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Phosphorus

Phosphorus is a chemical element; it has symbol P and atomic number 15. Elemental phosphorus exists in two major forms, white phosphorus and red phosphorus, but because it is highly reactive, phosphorus is never found as a free element on Earth. It has a concentration in the Earth's crust of about one gram per kilogram (compare copper at about 0.06 grams). In minerals, phosphorus generally occurs as phosphate.

Phosphorus, 15P
Forms of phosphorus
Waxy white
Light red
Dark red and violet
Black
Phosphorus
Pronunciation/ˈfɒsfərəs/ (FOS-fər-əs)
Allotropeswhite, red, violet, black and others (see Allotropes of phosphorus)
Appearancewhite, red and violet are waxy, black is metallic-looking
Standard atomic weight Ar°(P)
Abundance
in the Earth's crust5.2 (silicon = 100)
Phosphorus in the periodic table
Hydrogen Helium
Lithium Beryllium Boron Carbon Nitrogen Oxygen Fluorine Neon
Sodium Magnesium Aluminium Silicon Phosphorus Sulfur Chlorine Argon
Potassium Calcium Scandium Titanium Vanadium Chromium Manganese Iron Cobalt Nickel Copper Zinc Gallium Germanium Arsenic Selenium Bromine Krypton
Rubidium Strontium Yttrium Zirconium Niobium Molybdenum Technetium Ruthenium Rhodium Palladium Silver Cadmium Indium Tin Antimony Tellurium Iodine Xenon
Caesium Barium Lanthanum Cerium Praseodymium Neodymium Promethium Samarium Europium Gadolinium Terbium Dysprosium Holmium Erbium Thulium Ytterbium Lutetium Hafnium Tantalum Tungsten Rhenium Osmium Iridium Platinum Gold Mercury (element) Thallium Lead Bismuth Polonium Astatine Radon
Francium Radium Actinium Thorium Protactinium Uranium Neptunium Plutonium Americium Curium Berkelium Californium Einsteinium Fermium Mendelevium Nobelium Lawrencium Rutherfordium Dubnium Seaborgium Bohrium Hassium Meitnerium Darmstadtium Roentgenium Copernicium Nihonium Flerovium Moscovium Livermorium Tennessine Oganesson
N

P

As
siliconphosphorussulfur
Atomic number (Z)15
Groupgroup 15 (pnictogens)
Periodperiod 3
Block  p-block
Electron configuration[Ne] 3s2 3p3
Electrons per shell2, 8, 5
Physical properties
Phase at STPsolid
Melting pointwhite: 317.3 K ​(44.15 °C, ​111.5 °F)
red: ∼860 K (∼590 °C, ∼1090 °F)[3]
Boiling pointwhite: 553.7 K ​(280.5 °C, ​536.9 °F)
Sublimation pointred: ≈689.2–863 K ​(≈416–590 °C, ​≈780.8–1094 °F)
violet: 893 K (620 °C, 1148 °F)
Density (near r.t.)white: 1.823 g/cm3
red: ≈2.2–2.34 g/cm3
violet: 2.36 g/cm3
black: 2.69 g/cm3
Heat of fusionwhite: 0.66 kJ/mol
Heat of vaporisationwhite: 51.9 kJ/mol
Molar heat capacitywhite: 23.824 J/(mol·K)
Vapour pressure (white)
P (Pa) 1 10 100 1 k 10 k 100 k
at T (K) 279 307 342 388 453 549
Vapour pressure (red)
P (Pa) 1 10 100 1 k 10 k 100 k
at T (K) 455 489 529 576 635 704
Atomic properties
Oxidation states−3, −2, −1, 0,[4] +1,[5] +2, +3, +4, +5 (a mildly acidic oxide)
ElectronegativityPauling scale: 2.19
Ionisation energies
  • 1st: 1011.8 kJ/mol
  • 2nd: 1907 kJ/mol
  • 3rd: 2914.1 kJ/mol
  • (more)
Covalent radius107±3 pm
Van der Waals radius180 pm
Spectral lines of phosphorus
Other properties
Natural occurrenceprimordial
Crystal structureα-white: ​body-centred cubic (bcc) (cI232)
Lattice constant
a = 1.869 nm (at 20 °C)[6]
Crystal structureblack: ​orthorhombic (oS8)
Lattice constants
a = 0.33137 nm
b = 1.0477 nm
c = 0.43755 nm (at 20 °C)[6]
Thermal conductivitywhite: 0.236 W/(m⋅K)
black: 12.1 W/(m⋅K)
Magnetic orderingwhite, red, violet, black: diamagnetic[7]
Molar magnetic susceptibility−20.8×10−6 cm3/mol (293 K)[8]
Bulk moduluswhite: 5 GPa
red: 11 GPa
CAS Number7723-14-0 (red)
12185-10-3 (white)
History
DiscoveryHennig Brand (1669)
Recognised as an element byAntoine Lavoisier[9] (1777)
Isotopes of phosphorus
Main isotopes Decay
abun­dance half-life (t1/2) mode pro­duct
31P 100% stable
32P trace 14.269 d β 32S
33P trace 25.35 d β 33S
 Category: Phosphorus
| references

Elemental phosphorus was first isolated as white phosphorus in 1669. In white phosphorus, phosphorus atoms are arranged in groups of 4, written as P4. White phosphorus emits a faint glow when exposed to oxygen—hence a name, taken from Greek mythology, Φωσφόρος meaning 'light-bearer' (Latin Lucifer), referring to the "Morning Star", the planet Venus. The term phosphorescence, meaning glow after illumination, derives from this property of phosphorus, although the word has since been used for a different physical process that produces a glow. The glow of phosphorus is caused by oxidation of the white (but not red) phosphorus—a process now called chemiluminescence. Phosphorus is classified as a pnictogen, together with nitrogen, arsenic, antimony, bismuth, and moscovium.

Phosphorus is an element essential to sustaining life largely through phosphates, compounds containing the phosphate ion, PO43−. Phosphates are a component of DNA, RNA, ATP, and phospholipids, complex compounds fundamental to cells. Elemental phosphorus was first isolated from human urine, and bone ash was an important early phosphate source. Phosphate mines contain fossils because phosphate is present in the fossilized deposits of animal remains and excreta. Low phosphate levels are an important limit to growth in a number of plant ecosystems. The vast majority of phosphorus compounds mined are consumed as fertilisers. Phosphate is needed to replace the phosphorus that plants remove from the soil, and its annual demand is rising nearly twice as fast as the growth of the human population. Other applications include organophosphorus compounds in detergents, pesticides, and nerve agents.

Characteristics edit

Allotropes edit

Phosphorus has several allotropes that exhibit strikingly diverse properties.[10] The two most common allotropes are white phosphorus and red phosphorus.[11]

For both pure and applied uses, the most important allotrope white phosphorus, often abbreviated WP. White phosphorus is a soft, waxy molecular solid composed of P
4
tetrahedra. This P
4
tetrahedron is also present in liquid and gaseous phosphorus up to the temperature of 800 °C (1,500 °F; 1,100 K) when it starts decomposing to P
2
molecules.[12] The nature of bonding in this P
4
tetrahedron can be described by spherical aromaticity or cluster bonding, that is the electrons are highly delocalized. This has been illustrated by calculations of the magnetically induced currents, which sum up to 29 nA/T, much more than in the archetypical aromatic molecule benzene (11 nA/T).[13]

Crystalline structures of some phosphorus allotropes
 
White
 
Red
 
Violet
 
Black

White phosphorus exists in two crystalline forms: α (alpha) and β (beta). At room temperature, the α-form is stable. It is more common, has cubic crystal structure and at 195.2 K (−78.0 °C), it transforms into β-form, which has hexagonal crystal structure. These forms differ in terms of the relative orientations of the constituent P4 tetrahedra.[14][15]

White phosphorus is the least stable, the most reactive, the most volatile, the least dense and the most toxic of the allotropes. White phosphorus gradually changes to red phosphorus, accelerated by light and heat. Samples of white phosphorus almost always contain some red phosphorus and accordingly appear yellow. For this reason, white phosphorus that is aged or otherwise impure (e.g., weapons-grade, not lab-grade WP) is also called yellow phosphorus. White phosphorus is highly flammable and pyrophoric (self-igniting) in air; it faintly glows green and blue in the dark when exposed to oxygen. The autoxidation commonly coats samples with white phosphorus pentoxide (P
4
O
10
): P4 tetrahedra, but with oxygen inserted between the phosphorus atoms and at the vertices. White phosphorus is a napalm additive, and the characteristic odour of combustion is garlicky. White phosphorus is insoluble in water but soluble in carbon disulfide.[16]

Thermal decomposition of P4 at 1100 K gives diphosphorus, P2. This species is not stable as a solid or liquid. The dimeric unit contains a triple bond and is analogous to N2. It can also be generated as a transient intermediate in solution by thermolysis of organophosphorus precursor reagents.[17] At still higher temperatures, P2 dissociates into atomic P.[16]

Properties of some allotropes of phosphorus[10][18]
Form white(α) white(β) red violet black
Symmetry Body-centred
cubic
Triclinic Amorphous Monoclinic Orthorhombic
Pearson symbol aP24 mP84 oS8
Space group I43m P1 No.2 P2/c No.13 Cmce No.64
Density (g/cm3) 1.828 1.88 ~2.2 2.36 2.69
Band gap (eV) 2.1 1.8 1.5 0.34
Refractive index 1.8244 2.6 2.4

Red phosphorus is polymeric in structure. It can be viewed as a derivative of P4 wherein one P-P bond is broken, and one additional bond is formed with the neighbouring tetrahedron resulting in chains of P21 molecules linked by van der Waals forces.[19] Red phosphorus may be formed by heating white phosphorus to 250 °C (482 °F) or by exposing white phosphorus to sunlight.[20] Phosphorus after this treatment is amorphous. Upon further heating, this material crystallises. In this sense, red phosphorus is not an allotrope, but rather an intermediate phase between the white and violet phosphorus, and most of its properties have a range of values. For example, freshly prepared, bright red phosphorus is highly reactive and ignites at about 300 °C (572 °F),[21] though it is more stable than white phosphorus, which ignites at about 30 °C (86 °F).[22] After prolonged heating or storage, the color darkens (see infobox images); the resulting product is more stable and does not spontaneously ignite in air.[23]

Violet phosphorus is a form of phosphorus that can be produced by day-long annealing of red phosphorus above 550 °C. In 1865, Hittorf discovered that when phosphorus was recrystallised from molten lead, a red/purple form is obtained. Therefore, this form is sometimes known as "Hittorf's phosphorus" (or violet or α-metallic phosphorus).[18]

Black phosphorus is the least reactive allotrope and the thermodynamically stable form below 550 °C (1,022 °F). It is also known as β-metallic phosphorus and has a structure somewhat resembling that of graphite.[24][25] It is obtained by heating white phosphorus under high pressures (about 12,000 standard atmospheres or 1.2 gigapascals). It can also be produced at ambient conditions using metal salts, e.g. mercury, as catalysts.[26] In appearance, properties, and structure, it resembles graphite, being black and flaky, a conductor of electricity, and has puckered sheets of linked atoms.[27]

Another form, scarlet phosphorus, is obtained by allowing a solution of white phosphorus in carbon disulfide to evaporate in sunlight.[18]

Chemiluminescence edit

 
White phosphorus exposed to air glows in the dark.

