Sulfur or
sulphur (
IPA: /ˈsʌlfə(ɹ)/,
see spelling below) is the
chemical element that has the symbol
S and
atomic number 16. It is an abundant, tasteless,
multivalent non-metal. Sulfur, in its native form, is a yellow crystalline solid. In
nature, it can be found as the pure element or as
sulfide and
sulfate minerals. It is an essential element for life and is found in two
amino acids,
cysteine and
methionine. Its commercial uses are primarily in
fertilizers, but it's also widely used in
gunpowder,
matches,
insecticides and
fungicides.
Notable characteristics
At room temperature, sulfur is a soft bright yellow solid. Elemental sulfur has only a faint odor similar to that of
matches.
The odor associated with rotten eggs is from
hydrogen sulfide (H
2S) and organic sulfur compounds.
Sulfur burns with a blue flame that emits
sulfur dioxide, notable for its peculiar suffocating odor. Sulfur is insoluble in water but
soluble in
carbon disulfide and to a lesser extent in other non-polar organic solvents such as
benzene and
toluene. Common
oxidation states of sulfur include −2, +2, +4 and +6. Sulfur forms stable compounds with all elements except the
noble gases.
Sulfur in the solid state ordinarily exists as cyclic crown-shaped S
8 molecules. Sulfur has many
allotropes besides S
8. Removing one atom from the crown gives S
7, which is responsible for sulfur's distinctive yellow color. Many other rings have been prepared, including S
12 and S
18. By contrast, its lighter neighbor
oxygen only exists in two states of allotropic significance: O
2 and O
3.
Selenium, the heavier analogue of sulfur can form rings but is more often found as a polymer chain.
The
crystallography of sulfur is complex. Depending on the specific conditions, the sulfur
allotropes form several distinct
crystal structures, with
rhombic and
monoclinic S
8 best known.
A noteworthy property of sulfur is that its
viscosity in its molten state, unlike most other liquids, increases above temperatures of 200°C due to the formation of
polymer chains. The molten sulfur also becomes dark red in color above this temperature due to the presence of free valences on terminal atoms of the polymer chains. However, after a specific temperature is reached, the viscosity is reduced because there's enough energy to break the chains.
Amorphous or "plastic" sulfur can be produced through the rapid cooling of molten sulfur.
X-ray crystallography studies show that the amorphous form may have a
helical structure with eight atoms per turn. This form is
metastable at room temperature and gradually reverts back to crystalline form. This process happens within a matter of hours to days but can be rapidly catalyzed.
Applications
In the late 18th century,
furniture makers used molten sulfur to produce decorative
inlays in their craft. Because of the
sulfur dioxide produced during the process of melting sulfur, the craft of sulfur inlays was soon abandoned. Molten sulfur is sometimes still used for setting steel bolts into drilled concrete holes where high shock resistance is desired for floor-mounted equipment attachment points. Pure powdered sulfur was also used as a medicinal tonic and laxative.
Sulfur has many modern industrial uses. Through its major derivative,
sulfuric acid (
H2S
O4), sulfur ranks as one of the most important industrial raw materials. It is of prime importance to every sector of the
world's economies.
Sulfuric acid production is the major route in industrial sulfur chemistry on the way to many end-uses, and production and consumption of sulfuric acid has been regarded as one of the best indices of a nation's industrial development.
(External Link
). For example, more sulfuric acid is produced in the
United States every year than any other industrial chemical; although interestingly the rate of increase of U.S. production has encountered shocks since the mid 1960s, mirroring U.S. loss of industrial post-
World War II world influence. Principal uses for the acid include ore processing, fertilizer manufacturing, oil refining, wastewater processing, and chemical synthesis.
Sulfur is also used in
batteries,
detergents, the
vulcanization of rubber,
fungicides, ie skin care soaps, and in the manufacture of
phosphate fertilizers.
