
Additional hydrogen from steam reforming can be recovered from the carbon monoxide through the Water gas shift reaction:
Other important methods for H2 production include partial oxidation of hydrocarbons:
and water electrolysis.Note: hydrogen is sometimes produced and consumed in the same industrial process, without being separated. In the Haber process for the production of ammonia and the world's fifth most produced industrial compound, hydrogen is generated in situ from natural gas.
Nature employs various minor but mechanistically interesting routes to H2. Nitrogenase produces approximately one equivalent of H2 for each equivalent of N2 reduced to ammonia. Some phosphatases reduced phosphite to H2.
Hydrogen gas has the widest % range ignition mix with air of any known flammable agent, and will burn at concentrations as low as 4% H2 in air. When mixed with oxygen across a wide range of proportions, hydrogen explodes upon ignition. Uniquely, hydrogen-oxygen flames are nearly invisible to the naked eye, as illustrated by the faintness of flame from the main Space Shuttle engines (as opposed to the easily visible flames from the shuttle boosters). Thus it is difficult to visually detect if a hydrogen leak is burning and for similar reasons, it is easy to walk into a pure hydrogen fire inadvertently. (It should be noted that the flames from the burning Hindenburg, seen at right, are from the covering skin, which contained carbon and pyrophoric aluminium powder). Another characteristic of hydrogen fires, is that they tend to rapidly lift off the ground, causing less damage than hydrocarbon fires. Two-thirds of the Hindenburg passengers survived, partly for this reason.
The enthalpy of combustion for hydrogen is -286 kJ/mol; it combusts according to the following balanced equation.
H2 reacts directly with other oxidizing elements. A violent reaction can occur with chlorine and fluorine, forming the corresponding hydrogen halides, HCl and HF.
See also Hydrogen compounds.
Hydrogen forms a vast array of compounds with carbon. Because of their association with living things, these compounds are called organic compounds, and their study is called organic chemistry. (By some definitions "organic" compounds are only required to contain carbon; however most of them also contain hydrogen, and it is addition of hydrogen which gives them their particular chemical characteristics). The chemistry of hydrogen and carbon in combination is the basis for biochemistry.
Although exotic on earth, one of the most common ions in the universe is the H3+ ion.
H2 reacts with oxygen to form water, H2O. Considerable energy is released in this process. At room temperature no reaction occurs between H2 and O2 in the absence of a catalyst.
Hydrogen is not a pre-existing source of energy like fossil fuels, but a carrier, much like a battery. There are no "hydrogen wells" or "hydrogen mines" on Earth, so H2 cannot be considered a primary energy source such as sunlight or uranium. Since H2 is so light, any amount present on earth will float up into the atmosphere and out into space. H2 can however be burned in internal combustion engines, an approach advocated by BMW's experimental hydrogen car. There are several methods of storing hydrogen for transport applications, the most commonly-used being gaseous storage in gas cylinders similar to those used for the storage of any pressurised gas. Alternatives include storage as metal or chemical hydrides, cryogenic storage of liquid hydrogen (as in BMW's hydrogen internal combustion engine car) and research points to nanomaterials that will be able to store hydrogen more efficiently than any of the methods above.
Hydrogen fuel cells are being investigated as mobile power sources with lower emissions than hydrogen-burning internal combustion engines. The low emissions of hydrogen in internal combustion engines and fuel cells are currently offset by the pollution created by hydrogen production. This may change if the substantial amounts of electricity required for water electrolysis can be generated primarily from low pollution sources such as solar energy or wind. Research is being conducted on H2 as a replacement for fossil fuels. It could become the link between a range of energy sources, carriers and storage. H2 can be converted to and from electricity (solving the electricity storage and transport issues), from biofuels, and from and into natural gas and diesel fuel. All of this can theoretically be achieved with zero emissions of CO2 and toxic pollutants. ''
The extraction of H2 from water or hydrocarbons requires energy; these are endothermic processes. H2 cannot be produced from water or hydrocarbons without the expenditure of energy, and this problem is the central quandry confronting hydrogen production. The one possibly sustainable method for production of H2 entails photochemical water "splitting," where the input energy comes from our sun. This approach avoids production of greenhouse-gases, which are associated with fossil fuels. Certain species of green algae utilize this method under very special conditions. A second possible hydrogen production route is via the sulfur-iodine cycle using a heat source such as nuclear energy, but there are arguments about whether or not nuclear energy should be considered sustainable energy. Stripping H2 from biomass or even purified organic compounds such as glucose or sorbitol also generates CO2, but this process, like woodburning, is not a net greenhouse producer because the CO2 is derived from the atmosphere to begin with.
Hydrogen | Chemical elements | Nonmetals
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