When first isolated, it was observed that the green glow emanating from white phosphorus would persist for a time in a stoppered jar, but then cease. Robert Boyle in the 1680s ascribed it to "debilitation" of the air. Actually, it is oxygen being consumed. By the 18th century, it was known that in pure oxygen, phosphorus does not glow at all;[28] there is only a range of partial pressures at which it does. Heat can be applied to drive the reaction at higher pressures.[29]

In 1974, the glow was explained by R. J. van Zee and A. U. Khan.[30][31] A reaction with oxygen takes place at the surface of the solid (or liquid) phosphorus, forming the short-lived molecules HPO and P
2
O
2
that both emit visible light. The reaction is slow and only very little of the intermediates are required to produce the luminescence, hence the extended time the glow continues in a stoppered jar.

Since its discovery, phosphors and phosphorescence were used loosely to describe substances that shine in the dark without burning. Although the term phosphorescence is derived from phosphorus, the reaction that gives phosphorus its glow is properly called chemiluminescence (glowing due to a cold chemical reaction), not phosphorescence (re-emitting light that previously fell onto a substance and excited it).[32]

Isotopes edit

There are 22 known isotopes of phosphorus,[33] ranging from 26
P
to 47
P
.[34] Only 31
P
is stable and is therefore present at 100% abundance. The half-integer nuclear spin and high abundance of 31P make phosphorus-31 NMR spectroscopy a very useful analytical tool in studies of phosphorus-containing samples.

Two radioactive isotopes of phosphorus have half-lives suitable for biological scientific experiments. These are:

  • 32
    P
    , a beta-emitter (1.71 MeV) with a half-life of 14.3 days, which is used routinely in life-science laboratories, primarily to produce radiolabeled DNA and RNA probes, e.g. for use in Northern blots or Southern blots.
  • 33
    P
    , a beta-emitter (0.25 MeV) with a half-life of 25.4 days. It is used in life-science laboratories in applications in which lower energy beta emissions are advantageous such as DNA sequencing.

The high-energy beta particles from 32
P
penetrate skin and corneas and any 32
P
ingested, inhaled, or absorbed is readily incorporated into bone and nucleic acids. For these reasons, Occupational Safety and Health Administration in the United States, and similar institutions in other developed countries require personnel working with 32
P
to wear lab coats, disposable gloves, and safety glasses or goggles to protect the eyes, and avoid working directly over open containers. Monitoring personal, clothing, and surface contamination is also required. Shielding requires special consideration. The high energy of the beta particles gives rise to secondary emission of X-rays via Bremsstrahlung (braking radiation) in dense shielding materials such as lead. Therefore, the radiation must be shielded with low density materials such as acrylic or other plastic, water, or (when transparency is not required), even wood.[35]

Occurrence edit

Universe edit

In 2013, astronomers detected phosphorus in Cassiopeia A, which confirmed that this element is produced in supernovae as a byproduct of supernova nucleosynthesis. The phosphorus-to-iron ratio in material from the supernova remnant could be up to 100 times higher than in the Milky Way in general.[36]

In 2020, astronomers analysed ALMA and ROSINA data from the massive star-forming region AFGL 5142, to detect phosphorus-bearing molecules and how they are carried in comets to the early Earth.[37][38]

Crust and organic sources edit

Phosphorus has a concentration in the Earth's crust of about one gram per kilogram (compare copper at about 0.06 grams). It is not found free in nature, but is widely distributed in many minerals, usually as phosphates.[11] Inorganic phosphate rock, which is partially made of apatite (a group of minerals being, generally, pentacalcium triorthophosphate fluoride (hydroxide)), is today the chief commercial source of this element. According to the US Geological Survey (USGS), about 50 percent of the global phosphorus reserves are in Amazigh nations like Morocco, Algeria and Tunisia.[39] 85% of Earth's known reserves are in Morocco with smaller deposits in China, Russia,[40] Florida, Idaho, Tennessee, Utah, and elsewhere.[41] Albright and Wilson in the UK and their Niagara Falls plant, for instance, were using phosphate rock in the 1890s and 1900s from Tennessee, Florida, and the Îles du Connétable (guano island sources of phosphate); by 1950, they were using phosphate rock mainly from Tennessee and North Africa.[42]

Organic sources, namely urine, bone ash and (in the latter 19th century) guano, were historically of importance but had only limited commercial success.[43] As urine contains phosphorus, it has fertilising qualities which are still harnessed today in some countries, including Sweden, using methods for reuse of excreta. To this end, urine can be used as a fertiliser in its pure form or part of being mixed with water in the form of sewage or sewage sludge.

Compounds edit

Phosphorus(V) edit

 
The tetrahedral structure of P4O10 and P4S10

The most prevalent compounds of phosphorus are derivatives of phosphate (PO43−), a tetrahedral anion.[44] Phosphate is the conjugate base of phosphoric acid, which is produced on a massive scale for use in fertilisers. Being triprotic, phosphoric acid converts stepwise to three conjugate bases:

H3PO4 + H2O ⇌ H3O+ + H2PO4       Ka1 = 7.25×10−3
H2PO4 + H2O ⇌ H3O+ + HPO42−       Ka2 = 6.31×10−8
HPO42− + H2O ⇌ H3O+ +  PO43−        Ka3 = 3.98×10−13

Phosphate exhibits a tendency to form chains and rings containing P-O-P bonds. Many polyphosphates are known, including ATP. Polyphosphates arise by dehydration of hydrogen phosphates such as HPO42− and H2PO4. For example, the industrially important pentasodium triphosphate (also known as sodium tripolyphosphate, STPP) is produced industrially by the megatonne by this condensation reaction:

2 Na2HPO4 + NaH2PO4 → Na5P3O10 + 2 H2O

Phosphorus pentoxide (P4O10) is the acid anhydride of phosphoric acid, but several intermediates between the two are known. This waxy white solid reacts vigorously with water.

With metal cations, phosphate forms a variety of salts. These solids are polymeric, featuring P-O-M linkages. When the metal cation has a charge of 2+ or 3+, the salts are generally insoluble, hence they exist as common minerals. Many phosphate salts are derived from hydrogen phosphate (HPO42−).

PCl5 and PF5 are common compounds. PF5 is a colourless gas and the molecules have trigonal bipyramidal geometry. PCl5 is a colourless solid which has an ionic formulation of PCl4+ PCl6, but adopts the trigonal bipyramidal geometry when molten or in the vapour phase.[16] PBr5 is an unstable solid formulated as PBr4+Brand PI5 is not known.[16] The pentachloride and pentafluoride are Lewis acids. With fluoride, PF5 forms PF6, an anion that is isoelectronic with SF6. The most important oxyhalide is phosphorus oxychloride, (POCl3), which is approximately tetrahedral.

Before extensive computer calculations were feasible, it was thought that bonding in phosphorus(V) compounds involved d orbitals. Computer modeling of molecular orbital theory indicates that this bonding involves only s- and p-orbitals.[45]

Phosphorus(III) edit

All four symmetrical trihalides are well known: gaseous PF3, the yellowish liquids PCl3 and PBr3, and the solid PI3. These materials are moisture sensitive, hydrolysing to give phosphorous acid. The trichloride, a common reagent, is produced by chlorination of white phosphorus:

P4 + 6 Cl2 → 4 PCl3

The trifluoride is produced from the trichloride by halide exchange. PF3 is toxic because it binds to haemoglobin.

Phosphorus(III) oxide, P4O6 (also called tetraphosphorus hexoxide) is the anhydride of P(OH)3, the minor tautomer of phosphorous acid. The structure of P4O6 is like that of P4O10 without the terminal oxide groups.

Phosphorus(I) and phosphorus(II) edit

 
A stable diphosphene, a derivative of phosphorus(I)

These compounds generally feature P–P bonds.[16] Examples include catenated derivatives of phosphine and organophosphines. Compounds containing P=P double bonds have also been observed, although they are rare.

Phosphides and phosphines edit

Phosphides arise by reaction of metals with red phosphorus. The alkali metals (group 1) and alkaline earth metals can form ionic compounds containing the phosphide ion, P3−. These compounds react with water to form phosphine. Other phosphides, for example Na3P7, are known for these reactive metals. With the transition metals as well as the monophosphides there are metal-rich phosphides, which are generally hard refractory compounds with a metallic lustre, and phosphorus-rich phosphides which are less stable and include semiconductors.[16] Schreibersite is a naturally occurring metal-rich phosphide found in meteorites. The structures of the metal-rich and phosphorus-rich phosphides can be complex.

Phosphine (PH3) and its organic derivatives (PR3) are structural analogues of ammonia (NH3), but the bond angles at phosphorus are closer to 90° for phosphine and its organic derivatives. Phosphine is an ill-smelling, toxic gas. Phosphorus has an oxidation number of −3 in phosphine. Phosphine is produced by hydrolysis of calcium phosphide, Ca3P2. Unlike ammonia, phosphine is oxidised by air. Phosphine is also far less basic than ammonia. Other phosphines are known which contain chains of up to nine phosphorus atoms and have the formula PnHn+2.[16] The highly flammable gas diphosphine (P2H4) is an analogue of hydrazine.

Oxoacids edit

Phosphorus oxoacids are extensive, often commercially important, and sometimes structurally complicated. They all have acidic protons bound to oxygen atoms, some have nonacidic protons that are bonded directly to phosphorus and some contain phosphorus–phosphorus bonds.[16] Although many oxoacids of phosphorus are formed, only nine are commercially important, and three of them, hypophosphorous acid, phosphorous acid, and phosphoric acid, are particularly important.