Sulfites are used to
bleach paper and as a preservative in
wine and dried
fruit. Because of its flammable nature, sulfur also finds use in
matches,
gunpowder, and
fireworks. Sodium or ammonium
thiosulfate is used as photographic fixing agents.
Magnesium sulfate, better known as
Epsom salts, can be used as a
laxative, a bath additive, an
exfoliant, a
magnesium supplement for plants, or a
desiccant. Sulfur is used as a light-generating medium in the rare lighting fixtures known as
sulfur lamps. Elemental sulfur crystals are commonly sought after by rock collectors for their brightly colored
polyhedron shapes.
Biological role
Sulfur is an essential component of all living
cells.
Sulfur may also serve as chemical food source for some primitive organisms: some forms of
bacteria use
hydrogen sulfide (H
2S) in the place of water as the
electron donor in a primitive
photosynthesis-like process. Inorganic sulfur forms a part of
iron-sulfur clusters, and sulfur is the bridging ligand in the
CuA site of
cytochrome c oxidase, a basic substance involved in utilization of oxygen by all aerobic life.
Sulfur is absorbed by
plants via the
roots from soil as the
sulfate ion and reduced to sulfide before it's incorporated into
cysteine and other organic sulfur compounds (
sulfur assimilation).
In
plants and
animals the
amino acids
cysteine and
methionine contain sulfur, as do all
polypeptides,
proteins, and
enzymes which contain these amino acids.
Homocysteine and
taurine are other sulfur-containing acids which are similar in structure, but which are not coded for by
DNA, and are not part of the
primary structure of proteins.
Glutathione is an important sulfur-containing tripeptide which plays a role in cells as a source of chemical reduction potential in the cell, through its sulfhydryl (-SH) moiety. Many important cellular enzymes use prosthetic groups ending with -SH moieties to handle reactions involving acyl-containing biochemicals: two common examples from basic metabolism are
coenzyme A and
alpha-lipoic acid.
Disulfide bonds (S-S bonds) formed between cysteine residues in peptide chains are very important in protein assembly and structure. These strong covalent bonds between peptide chains give proteins a great deal of extra toughness and resiliency. For example, the high strength of feathers and hair is in part due to their high content of S-S bonds and their high content of cysteine and sulfur (eggs are high in sulfur because large amounts of the element are necessary for feather formation). The high disulfide content of hair and feathers contributes to their indigestibility, and also their odor when burned.
Environmental impact
The burning of
coal and/or
petroleum by industry and
power plants creates
sulfur dioxide (S
O2) which reacts with atmospheric water and oxygen to produce
sulfuric acid (H
2SO
4). This sulfuric acid is a component of
acid rain, which lowers the
pH of
soil and freshwater bodies, resulting in substantial damage to the
natural environment and
chemical weathering of statues and structures. Fuel standards increasingly require sulfur to be extracted from
fossil fuels to prevent the formation of acid rain. This extracted sulfur is then refined and represents a large portion of sulfur production. In coal fired power plants, the flue gases are sometimes purified. In more modern power plants that use
syngas the sulfur is extracted before the gas is burned.
History
Sulfur (
Sanskrit,
sulvari;
Latin sulfur or
sulpur) was known in ancient times, and is referred to in the
Biblical Pentateuch (
Genesis). The word itself is probably from the
Arabic sufra meaning yellow, from the bright color of the naturally occurring form.
English translations of the Bible commonly refer to sulfur as "brimstone", giving rise to the name of 'Fire and brimstone'
sermons, in which listeners are reminded of the fate of eternal damnation that awaits the unbelieving and unrepentant. It is from this part of the Bible that
Hell is implied to "smell of sulfur", although as mentioned above sulfur is in fact odorless. The "smell of sulfur" usually refers to the odor of
hydrogen sulfide, for example from rotten eggs. Burning sulfur produces
sulfur dioxide, the smell associated with burnt matches.
Sulfur was known in
China since the 6th century BC, in a natural form that the Chinese had called 'brimstone', or
shiliuhuang that was found in
Hanzhong. By the 3rd century, the Chinese discovered that sulfur could be extracted from
pyrite.
