FLUORINE

flooˈərēn, –rĭn, gaseous chemical element; symbol F; at. no. 9; at. wt. 18.998403; m.p. −219.6 degrees Celsius; b.p. −188.14 degrees Celsius; density 1.696 grams per liter at STP; valence −1. Fluorine is a yellowish, poisonous, highly corrosive gas. It is the most chemically active nonmetallic element and is the most electronegative of all the elements. Fluorine is a member of group VIIa of the periodic table. It readily displaces the other halogens from their salts. It combines spontaneously with most other elements—exceptions are chlorine, nitrogen, oxygen, and the so-called inert gases (helium, neon, argon, krypton, xenon, and radon), but it even combines with most of these when heated. Fluorine reacts with most inorganic and organic compounds. With hydrogen it forms hydrogen fluoride gas, whose water solution is called hydrofluoric acid. Because of its extreme reactivity, fluorine does not occur uncombined in nature. Fluorine gas is produced commercially by electrolysis of a solution of hydrogen fluoride containing potassium hydrogen fluoride. The mineral fluorite, or fluorspar (calcium fluoride), is the chief commercial source. Cryolite and apatite are other important natural compounds. Although there was no commercial production of fluorine before World War II, the use of the gas in a process for refining uranium ores prompted its manufacture. The importance of fluorine lies largely in its compounds. Fluorite is used as a flux in refining iron; cryolite serves as the electrolyte in the production of aluminum. Compounds of fluorine are also used in the ceramic and glass industries; hydrofluoric acid is used to etch glass and in the manufacture of light bulbs. The addition of one part per million of soluble fluorides to public water supplies has reduced the incidence of tooth decay in many communities; however, in larger amounts fluorine and fluoride compounds are poisonous. Sodium fluoride is employed as an insecticide. Halocarbons (compounds of carbon, fluorine, chlorine, and hydrogen) are used extensively in refrigeration and air-conditioning systems. They were widely used as aerosol propellants; but, since they cause depletion of the ozone layer, government restrictions have nearly abolished such use. The linking of fluorine and carbon has created some of the most chemically inert compounds known. Fluorocarbons such as Teflon have found extensive use as lubricants and bearing materials because of their low friction. Because of their inertness and heat resistance they may be used, for example, as a coating on cooking ware. Because they are not wetted by water or oils, they are sometimes used to add antisoil properties to textiles. The use of fluorite as a flux was described in 1529 by Georgius Agricola. Many early chemists experimented with hydrogen fluoride gas, among them Scheele, Davy, Lavoisier, and Gay-Lussac. Fluorine gas was first prepared in 1886 by Henri Moissan after nearly three quarters of a century of effort.

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The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright© 2004, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Lernout & Hauspie Speech Products N.V. All rights reserved.

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Questia Books and Articles on: Fluorine
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books on: Fluorine  - 436 results

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...Institute of Archaeology Chapter 6: FLUORINE, URANIUM, AND NITROGEN DATING OF BONE 111...Neave Parker XB The apparatus used in determining the fluorine content of the Piltdown bones Photograph by courtesy of...
...XVIII. Oakley. Fluorine and the Age of Early Man 357...355 Fluorine is absorbed by tooth and bone...World War II to study the effect of fluorine in preventing the decay of childrens...
...10-9 Binary Fluorine Compounds: Data for Model Construction...the corners of a tetrahedron. 9. Fluorine: This model, practically the same...use the models of nitrogen, oxygen, and fluorine to point out that although after all...
...The Halogens 193 Fluorine 195 Chlorine 198...oxidized, then converted to a halogen, such as chlorine or fluorine Group 7 VIIA , and the metal is finally extracted by electrolysis...
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journal articles on: Fluorine  - 56 results