Oxidation state Formula Name Acidic protons Compounds
+1 HH2PO2 hypophosphorous acid 1 acid, salts
+3 H3PO3 phosphorous acid
(phosphonic acid)
2 acid, salts
+3 HPO2 metaphosphorous acid 1 salts
+4 H4P2O6 hypophosphoric acid 4 acid, salts
+5 (HPO3)n metaphosphoric acids n salts (n = 3,4,6)
+5 H(HPO3)nOH polyphosphoric acids n+2 acids, salts (n = 1-6)
+5 H5P3O10 tripolyphosphoric acid 3 salts
+5 H4P2O7 pyrophosphoric acid 4 acid, salts
+5 H3PO4 (ortho)phosphoric acid 3 acid, salts

Nitrides edit

The PN molecule is considered unstable, but is a product of crystalline phosphorus nitride decomposition at 1100 K. Similarly, H2PN is considered unstable, and phosphorus nitride halogens like F2PN, Cl2PN, Br2PN, and I2PN oligomerise into cyclic polyphosphazenes. For example, compounds of the formula (PNCl2)n exist mainly as rings such as the trimer hexachlorophosphazene. The phosphazenes arise by treatment of phosphorus pentachloride with ammonium chloride:

PCl5 + NH4Cl → 1/n (NPCl2)n + 4 HCl

When the chloride groups are replaced by alkoxide (RO), a family of polymers is produced with potentially useful properties.[46]

Sulfides edit

Phosphorus forms a wide range of sulfides, where the phosphorus can be in P(V), P(III) or other oxidation states. The three-fold symmetric P4S3 is used in strike-anywhere matches. P4S10 and P4O10 have analogous structures.[47] Mixed oxyhalides and oxyhydrides of phosphorus(III) are almost unknown.

Organophosphorus compounds edit

Compounds with P-C and P-O-C bonds are often classified as organophosphorus compounds. They are widely used commercially. The PCl3 serves as a source of P3+ in routes to organophosphorus(III) compounds. For example, it is the precursor to triphenylphosphine:

PCl3 + 6 Na + 3 C6H5Cl → P(C6H5)3 + 6 NaCl

Treatment of phosphorus trihalides with alcohols and phenols gives phosphites, e.g. triphenylphosphite:

PCl3 + 3 C6H5OH → P(OC6H5)3 + 3 HCl

Similar reactions occur for phosphorus oxychloride, affording triphenylphosphate:

OPCl3 + 3 C6H5OH → OP(OC6H5)3 + 3 HCl

History edit

Etymology edit

The name Phosphorus in Ancient Greece was the name for the planet Venus and is derived from the Greek words (φῶς = light, φέρω = carry), which roughly translates as light-bringer or light carrier.[20] (In Greek mythology and tradition, Augerinus (Αυγερινός = morning star, still in use today), Hesperus or Hesperinus (΄Εσπερος or Εσπερινός or Αποσπερίτης = evening star, still in use today) and Eosphorus (Εωσφόρος = dawnbearer, not in use for the planet after Christianity) are close homologues, and also associated with Phosphorus-the-morning-star).

According to the Oxford English Dictionary, the correct spelling of the element is phosphorus. The word phosphorous is the adjectival form of the P3+ valence: so, just as sulfur forms sulfurous and sulfuric compounds, phosphorus forms phosphorous compounds (e.g., phosphorous acid) and P5+ valence phosphoric compounds (e.g., phosphoric acids and phosphates).

Discovery edit

 
Robert Boyle

The discovery of phosphorus, the first element to be discovered that was not known since ancient times,[48] is credited to the German alchemist Hennig Brand in 1669, although others might have discovered phosphorus around the same time.[49] Brand experimented with urine, which contains considerable quantities of dissolved phosphates from normal metabolism.[20] Working in Hamburg, Brand attempted to create the fabled philosopher's stone through the distillation of some salts by evaporating urine, and in the process produced a white material that glowed in the dark and burned brilliantly. It was named phosphorus mirabilis ("miraculous bearer of light").[50]

Brand's process originally involved letting urine stand for days until it gave off a terrible smell. Then he boiled it down to a paste, heated this paste to a high temperature, and led the vapours through water, where he hoped they would condense to gold. Instead, he obtained a white, waxy substance that glowed in the dark. Brand had discovered phosphorus. Specifically, Brand produced ammonium sodium hydrogen phosphate, (NH
4
)NaHPO
4
. While the quantities were essentially correct (it took about 1,100 litres [290 US gal] of urine to make about 60 g of phosphorus), it was unnecessary to allow the urine to rot first. Later scientists discovered that fresh urine yielded the same amount of phosphorus.[32]

Brand at first tried to keep the method secret,[51] but later sold the recipe for 200 thalers to Johann Daniel Kraft (de) from Dresden.[20] Krafft toured much of Europe with it, including England, where he met with Robert Boyle. The secret—that the substance was made from urine—leaked out, and Johann Kunckel (1630–1703) was able to reproduce it in Sweden (1678). Later, Boyle in London (1680) also managed to make phosphorus, possibly with the aid of his assistant, Ambrose Godfrey-Hanckwitz. Godfrey later made a business of the manufacture of phosphorus.

Boyle states that Krafft gave him no information as to the preparation of phosphorus other than that it was derived from "somewhat that belonged to the body of man". This gave Boyle a valuable clue, so that he, too, managed to make phosphorus, and published the method of its manufacture.[20] Later he improved Brand's process by using sand in the reaction (still using urine as base material),

4 NaPO
3
+ 2 SiO
2
+ 10 C → 2 Na
2
SiO
3
+ 10 CO + P
4

Robert Boyle was the first to use phosphorus to ignite sulfur-tipped wooden splints, forerunners of our modern matches, in 1680.[52]

Phosphorus was the 13th element to be discovered. Because of its tendency to spontaneously combust when left alone in air, it is sometimes referred to as "the Devil's element".[53]

Bone ash and guano edit

 
Guano mining in the Central Chincha Islands, c. 1860

Antoine Lavoisier recognized phosphorus as an element in 1777 after Johan Gottlieb Gahn and Carl Wilhelm Scheele, in 1769, showed that calcium phosphate (Ca
3
(PO
4
)
2
) is found in bones by obtaining elemental phosphorus from bone ash.[9]

Bone ash was the major source of phosphorus until the 1840s. The method started by roasting bones, then employed the use of fire clay retorts encased in a very hot brick furnace to distill out the highly toxic elemental phosphorus product.[54] Alternately, precipitated phosphates could be made from ground-up bones that had been de-greased and treated with strong acids. White phosphorus could then be made by heating the precipitated phosphates, mixed with ground coal or charcoal in an iron pot, and distilling off phosphorus vapour in a retort.[55] Carbon monoxide and other flammable gases produced during the reduction process were burnt off in a flare stack.

In the 1840s, world phosphate production turned to the mining of tropical island deposits formed from bird and bat guano (see also Guano Islands Act). These became an important source of phosphates for fertiliser in the latter half of the 19th century.[56]

Phosphate rock edit

Phosphate rock, which usually contains calcium phosphate, was first used in 1850 to make phosphorus, and following the introduction of the electric arc furnace by James Burgess Readman in 1888[57] (patented 1889),[58] elemental phosphorus production switched from the bone-ash heating, to electric arc production from phosphate rock. After the depletion of world guano sources about the same time, mineral phosphates became the major source of phosphate fertiliser production. Phosphate rock production greatly increased after World War II, and remains the primary global source of phosphorus and phosphorus chemicals today. Phosphate rock remains a feedstock in the fertiliser industry, where it is treated with sulfuric acid to produce various "superphosphate" fertiliser products.

Incendiaries edit

White phosphorus was first made commercially in the 19th century for the match industry. This used bone ash for a phosphate source, as described above. The bone-ash process became obsolete when the submerged-arc furnace for phosphorus production was introduced to reduce phosphate rock.[59][60] The electric furnace method allowed production to increase to the point where phosphorus could be used in weapons of war.[30][61] In World War I, it was used in incendiaries, smoke screens and tracer bullets.[61] A special incendiary bullet was developed to shoot at hydrogen-filled Zeppelins over Britain (hydrogen being highly flammable).[61] During World War II, Molotov cocktails made of phosphorus dissolved in petrol were distributed in Britain to specially selected civilians within the British resistance operation, for defence; and phosphorus incendiary bombs were used in war on a large scale. Burning phosphorus is difficult to extinguish and if it splashes onto human skin it has horrific effects.[16]

Early matches used white phosphorus in their composition, which was dangerous due to its toxicity. Murders, suicides and accidental poisonings resulted from its use. (An apocryphal tale tells of a woman attempting to murder her husband with white phosphorus in his food, which was detected by the stew's giving off luminous steam).[30] In addition, exposure to the vapours gave match workers a severe necrosis of the bones of the jaw, known as "phossy jaw". When a safe process for manufacturing red phosphorus was discovered, with its far lower flammability and toxicity, laws were enacted, under the Berne Convention (1906), requiring its adoption as a safer alternative for match manufacture.[62] The toxicity of white phosphorus led to discontinuation of its use in matches.[63] The Allies used phosphorus incendiary bombs in World War II to destroy Hamburg, the place where the "miraculous bearer of light" was first discovered.[50]

Production edit

 
Mining of phosphate rock in Nauru

In 2017, the USGS estimated 68 billion tons of world reserves, where reserve figures refer to the amount assumed recoverable at current market prices; 0.261 billion tons were mined in 2016.[64] Critical to contemporary agriculture, its annual demand is rising nearly twice as fast as the growth of the human population.[40] The production of phosphorus may have peaked before 2011 and some scientists predict reserves will be depleted before the end of the 21st century.[65][40][66] Phosphorus comprises about 0.1% by mass of the average rock, and consequently, the Earth's supply is vast, though dilute.[16]

Wet process edit

Most phosphorus-bearing material is for agriculture fertilisers. In this case where the standards of purity are modest, phosphorus is obtained from phosphate rock by what is called the "wet process." The minerals are treated with sulfuric acid to give phosphoric acid. Phosphoric acid is then neutralized to give various phosphate salts, which comprise fertilizers. In the wet process, phosphorus does not undergo redox.[67] About five tons of phosphogypsum waste are generated per ton of phosphoric acid production. Annually, the estimated generation of phosphogypsum worldwide is 100 to 280 Mt.[68]

Thermal process edit

For the use of phosphorus in drugs, detergents, and foodstuff, the standards of purity are high, which led to the development of the thermal process. In this process, phosphate minerals are converted to white phosphorus, which can be purified by distillation. The white phosphorus is then oxidised to phosphoric acid and subsequently neutralised with a base to give phosphate salts. The thermal process is conducted in a submerged-arc furnace which is energy intensive.[67] Presently, about 1,000,000 short tons (910,000 t) of elemental phosphorus is produced annually. Calcium phosphate (as phosphate rock), mostly mined in Florida and North Africa, can be heated to 1,200–1,500 °C with sand, which is mostly SiO
2
, and coke to produce P
4
. The P
4
product, being volatile, is readily isolated:[69]

4 Ca5(PO4)3F + 18 SiO2 + 30 C → 3 P4 + 30 CO + 18 CaSiO3 + 2 CaF2
2 Ca3(PO4)2 + 6 SiO2 + 10 C → 6 CaSiO3 + 10 CO + P4

Side products from the thermal process include ferrophosphorus, a crude form of Fe2P, resulting from iron impurities in the mineral precursors. The silicate slag is a useful construction material. The fluoride is sometimes recovered for use in water fluoridation. More problematic is a "mud" containing significant amounts of white phosphorus. Production of white phosphorus is conducted in large facilities in part because it is energy intensive. The white phosphorus is transported in molten form. Some major accidents have occurred during transportation.[70]