Extraction
Sulfur is extracted by mainly two processes: the Sicilian process and the
Frasch process. The Sicilian process, which was first used in
Sicily, was used in ancient times to get sulfur from rocks present in volcanic regions. In this process, the sulfur deposits are piled and stacked in brick kilns built on sloping hillsides, and with airspaces between them. Then powdered sulfur is put on top of the sulfur deposit and ignited. As the sulfur burns, the heat melts the sulfur deposits, causing the molten sulfur to flow down the sloping hillside. The molten sulfur can then be collected in wooden buckets.
The second process used to obtain sulfur is the Frasch process. In this method, three concentric pipes are used: the outermost pipe contains superheated water, which melts the sulfur, and the innermost pipe is filled with hot compressed air, which serves to create foam and pressure. The resulting sulfur foam is then expelled through the middle pipe.
The Frasch process produces sulfur with a 99.5% purity content, and which needs no further purification. The sulfur produced by the Sicilian process must be purified by distillation.
Compounds
Hydrogen sulfide has the characteristic smell of rotten eggs. Dissolved in water, hydrogen sulfide is acidic and will react with metals to form a series of metal sulfides. Natural metal sulfides are common, especially those of iron. Iron sulfide is called
pyrite, the so-called
fool's gold. Pyrite can show semiconductor properties.
Galena, a naturally occurring lead sulfide, was the first
semiconductor discovered, and found a use as a signal
rectifier in the "cat's whiskers" of early
crystal radios.
Many of the unpleasant odors of organic matter are based on sulfur-containing compounds such as
methyl and
ethyl mercaptan, also used to scent natural gas so that leaks are easily detectable. The odor of
garlic and "
skunk stink" are also caused by sulfur-containing organic compounds. Not all organic sulfur compounds smell unpleasant; for example,
grapefruit mercaptan, a sulfur-containing
monoterpenoid is responsible for the characteristic scent of
grapefruit.
Polymeric sulfur nitride has metallic properties even though it doesn't contain any
metal atoms. This compound also has unusual electrical and optical properties. This polymer can be made from
tetrasulfur tetranitride S
4N
4.
Phosphorus sulfides are important in synthesis. For example, P
4S
10 and its derivatives
Lawesson's reagent and
naphthalen-1,8-diyl 1,3,2,4-dithiadiphosphetane 2,4-disulfide are used to replace oxygen from some organic molecules with sulfur.
Inorganic sulfur compounds:
- Sulfides (S2−), a complex family of compounds usually derived from S2−. Cadmium sulfide (CdS) is an example.
- Sulfites (SO32−), the salts of sulfurous acid (H2SO3) which is generated by dissolving SO2 in water. Sulfurous acid and the corresponding sulfites are fairly strong reducing agents. Other compounds derived from SO2 include the pyrosulfite or metabisulfite ion (S2O52−).
- Sulfates (SO42−), the salts of sulfuric acid. Sulfuric acid also reacts with SO3 in equimolar ratios to form pyrosulfuric acid (H2S2O7).
- Thiosulfates (sometimes referred to as thiosulfites or "hyposulfites") (S2O32−). Thiosulfates are used in photographic fixing (HYPO) as reducing agents. Ammonium thiosulfate is being investigated as a cyanide replacement in leaching gold.(External Link
)
- Sodium dithionite, Na2S2O4, is the highly reducing dianion derived from hyposulfurous/dithionous acid.
- Sodium dithionate (Na2S2O6).
- Polythionic acids (H2SnO6), where n can range from 3 to 80.
- Peroxymonosulfuric acid (H2SO5) and peroxydisulfuric acids (H2S2O8), made from the action of SO3 on concentrated H2O2, and H2SO4 on concentrated H2O2 respectively.