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...the LOC. Determination of the vulnerable zone for fluorine Fluorine is a pale yellow gas at standard pressure and has a LOC of 0.039 gm/|m.sup.3~ (4). When gaseous fluorine is released into the atmosphere it will react with...
...forest-grass regions (Fang 2002). The areas of fluorine-related endemic ailments, which occur...tends to match that of regions with high-fluorine rocks, aquifers, springs, and coals...in limestone regions. In total, high fluorine, low iodine, low selenium, and low molybdenum...
...several studies have reported total organic fluorine concentrations in human blood from presumably...al. (1976) reported mean total organic fluorine concentrations of 30 (n = 65), 25 (n...Taves et al. 1976) determined organic fluorine was bound to albumin and tentatively...
...feature chains of carbon atoms bonded to fluorine atoms. In an Environmental Science...ongoing declines in levels of related fluorine-based compounds. Mabury notes that change...spectrometry systems capable of such analysis on fluorine--incorporating innovations such as electrospray...
...metabolic degradation. The strength of carbon-fluorine bonds contributes to the extreme stability...improved quantitation. Organically bound fluorine was reported in human blood in 1968...fluorochemical analytes, total organic fluorine was used to measure organic fluorine...
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magazine articles on: Fluorine  - 22 results

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...fires; moreover, there should not be much fluorine in the mix. If, on the other hand, the...roughly equal amounts of chlorine and fluorine in the stratosphere. Contrary, to Rays...roughly equal amounts of chlorine and fluorine in the upper stratosphere. NASA did not...
...scientists had established a link between fluorine and mottled teeth, and attention turned to whether fluorine protected against tooth decay. Enter...children exposed to minuscule amounts of fluorine in water developed few or no cavities...
...transplantation, surgery on the retina of the eye, and cancer chemotherapy and radiotherapy. PFCs are highly stable compounds of fluorine and carbon, chemical cousins of the Teflon on nonstick cookware. They have a combination of characteristics--including inertness...
...pounds of uranium to freedom (plus 6,844 pounds of affiliated fluorine). Some few unlucky escapees were hunted and recaptured on the...off in waves of flustered evaporation. (Imagine eight tons of fluorine-winged uranium atoms flocking to a dark mighty cloud.) In...
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newspaper articles on: Fluorine  - 23 results

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...after breathing in the toxic chemical fluorine. A spokesman for the Heath and Safety...It was a laser machine which uses fluorine. We think the machine may have had a...service the machine are on their way. Fluorine is a highly toxic and corrosive gas...
...have created a chemical which contains fluorine. It could, in theory, be given to the...Chemistry explained: "There is very little fluorine present naturally in the body so the...design a version of a compound containing fluorine which enables measurements to be taken...
...of Newcastle. "This is a by-product of the fertiliser industry used in the adding of fluoride to the water as the element fluorine does not exist on its own, but attaches to other chemicals. "Hexafluorosilicic acid is one of the most toxic substances known...
...FLUORIDE? The fluoride ion comes from the element fluorine. Fluorine, the 17th most abundant element in the Earths crust...gas and never occurs in its free state in nature. Fluorine exists only in combination with other elements as...
...visible, was written: sodium lithiumboron silicate hydroxide with fluorine. Sadly, unlike green kryptonite, the Serbian discovery - unearthed...robs Superman of his powers). But would the minor addition of fluorine do the trick? Assuming one really wanted to bump Superman off...
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encyclopedia articles on: Fluorine  - 30 results

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FLUORINE floo ren, rin, gaseous chemical element; symbol F...Celsius; density 1.696 grams per liter at STP; valence 1. Fluorine is a yellowish, poisonous, highly corrosive gas. It is...Group 17 (the halogens ) of the periodic table . Fluorine readily displaces the other halogens from their salts...
PERIODIC TABLE OF THE ELEMENTS: FLUORINE Periodic Table of the Elements: Fluorine Atomic Number: 9 Atomic Symbol: F Fluorine Atomic Weight: 18.998403 Electron Configuration: 2 7 ____________________ The Columbia...
...compounds that contain carbon, chlorine, and fluorine atoms. CFCs are highly effective refrigerants...bromine molecules can diffuse downward. Fluorine radicals combine to form hydrogen fluoride...similar to CFCs. They contain carbon, fluorine, and bromine and may contain chlorine...
...table ; the name applies especially to fluorine (symbol F), chlorine (Cl), bromine...perfect gradation of physical properties. Fluorine, a pale yellow gas, is the least dense...is more dense and less reactive than fluorine. Bromine is a dark red liquid. Iodine...
APATITE ap tit, mineral, a phosphate of calcium containing chlorine or fluorine, or both, that is transparent to opaque in shades of green, brown, yellow, white, red, and purple. Apatite is a minor constituent...
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