Historical routes edit

Historically, before the development of mineral-based extractions, white phosphorus was isolated on an industrial scale from bone ash.[71] In this process, the tricalcium phosphate in bone ash is converted to monocalcium phosphate with sulfuric acid:

Ca3(PO4)2 + 2 H2SO4 → Ca(H2PO4)2 + 2 CaSO4

Monocalcium phosphate is then dehydrated to the corresponding metaphosphate:

Ca(H2PO4)2 → Ca(PO3)2 + 2 H2O

When ignited to a white heat (~1300 °C) with charcoal, calcium metaphosphate yields two-thirds of its weight of white phosphorus while one-third of the phosphorus remains in the residue as calcium orthophosphate:

3 Ca(PO3)2 + 10 C → Ca3(PO4)2 + 10 CO + P4

Peak phosphorus edit

 
Annual global phosphate rock production (megatonnes per yr), 1994–2022 (data from US Geological Survey)[72]

Peak phosphorus is a concept to describe the point in time when humanity reaches the maximum global production rate of phosphorus as an industrial and commercial raw material. The term is used in an equivalent way to the better-known term peak oil.[73] The issue was raised as a debate on whether phosphorus shortages might be imminent around 2010, which was largely dismissed after USGS and other organizations[74] increased world estimates on available phosphorus resources, mostly in the form of additional resources in Morocco. However, exact reserve quantities remain uncertain, as do the possible impacts of increased phosphate use on future generations.[75] This is important because rock phosphate is a key ingredient in many inorganic fertilizers. Hence, a shortage in rock phosphate (or just significant price increases) might negatively affect the world's food security.[76]

Phosphorus is a finite (limited) resource that is widespread in the Earth's crust and in living organisms but is relatively scarce in concentrated forms, which are not evenly distributed across the Earth. The only cost-effective production method to date is the mining of phosphate rock, but only a few countries have significant commercial reserves. The top five are Morocco (including reserves located in Western Sahara), China, Egypt, Algeria and Syria.[77] Estimates for future production vary significantly depending on modelling and assumptions on extractable volumes, but it is inescapable that future production of phosphate rock will be heavily influenced by Morocco in the foreseeable future.[78]

Means of commercial phosphorus production besides mining are few because the phosphorus cycle does not include significant gas-phase transport.[79] The predominant source of phosphorus in modern times is phosphate rock (as opposed to the guano that preceded it). According to some researchers, Earth's commercial and affordable phosphorus reserves are expected to be depleted in 50–100 years and peak phosphorus to be reached in approximately 2030.[73][65] Others suggest that supplies will last for several hundreds of years.[80] As with the timing of peak oil, the question is not settled, and researchers in different fields regularly publish different estimates of the rock phosphate reserves.[81]

Background edit

 
Phosphate rock mined in the United States, 1900-2015 (data from US Geological Survey)

The peak phosphorus concept is connected with the concept of planetary boundaries. Phosphorus, as part of biogeochemical processes, belongs to one of the nine "Earth system processes" which are known to have boundaries. As long as the boundaries are not crossed, they mark the "safe zone" for the planet.[82]

Estimates of world phosphate reserves edit

 
Global distribution of commercial reserves of rock phosphate in 2016[83]

The accurate determination of peak phosphorus is dependent on knowing the total world's commercial phosphate reserves and resources, especially in the form of phosphate rock (a summarizing term for over 300 ores of different origin, composition, and phosphate content). "Reserves" refers to the amount assumed recoverable at current market prices and "resources" refers to estimated amounts of such a grade or quality that they have reasonable prospects for economic extraction.[84][85]

Unprocessed phosphate rock has a concentration of 1.7-8.7% phosphorus by mass (4-20% phosphorus pentoxide). By comparison, the Earth's crust contains 0.1% phosphorus by mass,[86] and vegetation 0.03% to 0.2%.[87] Although quadrillions of tons of phosphorus exist in the Earth's crust,[88] these are currently not economically extractable.

In 2023, the United States Geological Survey (USGS) estimated that economically extractable phosphate rock reserves worldwide are 72 billion tons, while world mining production in 2022 was 220 million tons.[77] Assuming zero growth, the reserves would thus last for around 300 years. This broadly confirms a 2010 International Fertilizer Development Center (IFDC) report that global reserves would last for several hundred years.[80][74] Phosphorus reserve figures are intensely debated.[84][89][90] Gilbert suggest that there has been little external verification of the estimate.[91] A 2014 review[81] concluded that the IFDC report "presents an inflated picture of global reserves, in particular those of Morocco, where largely hypothetical and inferred resources have simply been relabeled “reserves".

The countries with most phosphate rock commercial reserves (in billion metric tons): Morocco 50, China 3.2, Egypt 2.8, Algeria 2.2, Syria 1.8, Brazil 1.6, Saudi Arabia 1.4, South Africa 1.4, Australia 1.1, United States 1.0, Finland 1.0, Russia 0.6, Jordan 0.8.[92][77]

Rock phosphate shortages (or just significant price increases) might negatively affect the world's food security.[76] Many agricultural systems depend on supplies of inorganic fertilizer, which use rock phosphate. Under the food production regime in developed countries, shortages of rock phosphate could lead to shortages of inorganic fertilizer, which could in turn reduce the global food production.[93]

Economists have pointed out that price fluctuations of rock phosphate do not necessarily indicate peak phosphorus, as these have already occurred due to various demand- and supply-side factors.[94]

United States edit

US production of phosphate rock peaked in 1980 at 54.4 million metric tons. The United States was the world's largest producer of phosphate rock from at least 1900, up until 2006, when US production was exceeded by that of China. In 2019, the US produced 10 percent of the world's phosphate rock.[95]

Exhaustion of guano reserves edit

In 1609 Garcilaso de la Vega wrote the book Comentarios Reales in which he described many of the agricultural practices of the Incas prior to the arrival of the Spaniards and introduced the use of guano as a fertilizer. As Garcilaso described, the Incas near the coast harvested guano.[96] In the early 1800s Alexander von Humboldt introduced guano as a source of agricultural fertilizer to Europe after having discovered it on islands off the coast of South America. It has been reported that, at the time of its discovery, the guano on some islands was over 30 meters deep.[97] The guano had previously been used by the Moche people as a source of fertilizer by mining it and transporting it back to Peru by boat. International commerce in guano did not start until after 1840.[97] By the start of the 20th century guano had been nearly completely depleted and was eventually overtaken with the discovery of methods of production of superphosphate.

Phosphorus conservation and recycling edit

 
Phosphate mine on Nauru, once one of the world's major sources of phosphate rock.
Overview edit

Phosphorus can be transferred from the soil in one location to another as food is transported across the world, taking the phosphorus it contains with it. Once consumed by humans, it can end up in the local environment (in the case of open defecation which is still widespread on a global scale) or in rivers or the ocean via sewage systems and sewage treatment plants in the case of cities connected to sewer systems. An example of one crop that takes up large amounts of phosphorus is soy.

In an effort to postpone the onset of peak phosphorus several methods of reducing and reusing phosphorus are in practice, such as in agriculture and in sanitation systems. The Soil Association, the UK organic agriculture certification and pressure group, issued a report in 2010 "A Rock and a Hard Place" encouraging more recycling of phosphorus.[98] One potential solution to the shortage of phosphorus is greater recycling of human and animal wastes back into the environment.[99]

Agricultural practices edit

Reducing agricultural runoff and soil erosion can slow the frequency with which farmers have to reapply phosphorus to their fields. Agricultural methods such as no-till farming, terracing, contour tilling, and the use of windbreaks have been shown to reduce the rate of phosphorus depletion from farmland. These methods are still dependent on a periodic application of phosphate rock to the soil and as such methods to recycle the lost phosphorus have also been proposed. Perennial vegetation, such as grassland or forest, is much more efficient in its use of phosphate than arable land. Strips of grassland and/or forest between arable land and rivers can greatly reduce losses of phosphate and other nutrients.[100]

Integrated farming systems which use animal sources to supply phosphorus for crops do exist at smaller scales, and application of the system to a larger scale is a potential alternative for supplying the nutrient, although it would require significant changes to the widely adopted modern crop fertilizing methods.

Excreta reuse edit

The oldest method of recycling phosphorus is through the reuse of animal manure and human excreta in agriculture. Via this method, phosphorus in the foods consumed are excreted, and the animal or human excreta are subsequently collected and re-applied to the fields. Although this method has maintained civilizations for centuries the current system of manure management is not logistically geared towards application to crop fields on a large scale. At present, manure application could not meet the phosphorus needs of large scale agriculture. Despite that, it is still an efficient method of recycling used phosphorus and returning it to the soil.

Sewage sludge edit

Sewage treatment plants that have an enhanced biological phosphorus removal step produce a sewage sludge that is rich in phosphorus. Various processes have been developed to extract phosphorus from sewage sludge directly, from the ash after incineration of the sewage sludge or from other products of sewage sludge treatment. This includes the extraction of phosphorus rich materials such as struvite from waste processing plants.[91] The struvite can be made by adding magnesium to the waste. Some companies such as Ostara in Canada and NuReSys in Belgium are already using this technique to recover phosphate. Ostara has eight operating plants worldwide.[citation needed]

Research on phosphorus recovery methods from sewage sludge has been carried out in Sweden and Germany since around 2003, but the technologies currently under development are not yet cost effective, given the current price of phosphorus on the world market.[101][102]

Applications edit

Flame retardant edit

Phosphorus compounds are used as flame retardants. Flame-retardant materials and coatings are being developed that are both phosphorus- and bio-based.[103]

Food additive edit

Phosphorus is an essential mineral for humans listed in the Dietary Reference Intake (DRI).

Food-grade phosphoric acid (additive E338[104]) is used to acidify foods and beverages such as various colas and jams, providing a tangy or sour taste. The phosphoric acid also serves as a preservative.[105] Soft drinks containing phosphoric acid, including Coca-Cola, are sometimes called phosphate sodas or phosphates. Phosphoric acid in soft drinks has the potential to cause dental erosion.[106] Phosphoric acid also has the potential to contribute to the formation of kidney stones, especially in those who have had kidney stones previously.[107]

Fertiliser edit

Phosphorus is an essential plant nutrient (the most often limiting nutrient, after nitrogen),[108] and the bulk of all phosphorus production is in concentrated phosphoric acids for agriculture fertilisers, containing as much as 70% to 75% P2O5. That led to large increase in phosphate (PO43−) production in the second half of the 20th century.[40] Artificial phosphate fertilisation is necessary because phosphorus is essential to all living organisms; it is involved in energy transfers, strength of root and stems, photosynthesis, the expansion of plant roots, formation of seeds and flowers, and other important factors effecting overall plant health and genetics.[108] Heavy use of phosphorus fertilizers and their runoff have resulted in eutrophication (overenrichment) of aquatic ecosystems.[109][110]

Natural phosphorus-bearing compounds are mostly inaccessible to plants because of the low solubility and mobility in soil.[111] Most phosphorus is very stable in the soil minerals or organic matter of the soil. Even when phosphorus is added in manure or fertilizer it can become fixed in the soil. Therefore, the natural phosphorus cycle is very slow. Some of the fixed phosphorus is released again over time, sustaining wild plant growth, however, more is needed to sustain intensive cultivation of crops.[112] Fertiliser is often in the form of superphosphate of lime, a mixture of calcium dihydrogen phosphate (Ca(H2PO4)2), and calcium sulfate dihydrate (CaSO4·2H2O) produced reacting sulfuric acid and water with calcium phosphate.

