Acetylene
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Acetylene | |
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Image:Acetylene.png | |
Chemical name | Acetylene |
Chemical formula | C2H2 |
Other names | Ethyne, Ethine |
Molecular mass | 26.0373 g/mol |
CAS number | 74-86-2 |
Density | 1.09670E-03 g/cm3 |
Melting point | -84 °C |
Boiling point | -80.8 °C |
SMILES | C#C |
Disclaimer and references |
Acetylene (IUPAC name: ethyne) is the simplest alkyne hydrocarbon, consisting of two hydrogen atoms and two carbon atoms connected by a triple bond. Because it contains a triple bond, acetylene is an unsaturated chemical compound.
As the molecule cannot twist around the triple bond, all four atoms lie in the same straight line, with bond angles of 180°.
Acetylene was discovered in 1836 by Edmund Davy, in England.
Contents |
Preparation
The principal raw materials for acetylene manufacture are calcium carbonate (limestone) and coal. The calcium carbonate is first converted into calcium oxide and the coal into coke, then the two are reacted with each other to form calcium carbide and carbon monoxide:
- <math>Ca O + 3 C \to Ca C_2 + C O</math>
Calcium carbide (or calcium acetylide) and water are then reacted by any of several methods to produce acetylene and calcium hydroxide.
- <math>Ca C_2 + 2 H_2 O \to Ca (O H)_2 + C_2 H_2</math>
Acetylene can also be manufactured by the partial combustion of methane with oxygen, or by the cracking of hydrocarbons.
Safety and handling
Compression
Acetylene can explode with extreme violence if the pressure of the gas exceeds about 100 kPa as a gas or when in liquid or solid form, so it is shipped and stored dissolved in acetone. The majority of acetylene's chemical energy is contained in the carbon-carbon triple bond.
Toxic effects
Inhaling acetylene may cause dizziness, headache and nausea. <ref name="HitCL">Muir, GD (ed.) 1971, Hazards in the Chemical Laboratory, The Royal Institute of Chemistry, London.</ref> It may also contain toxic impurities: the Compressed Gas Association Commodity Specification for acetylene has established a grading system for identifying and quantifying phosphine, arsine, and hydrogen sulfide content in commercial grades of acetylene in order to limit exposure to these impurities.
Fire hazard
Mixtures with air containing between 3% and 82% acetylene are explosive on ignition. The minimum ignition temperature is 335°C.<ref name="HitCL" />
Reactions
Above 400 °C (which is quite low for a hydrocarbon), the pyrolysis of acetylene will start. The main products are the dimer vinylacetylene (C4H4) and benzene. At temperatures above 900 °C, the main product will be soot.
Polymerization with Ziegler-Natta catalysts produces polyacetylene films.
Uses
Approximately 80 percent of the acetylene produced annually in the United States is used in chemical synthesis. The remaining 20 percent is used primarily for oxyacetylene gas welding and cutting. Combustion with oxygen produces a flame of over 3300°C, releasing 11,800 J/g.
Acetylene is also used in the acetylene ('carbide') lamp, formerly found in mines (not to be confused with the Davy lamp), and on vintage cars; it is still sometimes used by spelunkers. In this context, the acetylene is generated by adding calcium carbide (CaC2) pellets to water.
In former times a few towns used acetylene for lighting, including Tata in Hungary where it was installed on 24 July 1897, and North Petherton, England in 1898.
Nowadays acetylene is used for carburization (that is, hardening) of steel. Research in the last ten years has concluded that acetylene is the best hydrocarbon available for this purpose.
Acetylene has been proposed as a carbon feedstock for Molecular Manufacturing using Nanotechnology. Since it does not occur naturally, using acetylene could limit out-of-control self-replication.
Other meanings
Sometimes the plural "acetylenes" is used to more generally mean organic chemical compounds that contain the -C≡C- group: see -yne.
References
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External links
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