- Sodium polysulfides (Na2Sx)
- Sulfur hexafluoride, SF6, a dense gas at ambient conditions, is used as nonreactive and nontoxic propellant
- Sulfur nitrides are chain and cyclic compounds containing only S and N. Tetrasulfur tetranitride S4N4 is an example.
- Thiocyanates contain the SCN− group. Oxidation of thiocyanoate gives thiocyanogen, (SCN)2 with the connectivity NCS-SCN.
Organic sulfur compounds (where R, R', and R
are organic groups such as CH3):
Thioethers have the form R-S-R′. These compounds are the sulfur equivalents of ethers.
Sulfonium ions have the formula RR'S-'R'", for example where three groups are attached to the cationic sulfur center. Dimethylsulfoniopropionate (DMSP; (CH3)2S+CH2CH2COO−) is a sulfonium ion, which is important in the marine organic sulfur cycle.
Thiols (also known as mercaptans) have the form R-SH. These are the sulfur equivalents of alcohols.
Thiolates ions have the form R-S-. Such anions arise upon treatment of thiols with base.
Sulfoxides have the form R-S(=O)-R′. A common sulfoxide is DMSO.
Sulfones have the form R-S(=O)2-R′. A common sulfone is sulfolane C4H8SO2.
See also and organosulfur chemistry
Isotopes
Sulfur has 18 isotopes, four of which are stable: 32S (95.02%), 33S (0.75%), 34S (4.21%), and 36S (0.02%). Other than 35S, the radioactive isotopes of sulfur are all short lived. 35S is formed from cosmic ray spallation of 40argon in the atmosphere. It has a half-life of 87 days.
When sulfide minerals are precipitated, isotopic equilibration among solids and liquid may cause small differences in the δS-34 values of co-genetic minerals. The differences between minerals can be used to estimate the temperature of equilibration. The δC-13 and δS-34 of coexisting carbonates and sulfides can be used to determine the pH and oxygen fugacity of the ore-bearing fluid during ore formation.
In most forest ecosystems, sulfate is derived mostly from the atmosphere; weathering of ore minerals and evaporites also contribute some sulfur. Sulfur with a distinctive isotopic composition has been used to identify pollution sources, and enriched sulfur has been added as a tracer in hydrologic studies. Differences in the natural abundances can also be used in systems where there's sufficient variation in the 34S of ecosystem components. Rocky Mountain lakes thought to be dominated by atmospheric sources of sulfate have been found to have different δS-34 values from lakes believed to be dominated by watershed sources of sulfate.
Precautions
Carbon disulfide, carbon oxysulfide, hydrogen sulfide, and sulfur dioxide should all be handled with care.
Although sulfur dioxide is sufficiently safe to be used as a food additive in small amounts, at high concentrations it reacts with moisture to form sulfurous acid which in sufficient quantities may harm the lungs, eyes or other tissues. In organisms without lungs such as insects or plants, it otherwise prevents respiration.
Hydrogen sulfide is toxic. Although very pungent at first, it quickly deadens the sense of smell, so potential victims may be unaware of its presence until it's too late.
Spelling
The element has traditionally been spelled sulphur in the United Kingdom, Ireland, Hong Kong, the Commonwealth Caribbean India and New Zealand, but sulfur in the United States, while both spellings are used in Australia and Canada. IUPAC adopted the spelling “sulfur” in 1990, as did the Royal Society of Chemistry Nomenclature Committee in 1992 and the Qualifications and Curriculum Authority for England and Wales recommended its use in 2000. The spelling of the term in non-official texts is gradually becoming uniform as sulfur.
In Latin, the word is variously written sulpur, sulphur, and sulfur (the Oxford Latin Dictionary lists the spellings in this order). It is an original Latin name and not a Classical Greek loan, so the ph variant doesn't denote the Greek letter φ. Sulfur in Greek is theion (θεῖον), whence comes the prefix thio-. The simplification of the Latin word's p or ph to an f appears to have taken place towards the end of the classical period, with the f spelling becoming dominant in the medieval period.
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