Processing phosphate minerals with sulfuric acid for obtaining fertiliser is so important to the global economy that this is the primary industrial market for sulfuric acid and the greatest industrial use of elemental sulfur.[113]

Widely used compounds Use
Ca(H2PO4)2·H2O Baking powder and fertilisers
CaHPO4·2H2O Animal food additive, toothpowder
H3PO4 Manufacture of phosphate fertilisers
PCl3 Manufacture of POCl3 and pesticides
POCl3 Manufacture of plasticiser
P4S10 Manufacturing of additives and pesticides
Na5P3O10 Detergents

Organophosphorus edit

White phosphorus is widely used to make organophosphorus compounds through intermediate phosphorus chlorides and two phosphorus sulfides, phosphorus pentasulfide and phosphorus sesquisulfide.[114] Organophosphorus compounds have many applications, including in plasticisers, flame retardants, pesticides, extraction agents, nerve agents and water treatment.[16][115]

Metallurgical aspects edit

Phosphorus is also an important component in steel production, in the making of phosphor bronze, and in many other related products.[116][117] Phosphorus is added to metallic copper during its smelting process to react with oxygen present as an impurity in copper and to produce phosphorus-containing copper (CuOFP) alloys with a higher hydrogen embrittlement resistance than normal copper.[118]Phosphate conversion coating is a chemical treatment applied to steel parts to improve their corrosion resistance.

Matches edit

 
Match striking surface made of a mixture of red phosphorus, glue and ground glass. The glass powder is used to increase the friction.

The first striking match with a phosphorus head was invented by Charles Sauria in 1830. These matches (and subsequent modifications) were made with heads of white phosphorus, an oxygen-releasing compound (potassium chlorate, lead dioxide, or sometimes nitrate), and a binder. They were poisonous to the workers in manufacture,[119] sensitive to storage conditions, toxic if ingested, and hazardous when accidentally ignited on a rough surface.[120][121] Production in several countries was banned between 1872 and 1925.[122] The international Berne Convention, ratified in 1906, prohibited the use of white phosphorus in matches.

In consequence, phosphorous matches were gradually replaced by safer alternatives. Around 1900 French chemists Henri Sévène and Emile David Cahen invented the modern strike-anywhere match, wherein the white phosphorus was replaced by phosphorus sesquisulfide (P4S3), a non-toxic and non-pyrophoric compound that ignites under friction. For a time these safer strike-anywhere matches were quite popular but in the long run they were superseded by the modern safety match.

Safety matches are very difficult to ignite on any surface other than a special striker strip. The strip contains non-toxic red phosphorus and the match head potassium chlorate, an oxygen-releasing compound. When struck, small amounts of abrasion from match head and striker strip are mixed intimately to make a small quantity of Armstrong's mixture, a very touch sensitive composition. The fine powder ignites immediately and provides the initial spark to set off the match head. Safety matches separate the two components of the ignition mixture until the match is struck. This is the key safety advantage as it prevents accidental ignition. Nonetheless, safety matches, invented in 1844 by Gustaf Erik Pasch and market ready by the 1860s, did not gain consumer acceptance until the prohibition of white phosphorus. Using a dedicated striker strip was considered clumsy.[21][114][123]

Water softening edit

Sodium tripolyphosphate made from phosphoric acid is used in laundry detergents in some countries, but banned for this use in others.[23] This compound softens the water to enhance the performance of the detergents and to prevent pipe/boiler tube corrosion.[124]

Miscellaneous edit

Biological role edit

Inorganic phosphorus in the form of the phosphate PO3−
4
is required for all known forms of life.[127] Phosphorus plays a major role in the structural framework of DNA and RNA. Living cells use phosphate to transport cellular energy with adenosine triphosphate (ATP), necessary for every cellular process that uses energy. ATP is also important for phosphorylation, a key regulatory event in cells. Phospholipids are the main structural components of all cellular membranes. Calcium phosphate salts assist in stiffening bones.[16] Biochemists commonly use the abbreviation "Pi" to refer to inorganic phosphate.[128]

Every living cell is encased in a membrane that separates it from its surroundings. Cellular membranes are composed of a phospholipid matrix and proteins, typically in the form of a bilayer. Phospholipids are derived from glycerol with two of the glycerol hydroxyl (OH) protons replaced by fatty acids as an ester, and the third hydroxyl proton has been replaced with phosphate bonded to another alcohol.[129]

An average adult human contains about 0.7 kg of phosphorus, about 85–90% in bones and teeth in the form of apatite, and the remainder in soft tissues and extracellular fluids. The phosphorus content increases from about 0.5% by mass in infancy to 0.65–1.1% by mass in adults. Average phosphorus concentration in the blood is about 0.4 g/L; about 70% of that is organic and 30% inorganic phosphates.[130] An adult with healthy diet consumes and excretes about 1–3 grams of phosphorus per day, with consumption in the form of inorganic phosphate and phosphorus-containing biomolecules such as nucleic acids and phospholipids; and excretion almost exclusively in the form of phosphate ions such as H
2
PO
4
and HPO2−
4
. Only about 0.1% of body phosphate circulates in the blood, paralleling the amount of phosphate available to soft tissue cells.

Bone and teeth enamel edit

The main component of bone is hydroxyapatite as well as amorphous forms of calcium phosphate, possibly including carbonate. Hydroxyapatite is the main component of tooth enamel. Water fluoridation enhances the resistance of teeth to decay by the partial conversion of this mineral to the still harder material fluorapatite:[16]

Ca
5
(PO
4
)
3
OH
+ F
Ca
5
(PO
4
)
3
F
+ OH

Phosphorus deficiency edit

In medicine, phosphate deficiency syndrome may be caused by malnutrition, by failure to absorb phosphate, and by metabolic syndromes that draw phosphate from the blood (such as in refeeding syndrome after malnutrition[131]) or passing too much of it into the urine. All are characterised by hypophosphatemia, which is a condition of low levels of soluble phosphate levels in the blood serum and inside the cells. Symptoms of hypophosphatemia include neurological dysfunction and disruption of muscle and blood cells due to lack of ATP. Too much phosphate can lead to diarrhoea and calcification (hardening) of organs and soft tissue, and can interfere with the body's ability to use iron, calcium, magnesium, and zinc.[132]

Phosphorus is an essential macromineral for plants, which is studied extensively in edaphology to understand plant uptake from soil systems. Phosphorus is a limiting factor in many ecosystems; that is, the scarcity of phosphorus limits the rate of organism growth. An excess of phosphorus can also be problematic, especially in aquatic systems where eutrophication sometimes leads to algal blooms.[40]

Nutrition edit

Dietary recommendations edit

The U.S. Institute of Medicine (IOM) updated Estimated Average Requirements (EARs) and Recommended Dietary Allowances (RDAs) for phosphorus in 1997. If there is not sufficient information to establish EARs and RDAs, an estimate designated Adequate Intake (AI) is used instead. The current EAR for phosphorus for people ages 19 and up is 580 mg/day. The RDA is 700 mg/day. RDAs are higher than EARs so as to identify amounts that will cover people with higher than average requirements. RDA for pregnancy and lactation are also 700 mg/day. For people ages 1–18 years the RDA increases with age from 460 to 1250 mg/day. As for safety, the IOM sets Tolerable upper intake levels (ULs) for vitamins and minerals when evidence is sufficient. In the case of phosphorus the UL is 4000 mg/day. Collectively the EARs, RDAs, AIs and ULs are referred to as Dietary Reference Intakes (DRIs).[133]

The European Food Safety Authority (EFSA) refers to the collective set of information as Dietary Reference Values, with Population Reference Intake (PRI) instead of RDA, and Average Requirement instead of EAR. AI and UL are defined the same as in the United States. For people ages 15 and older, including pregnancy and lactation, the AI is set at 550 mg/day. For children ages 4–10 the AI is 440 mg/day, and for ages 11–17 it is 640 mg/day. These AIs are lower than the U.S. RDAs. In both systems, teenagers need more than adults.[134] The European Food Safety Authority reviewed the same safety question and decided that there was not sufficient information to set a UL.[135]

For U.S. food and dietary supplement labeling purposes the amount in a serving is expressed as a percent of Daily Value (%DV). For phosphorus labeling purposes 100% of the Daily Value was 1000 mg, but as of May 27, 2016, it was revised to 1250 mg to bring it into agreement with the RDA.[136][137] A table of the old and new adult daily values is provided at Reference Daily Intake.

Food sources edit

The main food sources for phosphorus are the same as those containing protein, although proteins do not contain phosphorus. For example, milk, meat, and soya typically also have phosphorus. As a rule, if a diet has sufficient protein and calcium, the amount of phosphorus is probably sufficient.[138]

Precautions edit

 
Phosphorus explosion

Organic compounds of phosphorus form a wide class of materials; many are required for life, but some are extremely toxic. Fluorophosphate esters are among the most potent neurotoxins known. A wide range of organophosphorus compounds are used for their toxicity as pesticides (herbicides, insecticides, fungicides, etc.) and weaponised as nerve agents against enemy humans. Most inorganic phosphates are relatively nontoxic and essential nutrients.[16]

The white phosphorus allotrope presents a significant hazard because it ignites in the air and produces phosphoric acid residue. Chronic white phosphorus poisoning leads to necrosis of the jaw called "phossy jaw". White phosphorus is toxic, causing severe liver damage on ingestion and may cause a condition known as "Smoking Stool Syndrome".[139]

In the past, external exposure to elemental phosphorus was treated by washing the affected area with 2% copper(II) sulfate solution to form harmless compounds that are then washed away. According to the recent US Navy's Treatment of Chemical Agent Casualties and Conventional Military Chemical Injuries: FM8-285: Part 2 Conventional Military Chemical Injuries, "Cupric (copper(II)) sulfate has been used by U.S. personnel in the past and is still being used by some nations. However, copper sulfate is toxic and its use will be discontinued. Copper sulfate may produce kidney and cerebral toxicity as well as intravascular hemolysis."[140]

The manual suggests instead "a bicarbonate solution to neutralise phosphoric acid, which will then allow removal of visible white phosphorus. Particles often can be located by their emission of smoke when air strikes them, or by their phosphorescence in the dark. In dark surroundings, fragments are seen as luminescent spots. Promptly debride the burn if the patient's condition will permit removal of bits of WP (white phosphorus) that might be absorbed later and possibly produce systemic poisoning. DO NOT apply oily-based ointments until it is certain that all WP has been removed. Following complete removal of the particles, treat the lesions as thermal burns."[note 1][citation needed] As white phosphorus readily mixes with oils, any oily substances or ointments are not recommended until the area is thoroughly cleaned and all white phosphorus removed.

