Tetrafluorohydrazine Explained

Tetrafluorohydrazine or perfluorohydrazine,, is a colourless, nonflammable, reactive inorganic gas. It is a fluorinated analog of hydrazine.

Synthesis

Tetrafluorohydrazine was originally prepared from nitrogen trifluoride using a copper as a fluorine atom acceptor:[1]

A number of F-atom acceptors can be used, including carbon, other metals, and nitric oxide. These reactions exploit the relatively weak N-F bond in NF3.[2]

Properties

Tetrafluorohydrazine is in equilibrium with its radical monomer nitrogen difluoride.[3]

At room temperature is mostly associated with only 0.7% in the form of at 5mm Hg pressure. When the temperature rises to 225 °C, it mostly dissociates with 99% in the form of .[4]

The energy needed to break the N−N bond in is 20.8 kcal/mol, with an entropy change of 38.6 eu. For comparison, the dissociation energy of the N−N bond is 14.6kcal/mol in , 10.2kcal/mol in , and 60kcal/mol in . The enthalpy of formation of (ΔfH°) is 34.421 kJ/mol.[5]

Uses

Tetrafluorohydrazine is used in organic synthesis and some rocket propellant formulations.[6] It adds across double bonds to give vicinal di(difluoroamine)s. In chemical syntheses, as a precursor or a catalyst. It was considered for use as a high-energy liquid oxidizer in some never-flown rocket fuel formulas in 1959.[7]

Safety

Tetrafluorohydrazine is a highly hazardous chemical that explodes in the presence of organic materials.[6]

It is a toxic chemical which irritates skin, eyes and lungs. It is a neurotoxin and may cause methemoglobinemia. May be fatal if inhaled or absorbed through skin. Vapors may be irritating and corrosive. It is a strong oxidizing agent. Contact with this chemical may cause burns and severe injury. Fire produces irritating, corrosive and toxic gases. Vapors from liquefied gas are initially heavier than air and spread across the ground.[6]

Tetrafluorohydrazine explodes or ignites on contact with reducing agents at room temperature, including hydrogen, hydrocarbons, alcohols, thiols, amines, ammonia, hydrazines, dicyanogen, nitroalkanes, alkylberylliums, silanes, boranes or powdered metals. Prolonged exposure of the container of tetrafluorohydrazine to high heat may cause it to rupture violently and rocket. Tetrafluorohydrazine itself can explode at high temperatures or with shock or blast when under pressure. When heated to decomposition in air, it emits highly toxic fumes of fluorine and oxides of nitrogen.[6]

There is a fatal case in which during opening of valves to check the pressure, the cylinder exploded, killing one man and injuring another.[6]

Notes and References

  1. 10.1021/cr60250a004 . Derivatives of Nitrogen Fluorides . 1967 . Ruff . John K. . Chemical Reviews . 67 . 6 . 665–680 .
  2. Book: Clark, John Drury. 82. Ignition!. John Drury Clark. 1972. Rutgers UP. New Brunswick, NJ. 72-185390. 0-8135-0725-1.
  3. Book: Jäger. Susanne. F Fluorine: Compounds with Oxygen and Nitrogen. von Jouanne. Jörn. Keller-Rudek. Hannelore. Koschel. Dieter. Kuhn. Peter. Merlet. Peter. Rupecht. Sigrid. Vanecek. Hans. Wagner. Joachim. 1986. Springer. 978-3-662-06341-5. Koschel. Dieter. Gmelin Handbook of Inorganic Chemistry. 4. Berlin. 162. 10.1007/978-3-662-06339-2. 29 August 2015. Kuhn. Peter. Merlet. Peter. Ruprecht. Sigrid. Wagner. Joachim.
  4. Bohn. Robert K.. Bauer. Simon Harvey. February 1967. An electron diffraction study of the structures of NF2 and N2F4. Inorganic Chemistry. 6. 2. 304–309. 10.1021/ic50048a024. molecule dimensions and angles
  5. Web site: Nitrogen difluoride NF2(g). www.chem.msu.su.
  6. Web site: Tetrafluorohydrazine . pubchem.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov . National Library of Medicine . 26 March 2023 . en.
  7. https://web.archive.org/web/20070312051306/http://stinet.dtic.mil/oai/oai?&verb=getRecord&metadataPrefix=html&identifier=AD0313998 Tetrafluorohydrazine