Chlorine: Difference between revisions

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'''Chlorine''' is a [[Chemical elements|chemical element]], having the [[chemical symbol]] Cl. Its [[atomic number]] (the number of [[proton]]s) is 17. It has a [[Atomic mass#Standard atomic weights of the elements|standard atomic weight]] of 35.453 g•mol<sup> −1</sup>, and is typically found as a [[solid]] in its elemental form.
'''Chlorine''' is a [[Chemical elements|chemical element]], typically found as a [[gas]] in its elemental form. It has the [[chemical symbol]] Cl, [[atomic number]] (number of [[protons]]) ''Z''&nbsp;=&nbsp;17, and a [[Atomic mass#Standard atomic weights of the elements|standard atomic weight]] of 35.453&nbsp;g/mol.  


Chlorine is considered a member of the "Halogen" class of element. At a [[pressure]] of 101.325 k[[Pascal (unit)|Pa]], it has a [[boiling point]] −34.04 °[[Celsius (unit)|C]], and a [[melting point]] of −101.5 °C.  
Chlorine is considered a member of the "Halogen" class of elements. At a [[pressure]] of 101.325 k[[Pascal (unit)|Pa]], it has a [[boiling point]] −34.04 °[[Celsius (unit)|C]], and a [[melting point]] of −101.5 °C.  


==Chemical warfare==
==Chemical warfare==

Revision as of 14:23, 2 January 2021

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Chlorine
35.453(2)



  Cl
17
1s22s22p63s23p5
[ ? ] Halogen:
Properties:
Pale yellow-green, toxic gas with strong odor.
Uses:
Water purification, bleaching, disinfection, dyestuffs, medicines.
Hazard:
Toxic, explosive in mixtures with flammable gases and vapors.


Chlorine is a chemical element, typically found as a gas in its elemental form. It has the chemical symbol Cl, atomic number (number of protons) Z = 17, and a standard atomic weight of 35.453 g/mol.

Chlorine is considered a member of the "Halogen" class of elements. At a pressure of 101.325 kPa, it has a boiling point −34.04 °C, and a melting point of −101.5 °C.

Chemical warfare

Chlorine was the first agent used as a large-scale chemical weapon, by German forces at the Second Battle of Ypres in 1915; see World War I, poison gas. It was released from cylinders carried by trains, but was replaced by agents that were sufficiently toxic, for weight, to be used in artillery shells (e.g., phosgene).

Concern remains that chlorine, widely used in water purification and as an industrial chemical precursor, could be the source of a chemical terrorism incident. In industrialized countries, greater tracking and security is being applied to the large amounts shipped by rail.