People can be exposed to phosphorus in the workplace by inhalation, ingestion, skin contact, and eye contact. The Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) has set the phosphorus exposure limit (Permissible exposure limit) in the workplace at 0.1 mg/m3 over an 8-hour workday. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH) has set a Recommended exposure limit (REL) of 0.1 mg/m3 over an 8-hour workday. At levels of 5 mg/m3, phosphorus is immediately dangerous to life and health.[141]

US DEA List I status edit

Phosphorus can reduce elemental iodine to hydroiodic acid, which is a reagent effective for reducing ephedrine or pseudoephedrine to methamphetamine.[142] For this reason, red and white phosphorus were designated by the United States Drug Enforcement Administration as List I precursor chemicals under 21 CFR 1310.02 effective on November 17, 2001.[143] In the United States, handlers of red or white phosphorus are subject to stringent regulatory controls.[143][144][145]

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ WP, (white phosphorus), exhibits chemoluminescence upon exposure to air and if there is any WP in the wound, covered by tissue or fluids such as blood serum, it will not glow until it is exposed to air, which requires a very dark room and dark-adapted eyes to see clearly

Bibliography edit

References edit

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General sources edit

  • Beatty, Richard (2000). Phosphorus. Marshall Cavendish. ISBN 0-7614-0946-7.
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  • Cordell, Dana & Stuart White 2011. Review: Peak Phosphorus: Clarifying the Key Issues of a Vigorous Debate about Long-Term Phosphorus Security. Sustainability 2011, 3(10), 2027-2049; doi:10.3390/su3102027, http://www.mdpi.com/2071-1050/3/10/2027/htm
  • Diskowski, Herbert; Hofmann, Thomas. "Phosphorus". Ullmann's Encyclopedia of Industrial Chemistry. Weinheim: Wiley-VCH. doi:10.1002/14356007.a19_505. ISBN 978-3527306732.
  • Emsley, John (2000). The Shocking history of Phosphorus: A biography of the Devil's Element. London: MacMillan. ISBN 0-333-76638-5.
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  • Parkes, G. D.; Mellor, J. W. (1939). Mellor's Modern Inorganic Chemistry. Longman's Green and Co.
  • Ruttenberg, K. C. Phosphorus Cycle – Terrestrial Phosphorus Cycle, Transport of Phosphorus, from Continents to the Ocean, The Marine Phosphorus Cycle. Archived 2011-07-13 at archive.today.
  • Sommers, Michael A. (2007-08-15). Phosphorus. Rosen Group. ISBN 978-1-4042-1960-1.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: date and year (link)
  • Schrödter, Klaus; Bettermann, Gerhard; Staffel, Thomas; Wahl, Friedrich; Klein, Thomas; Hofmann, Thomas. "Phosphoric Acid and Phosphates". Ullmann's Encyclopedia of Industrial Chemistry. Weinheim: Wiley-VCH. doi:10.1002/14356007.a19_465.pub3. ISBN 978-3527306732.
  • Threlfall, Richard E. (1951). The Story of 100 years of Phosphorus Making: 1851–1951. Oldbury: Albright & Wilson Ltd.
  • Toy, Arthur D. F. (1975). The Chemistry of Phosphorus. Texts in Inorganic Chemistry. Vol. 3. Pergamon. ISBN 978-1-4831-4741-3. Retrieved 2013-10-22.

Further reading edit

  • Podger, Hugh (2002). Albright & Wilson. The Last 50 years. Studley: Brewin Books. ISBN 1-85858-223-7.
  • Kolbert, Elizabeth, "Elemental Need: Phosphorus helped save our way of life – and now threatens to end it", The New Yorker, 6 March 2023, pp. 24–27. "[T]he world's phosphorus problem [arising from the element's exorbitant use in agriculture] resembles its carbon-dioxide problem, its plastics problem, its groundwater-use problem, its soil-erosion problem, and its nitrogen problem. The path humanity is on may lead to ruin, but, as of yet, no one has found a workable way back." (p. 27.)

