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Allotropes of sulfur : Sulfur(a) by liu meimei





Allotropes of sulfur : Sulfur(a) by
Article Posted: 11/12/2013
Article Views: 184
Articles Written: 168
Word Count: 510
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Allotropes of sulfur : Sulfur(a)


 
Science & Technology
Sulfur(a) is one of the Allotropes of sulfur. There are a large number of allotropes of sulfur. In this respect, sulfur is second only to carbon. The most common form found in nature is yellow orthorhombic Sulfur(a), which contains puckered rings of S.

Sulfur is a chemical element that is represented with the chemical symbol "S" and the atomic number 16 on the periodic table. Because it is 0.0384% of the Earth's crust, sulfur is the seventeenth most abundant element following strontium. Sulfur also takes on many forms, which include elemental sulfur, organo-sulfur compounds in oil and coal, H2S(g) in natural gas, and mineral sulfides and sulfates. This element is extracted by using the Frasch process, a method where superheated water and compressed air is used to draw liquid sulfur to the surface. Offshore sites, Texas, and Louisiana are the primary sites that yield extensive amounts of elemental sulfur. However, elemental sulfur can also be produced by reducing H2S, commonly found in oil and natural gas. For the most part though, sulfur is used to produce SO2(g) and H2SO4.

Sulfur is typically found as a light-yellow, oqaque, and brittle solid in large amounts of small orthorhombic crystals. Not only does sulfur have twice the density of water, it is also insoluble in water. On the other hand, sulfur is highly soluble in carbon disulfide and slightly soluble in many common solvents. Sulfur can also vary in color and blackens upon boiling due to carbonaceous impurities. Even as little as 0.05% of carbonaceous matter darkens sulfur significantly.

The range of molecular allotropes possessed by sulfur can in part be ascribed to the wide range of bond lengths (180–260 pm) and bond angles (90–120°) exhibited by the S–S bond and its strength (the unrestrained S–S single bond has a high bond energy of 265 kJ mol-1).

Early workers identified some forms that have later proved to be allotropes, i.e. pure forms, whilst others have proved to be mixtures.Some forms have been named for their appearance, e.g. "mother of pearl sulfur", or alternatively named for a chemist who was pre-eminent in identifying them, e.g. "Muthmann's sulfur I" or "Engel's sulfur". A commonly used naming system uses Greek suffixes (a, ß, etc.); however, this system predates the discovery of the new forms that have been synthesised rather than prepared from elemental sulfur.

Sulfur(a) is the form most commonly found in nature. When pure it has a greenish-yellow colour (traces of cyclo-S7 in commercially available samples make it appear yellower). It is practically insoluble in water and is a good electrical insulator with poor thermal conductivity. It is quite soluble in carbon disulfide: 35.5 g/100 g solvent at 25 °C. It has a rhombohedral crystal structure. This is the predominant form found in "flowers of sulfur", "roll sulfur" and "milk of sulfur". It contains S8 puckered rings, alternatively called a crown shape.The S-S bond lengths are all 206 pm and the S-S-S angles are 108° with a dihedral angle of 98°. At 95.3 °C, Sulfur(a) converts to ß-sulfur.

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