phosphorus, this, article, about, chemical, element, other, uses, disambiguation, chemical, element, symbol, atomic, number, elemental, phosphorus, exists, major, forms, white, phosphorus, phosphorus, because, highly, reactive, phosphorus, never, found, free, . This article is about the chemical element For other uses see Phosphorus disambiguation Phosphorus is a chemical element it has symbol P and atomic number 15 Elemental phosphorus exists in two major forms white phosphorus and red phosphorus but because it is highly reactive phosphorus is never found as a free element on Earth It has a concentration in the Earth s crust of about one gram per kilogram compare copper at about 0 06 grams In minerals phosphorus generally occurs as phosphate Phosphorus 15PForms of phosphorusWaxy whiteLight redDark red and violetBlackPhosphorusPronunciation ˈ f ɒ s f er e s wbr FOS fer es Allotropeswhite red violet black and others see Allotropes of phosphorus Appearancewhite red and violet are waxy black is metallic lookingStandard atomic weight Ar P 30 973761 998 0 000000 005 1 30 974 0 001 abridged 2 Abundancein the Earth s crust5 2 silicon 100 Phosphorus in the periodic tableHydrogen HeliumLithium Beryllium Boron Carbon Nitrogen Oxygen Fluorine NeonSodium Magnesium Aluminium Silicon Phosphorus Sulfur Chlorine ArgonPotassium Calcium Scandium Titanium Vanadium Chromium Manganese Iron Cobalt Nickel Copper Zinc Gallium Germanium Arsenic Selenium Bromine KryptonRubidium Strontium Yttrium Zirconium Niobium Molybdenum Technetium Ruthenium Rhodium Palladium Silver Cadmium Indium Tin Antimony Tellurium Iodine XenonCaesium Barium Lanthanum Cerium Praseodymium Neodymium Promethium Samarium Europium Gadolinium Terbium Dysprosium Holmium Erbium Thulium Ytterbium Lutetium Hafnium Tantalum Tungsten Rhenium Osmium Iridium Platinum Gold Mercury element Thallium Lead Bismuth Polonium Astatine RadonFrancium Radium Actinium Thorium Protactinium Uranium Neptunium Plutonium Americium Curium Berkelium Californium Einsteinium Fermium Mendelevium Nobelium Lawrencium Rutherfordium Dubnium Seaborgium Bohrium Hassium Meitnerium Darmstadtium Roentgenium Copernicium Nihonium Flerovium Moscovium Livermorium Tennessine Oganesson N P Assilicon phosphorus sulfurAtomic number Z 15Groupgroup 15 pnictogens Periodperiod 3Block p blockElectron configuration Ne 3s2 3p3Electrons per shell2 8 5Physical propertiesPhase at STPsolidMelting pointwhite 317 3 K 44 15 C 111 5 F red 860 K 590 C 1090 F 3 Boiling pointwhite 553 7 K 280 5 C 536 9 F Sublimation pointred 689 2 863 K 416 590 C 780 8 1094 F violet 893 K 620 C 1148 F Density near r t white 1 823 g cm3red 2 2 2 34 g cm3 violet 2 36 g cm3 black 2 69 g cm3Heat of fusionwhite 0 66 kJ molHeat of vaporisationwhite 51 9 kJ molMolar heat capacitywhite 23 824 J mol K Vapour pressure white P Pa 1 10 100 1 k 10 k 100 kat T K 279 307 342 388 453 549Vapour pressure red P Pa 1 10 100 1 k 10 k 100 kat T K 455 489 529 576 635 704Atomic propertiesOxidation states 3 2 1 0 4 1 5 2 3 4 5 a mildly acidic oxide ElectronegativityPauling scale 2 19Ionisation energies1st 1011 8 kJ mol2nd 1907 kJ mol3rd 2914 1 kJ mol more Covalent radius107 3 pmVan der Waals radius180 pmSpectral lines of phosphorusOther propertiesNatural occurrenceprimordialCrystal structurea white body centred cubic bcc cI232 Lattice constanta 1 869 nm at 20 C 6 Crystal structureblack orthorhombic oS8 Lattice constantsa 0 33137 nmb 1 0477 nmc 0 43755 nm at 20 C 6 Thermal conductivitywhite 0 236 W m K black 12 1 W m K Magnetic orderingwhite red violet black diamagnetic 7 Molar magnetic susceptibility 20 8 10 6 cm3 mol 293 K 8 Bulk moduluswhite 5 GPared 11 GPaCAS Number7723 14 0 red 12185 10 3 white HistoryDiscoveryHennig Brand 1669 Recognised as an element byAntoine Lavoisier 9 1777 Isotopes of phosphorusveMain isotopes Decayabun dance half life t1 2 mode pro duct31P 100 stable32P trace 14 269 d b 32S33P trace 25 35 d b 33S Category Phosphorusviewtalkedit referencesElemental phosphorus was first isolated as white phosphorus in 1669 In white phosphorus phosphorus atoms are arranged in groups of 4 written as P4 White phosphorus emits a faint glow when exposed to oxygen hence a name taken from Greek mythology Fwsforos meaning light bearer Latin Lucifer referring to the Morning Star the planet Venus The term phosphorescence meaning glow after illumination derives from this property of phosphorus although the word has since been used for a different physical process that produces a glow The glow of phosphorus is caused by oxidation of the white but not red phosphorus a process now called chemiluminescence Phosphorus is classified as a pnictogen together with nitrogen arsenic antimony bismuth and moscovium Phosphorus is an element essential to sustaining life largely through phosphates compounds containing the phosphate ion PO43 Phosphates are a component of DNA RNA ATP and phospholipids complex compounds fundamental to cells Elemental phosphorus was first isolated from human urine and bone ash was an important early phosphate source Phosphate mines contain fossils because phosphate is present in the fossilized deposits of animal remains and excreta Low phosphate levels are an important limit to growth in a number of plant ecosystems The vast majority of phosphorus compounds mined are consumed as fertilisers Phosphate is needed to replace the phosphorus that plants remove from the soil and its annual demand is rising nearly twice as fast as the growth of the human population Other applications include organophosphorus compounds in detergents pesticides and nerve agents Contents 1 Characteristics 1 1 Allotropes 1 2 Chemiluminescence 1 3 Isotopes 2 Occurrence 2 1 Universe 2 2 Crust and organic sources 3 Compounds 3 1 Phosphorus V 3 2 Phosphorus III 3 3 Phosphorus I and phosphorus II 3 4 Phosphides and phosphines 3 5 Oxoacids 3 6 Nitrides 3 7 Sulfides 3 8 Organophosphorus compounds 4 History 4 1 Etymology 4 2 Discovery 4 3 Bone ash and guano 4 4 Phosphate rock 4 5 Incendiaries 5 Production 5 1 Wet process 5 2 Thermal process 5 3 Historical routes 5 4 Peak phosphorus 5 4 1 Background 5 4 2 Estimates of world phosphate reserves 5 4 2 1 United States 5 4 2 2 Exhaustion of guano reserves 5 4 3 Phosphorus conservation and recycling 5 4 3 1 Overview 5 4 3 2 Agricultural practices 5 4 3 3 Excreta reuse 5 4 3 4 Sewage sludge 6 Applications 6 1 Flame retardant 6 2 Food additive 6 3 Fertiliser 6 4 Organophosphorus 6 5 Metallurgical aspects 6 6 Matches 6 7 Water softening 6 8 Miscellaneous 7 Biological role 7 1 Bone and teeth enamel 7 2 Phosphorus deficiency 7 3 Nutrition 7 3 1 Dietary recommendations 7 3 2 Food sources 8 Precautions 8 1 US DEA List I status 9 See also 10 Notes 11 Bibliography 11 1 References 11 2 General sources 11 3 Further readingCharacteristics editAllotropes edit Main article Allotropes of phosphorus Phosphorus has several allotropes that exhibit strikingly diverse properties 10 The two most common allotropes are white phosphorus and red phosphorus 11 For both pure and applied uses the most important allotrope white phosphorus often abbreviated WP White phosphorus is a soft waxy molecular solid composed of P4 tetrahedra This P4 tetrahedron is also present in liquid and gaseous phosphorus up to the temperature of 800 C 1 500 F 1 100 K when it starts decomposing to P2 molecules 12 The nature of bonding in this P4 tetrahedron can be described by spherical aromaticity or cluster bonding that is the electrons are highly delocalized This has been illustrated by calculations of the magnetically induced currents which sum up to 29 nA T much more than in the archetypical aromatic molecule benzene 11 nA T 13 Crystalline structures of some phosphorus allotropes nbsp White nbsp Red nbsp Violet nbsp Black White phosphorus exists in two crystalline forms a alpha and b beta At room temperature the a form is stable It is more common has cubic crystal structure and at 195 2 K 78 0 C it transforms into b form which has hexagonal crystal structure These forms differ in terms of the relative orientations of the constituent P4 tetrahedra 14 15 White phosphorus is the least stable the most reactive the most volatile the least dense and the most toxic of the allotropes White phosphorus gradually changes to red phosphorus accelerated by light and heat Samples of white phosphorus almost always contain some red phosphorus and accordingly appear yellow For this reason white phosphorus that is aged or otherwise impure e g weapons grade not lab grade WP is also called yellow phosphorus White phosphorus is highly flammable and pyrophoric self igniting in air it faintly glows green and blue in the dark when exposed to oxygen The autoxidation commonly coats samples with white phosphorus pentoxide P4 O10 P4 tetrahedra but with oxygen inserted between the phosphorus atoms and at the vertices White phosphorus is a napalm additive and the characteristic odour of combustion is garlicky White phosphorus is insoluble in water but soluble in carbon disulfide 16 Thermal decomposition of P4 at 1100 K gives diphosphorus P2 This species is not stable as a solid or liquid The dimeric unit contains a triple bond and is analogous to N2 It can also be generated as a transient intermediate in solution by thermolysis of organophosphorus precursor reagents 17 At still higher temperatures P2 dissociates into atomic P 16 Properties of some allotropes of phosphorus 10 18 Form white a white b red violet blackSymmetry Body centredcubic Triclinic Amorphous Monoclinic OrthorhombicPearson symbol aP24 mP84 oS8Space group I4 3m P1 No 2 P2 c No 13 Cmce No 64Density g cm3 1 828 1 88 2 2 2 36 2 69Band gap eV 2 1 1 8 1 5 0 34Refractive index 1 8244 2 6 2 4Red phosphorus is polymeric in structure It can be viewed as a derivative of P4 wherein one P P bond is broken and one additional bond is formed with the neighbouring tetrahedron resulting in chains of P21 molecules linked by van der Waals forces 19 Red phosphorus may be formed by heating white phosphorus to 250 C 482 F or by exposing white phosphorus to sunlight 20 Phosphorus after this treatment is amorphous Upon further heating this material crystallises In this sense red phosphorus is not an allotrope but rather an intermediate phase between the white and violet phosphorus and most of its properties have a range of values For example freshly prepared bright red phosphorus is highly reactive and ignites at about 300 C 572 F 21 though it is more stable than white phosphorus which ignites at about 30 C 86 F 22 After prolonged heating or storage the color darkens see infobox images the resulting product is more stable and does not spontaneously ignite in air 23 Violet phosphorus is a form of phosphorus that can be produced by day long annealing of red phosphorus above 550 C In 1865 Hittorf discovered that when phosphorus was recrystallised from molten lead a red purple form is obtained Therefore this form is sometimes known as Hittorf s phosphorus or violet or a metallic phosphorus 18 Black phosphorus is the least reactive allotrope and the thermodynamically stable form below 550 C 1 022 F It is also known as b metallic phosphorus and has a structure somewhat resembling that of graphite 24 25 It is obtained by heating white phosphorus under high pressures about 12 000 standard atmospheres or 1 2 gigapascals It can also be produced at ambient conditions using metal salts e g mercury as catalysts 26 In appearance properties and structure it resembles graphite being black and flaky a conductor of electricity and has puckered sheets of linked atoms 27 Another form scarlet phosphorus is obtained by allowing a solution of white phosphorus in carbon disulfide to evaporate in sunlight 18 Chemiluminescence edit nbsp White phosphorus exposed to air glows in the dark When first isolated it was observed that the green glow emanating from white phosphorus would persist for a time in a stoppered jar but then cease Robert Boyle in the 1680s ascribed it to debilitation of the air Actually it is oxygen being consumed By the 18th century it was known that in pure oxygen phosphorus does not glow at all 28 there is only a range of partial pressures at which it does Heat can be applied to drive the reaction at higher pressures 29 In 1974 the glow was explained by R J van Zee and A U Khan 30 31 A reaction with oxygen takes place at the surface of the solid or liquid phosphorus forming the short lived molecules HPO and P2 O2 that both emit visible light The reaction is slow and only very little of the intermediates are required to produce the luminescence hence the extended time the glow continues in a stoppered jar Since its discovery phosphors and phosphorescence were used loosely to describe substances that shine in the dark without burning Although the term phosphorescence is derived from phosphorus the reaction that gives phosphorus its glow is properly called chemiluminescence glowing due to a cold chemical reaction not phosphorescence re emitting light that previously fell onto a substance and excited it 32 Isotopes edit Main article Isotopes of phosphorus There are 22 known isotopes of phosphorus 33 ranging from 26 P to 47 P 34 Only 31 P is stable and is therefore present at 100 abundance The half integer nuclear spin and high abundance of 31P make phosphorus 31 NMR spectroscopy a very useful analytical tool in studies of phosphorus containing samples Two radioactive isotopes of phosphorus have half lives suitable for biological scientific experiments These are 32 P a beta emitter 1 71 MeV with a half life of 14 3 days which is used routinely in life science laboratories primarily to produce radiolabeled DNA and RNA probes e g for use in Northern blots or Southern blots 33 P a beta emitter 0 25 MeV with a half life of 25 4 days It is used in life science laboratories in applications in which lower energy beta emissions are advantageous such as DNA sequencing The high energy beta particles from 32 P penetrate skin and corneas and any 32 P ingested inhaled or absorbed is readily incorporated into bone and nucleic acids For these reasons Occupational Safety and Health Administration in the United States and similar institutions in other developed countries require personnel working with 32 P to wear lab coats disposable gloves and safety glasses or goggles to protect the eyes and avoid working directly over open containers Monitoring personal clothing and surface contamination is also required Shielding requires special consideration The high energy of the beta particles gives rise to secondary emission of X rays via Bremsstrahlung braking radiation in dense shielding materials such as lead Therefore the radiation must be shielded with low density materials such as acrylic or other plastic water or when transparency is not required even wood 35 Occurrence editSee also Category Phosphate minerals Universe edit In 2013 astronomers detected phosphorus in Cassiopeia A which confirmed that this element is produced in supernovae as a byproduct of supernova nucleosynthesis The phosphorus to iron ratio in material from the supernova remnant could be up to 100 times higher than in the Milky Way in general 36 In 2020 astronomers analysed ALMA and ROSINA data from the massive star forming region AFGL 5142 to detect phosphorus bearing molecules and how they are carried in comets to the early Earth 37 38 Crust and organic sources edit Phosphorus has a concentration in the Earth s crust of about one gram per kilogram compare copper at about 0 06 grams It is not found free in nature but is widely distributed in many minerals usually as phosphates 11 Inorganic phosphate rock which is partially made of apatite a group of minerals being generally pentacalcium triorthophosphate fluoride hydroxide is today the chief commercial source of this element According to the US Geological Survey USGS about 50 percent of the global phosphorus reserves are in Amazigh nations like Morocco Algeria and Tunisia 39 85 of Earth s known reserves are in Morocco with smaller deposits in China Russia 40 Florida Idaho Tennessee Utah and elsewhere 41 Albright and Wilson in the UK and their Niagara Falls plant for instance were using phosphate rock in the 1890s and 1900s from Tennessee Florida and the Iles du Connetable guano island sources of phosphate by 1950 they were using phosphate rock mainly from Tennessee and North Africa 42 Organic sources namely urine bone ash and in the latter 19th century guano were historically of importance but had only limited commercial success 43 As urine contains phosphorus it has fertilising qualities which are still harnessed today in some countries including Sweden using methods for reuse of excreta To this end urine can be used as a fertiliser in its pure form or part of being mixed with water in the form of sewage or sewage sludge Compounds editSee also Phosphorus halides Category Phosphate minerals and Category Phosphorus compounds Phosphorus V edit nbsp The tetrahedral structure of P4O10 and P4S10The most prevalent compounds of phosphorus are derivatives of phosphate PO43 a tetrahedral anion 44 Phosphate is the conjugate base of phosphoric acid which is produced on a massive scale for use in fertilisers Being triprotic phosphoric acid converts stepwise to three conjugate bases H3PO4 H2O H3O H2PO4 Ka1 7 25 10 3H2PO4 H2O H3O HPO42 Ka2 6 31 10 8HPO42 H2O H3O PO43 Ka3 3 98 10 13Phosphate exhibits a tendency to form chains and rings containing P O P bonds Many polyphosphates are known including ATP Polyphosphates arise by dehydration of hydrogen phosphates such as HPO42 and H2PO4 For example the industrially important pentasodium triphosphate also known as sodium tripolyphosphate STPP is produced industrially by the megatonne by this condensation reaction 2 Na2HPO4 NaH2PO4 Na5P3O10 2 H2OPhosphorus pentoxide P4O10 is the acid anhydride of phosphoric acid but several intermediates between the two are known This waxy white solid reacts vigorously with water With metal cations phosphate forms a variety of salts These solids are polymeric featuring P O M linkages When the metal cation has a charge of 2 or 3 the salts are generally insoluble hence they exist as common minerals Many phosphate salts are derived from hydrogen phosphate HPO42 PCl5 and PF5 are common compounds PF5 is a colourless gas and the molecules have trigonal bipyramidal geometry PCl5 is a colourless solid which has an ionic formulation of PCl4 PCl6 but adopts the trigonal bipyramidal geometry when molten or in the vapour phase 16 PBr5 is an unstable solid formulated as PBr4 Br and PI5 is not known 16 The pentachloride and pentafluoride are Lewis acids With fluoride PF5 forms PF6 an anion that is isoelectronic with SF6 The most important oxyhalide is phosphorus oxychloride POCl3 which is approximately tetrahedral Before extensive computer calculations were feasible it was thought that bonding in phosphorus V compounds involved d orbitals Computer modeling of molecular orbital theory indicates that this bonding involves only s and p orbitals 45 Phosphorus III edit All four symmetrical trihalides are well known gaseous PF3 the yellowish liquids PCl3 and PBr3 and the solid PI3 These materials are moisture sensitive hydrolysing to give phosphorous acid The trichloride a common reagent is produced by chlorination of white phosphorus P4 6 Cl2 4 PCl3The trifluoride is produced from the trichloride by halide exchange PF3 is toxic because it binds to haemoglobin Phosphorus III oxide P4O6 also called tetraphosphorus hexoxide is the anhydride of P OH 3 the minor tautomer of phosphorous acid The structure of P4O6 is like that of P4O10 without the terminal oxide groups Phosphorus I and phosphorus II edit nbsp A stable diphosphene a derivative of phosphorus I These compounds generally feature P P bonds 16 Examples include catenated derivatives of phosphine and organophosphines Compounds containing P P double bonds have also been observed although they are rare Phosphides and phosphines edit Phosphides arise by reaction of metals with red phosphorus The alkali metals group 1 and alkaline earth metals can form ionic compounds containing the phosphide ion P3 These compounds react with water to form phosphine Other phosphides for example Na3P7 are known for these reactive metals With the transition metals as well as the monophosphides there are metal rich phosphides which are generally hard refractory compounds with a metallic lustre and phosphorus rich phosphides which are less stable and include semiconductors 16 Schreibersite is a naturally occurring metal rich phosphide found in meteorites The structures of the metal rich and phosphorus rich phosphides can be complex Phosphine PH3 and its organic derivatives PR3 are structural analogues of ammonia NH3 but the bond angles at phosphorus are closer to 90 for phosphine and its organic derivatives Phosphine is an ill smelling toxic gas Phosphorus has an oxidation number of 3 in phosphine Phosphine is produced by hydrolysis of calcium phosphide Ca3P2 Unlike ammonia phosphine is oxidised by air Phosphine is also far less basic than ammonia Other phosphines are known which contain chains of up to nine phosphorus atoms and have the formula PnHn 2 16 The highly flammable gas diphosphine P2H4 is an analogue of hydrazine Oxoacids edit Phosphorus oxoacids are extensive often commercially important and sometimes structurally complicated They all have acidic protons bound to oxygen atoms some have nonacidic protons that are bonded directly to phosphorus and some contain phosphorus phosphorus bonds 16 Although many oxoacids of phosphorus are formed only nine are commercially important and three of them hypophosphorous acid phosphorous acid and phosphoric acid are particularly important Oxidation state Formula Name Acidic protons Compounds 1 HH2PO2 hypophosphorous acid 1 acid salts 3 H3PO3 phosphorous acid phosphonic acid 2 acid salts 3 HPO2 metaphosphorous acid 1 salts 4 H4P2O6 hypophosphoric acid 4 acid salts 5 HPO3 n metaphosphoric acids n salts n 3 4 6 5 H HPO3 nOH polyphosphoric acids n 2 acids salts n 1 6 5 H5P3O10 tripolyphosphoric acid 3 salts 5 H4P2O7 pyrophosphoric acid 4 acid salts 5 H3PO4 ortho phosphoric acid 3 acid saltsNitrides editThe PN molecule is considered unstable but is a product of crystalline phosphorus nitride decomposition at 1100 K Similarly H2PN is considered unstable and phosphorus nitride halogens like F2PN Cl2PN Br2PN and I2PN oligomerise into cyclic polyphosphazenes For example compounds of the formula PNCl2 n exist mainly as rings such as the trimer hexachlorophosphazene The phosphazenes arise by treatment of phosphorus pentachloride with ammonium chloride PCl5 NH4Cl 1 n NPCl2 n 4 HClWhen the chloride groups are replaced by alkoxide RO a family of polymers is produced with potentially useful properties 46 Sulfides edit Main article phosphorus sulfide Phosphorus forms a wide range of sulfides where the phosphorus can be in P V P III or other oxidation states The three fold symmetric P4S3 is used in strike anywhere matches P4S10 and P4O10 have analogous structures 47 Mixed oxyhalides and oxyhydrides of phosphorus III are almost unknown Organophosphorus compounds edit Main article organophosphorus compounds Compounds with P C and P O C bonds are often classified as organophosphorus compounds They are widely used commercially The PCl3 serves as a source of P3 in routes to organophosphorus III compounds For example it is the precursor to triphenylphosphine PCl3 6 Na 3 C6H5Cl P C6H5 3 6 NaClTreatment of phosphorus trihalides with alcohols and phenols gives phosphites e g triphenylphosphite PCl3 3 C6H5OH P OC6H5 3 3 HClSimilar reactions occur for phosphorus oxychloride affording triphenylphosphate OPCl3 3 C6H5OH OP OC6H5 3 3 HClHistory editEtymology edit The name Phosphorus in Ancient Greece was the name for the planet Venus and is derived from the Greek words fῶs light ferw carry which roughly translates as light bringer or light carrier 20 In Greek mythology and tradition Augerinus Aygerinos morning star still in use today Hesperus or Hesperinus Esperos or Esperinos or Aposperiths evening star still in use today and Eosphorus Ewsforos dawnbearer not in use for the planet after Christianity are close homologues and also associated with Phosphorus the morning star According to the Oxford English Dictionary the correct spelling of the element is phosphorus The word phosphorous is the adjectival form of the P3 valence so just as sulfur forms sulfurous and sulfuric compounds phosphorus forms phosphorous compounds e g phosphorous acid and P5 valence phosphoric compounds e g phosphoric acids and phosphates Discovery edit nbsp Robert BoyleThe discovery of phosphorus the first element to be discovered that was not known since ancient times 48 is credited to the German alchemist Hennig Brand in 1669 although others might have discovered phosphorus around the same time 49 Brand experimented with urine which contains considerable quantities of dissolved phosphates from normal metabolism 20 Working in Hamburg Brand attempted to create the fabled philosopher s stone through the distillation of some salts by evaporating urine and in the process produced a white material that glowed in the dark and burned brilliantly It was named phosphorus mirabilis miraculous bearer of light 50 Brand s process originally involved letting urine stand for days until it gave off a terrible smell Then he boiled it down to a paste heated this paste to a high temperature and led the vapours through water where he hoped they would condense to gold Instead he obtained a white waxy substance that glowed in the dark Brand had discovered phosphorus Specifically Brand produced ammonium sodium hydrogen phosphate NH4 NaHPO4 While the quantities were essentially correct it took about 1 100 litres 290 US gal of urine to make about 60 g of phosphorus it was unnecessary to allow the urine to rot first Later scientists discovered that fresh urine yielded the same amount of phosphorus 32 Brand at first tried to keep the method secret 51 but later sold the recipe for 200 thalers to Johann Daniel Kraft de from Dresden 20 Krafft toured much of Europe with it including England where he met with Robert Boyle The secret that the substance was made from urine leaked out and Johann Kunckel 1630 1703 was able to reproduce it in Sweden 1678 Later Boyle in London 1680 also managed to make phosphorus possibly with the aid of his assistant Ambrose Godfrey Hanckwitz Godfrey later made a business of the manufacture of phosphorus Boyle states that Krafft gave him no information as to the preparation of phosphorus other than that it was derived from somewhat that belonged to the body of man This gave Boyle a valuable clue so that he too managed to make phosphorus and published the method of its manufacture 20 Later he improved Brand s process by using sand in the reaction still using urine as base material 4 NaPO3 2 SiO2 10 C 2 Na2 SiO3 10 CO P4Robert Boyle was the first to use phosphorus to ignite sulfur tipped wooden splints forerunners of our modern matches in 1680 52 Phosphorus was the 13th element to be discovered Because of its tendency to spontaneously combust when left alone in air it is sometimes referred to as the Devil s element 53 Bone ash and guano edit nbsp Guano mining in the Central Chincha Islands c 1860Antoine Lavoisier recognized phosphorus as an element in 1777 after Johan Gottlieb Gahn and Carl Wilhelm Scheele in 1769 showed that calcium phosphate Ca3 PO4 2 is found in bones by obtaining elemental phosphorus from bone ash 9 Bone ash was the major source of phosphorus until the 1840s The method started by roasting bones then employed the use of fire clay retorts encased in a very hot brick furnace to distill out the highly toxic elemental phosphorus product 54 Alternately precipitated phosphates could be made from ground up bones that had been de greased and treated with strong acids White phosphorus could then be made by heating the precipitated phosphates mixed with ground coal or charcoal in an iron pot and distilling off phosphorus vapour in a retort 55 Carbon monoxide and other flammable gases produced during the reduction process were burnt off in a flare stack In the 1840s world phosphate production turned to the mining of tropical island deposits formed from bird and bat guano see also Guano Islands Act These became an important source of phosphates for fertiliser in the latter half of the 19th century 56 Phosphate rock edit Phosphate rock which usually contains calcium phosphate was first used in 1850 to make phosphorus and following the introduction of the electric arc furnace by James Burgess Readman in 1888 57 patented 1889 58 elemental phosphorus production switched from the bone ash heating to electric arc production from phosphate rock After the depletion of world guano sources about the same time mineral phosphates became the major source of phosphate fertiliser production Phosphate rock production greatly increased after World War II and remains the primary global source of phosphorus and phosphorus chemicals today Phosphate rock remains a feedstock in the fertiliser industry where it is treated with sulfuric acid to produce various superphosphate fertiliser products Incendiaries edit White phosphorus was first made commercially in the 19th century for the match industry This used bone ash for a phosphate source as described above The bone ash process became obsolete when the submerged arc furnace for phosphorus production was introduced to reduce phosphate rock 59 60 The electric furnace method allowed production to increase to the point where phosphorus could be used in weapons of war 30 61 In World War I it was used in incendiaries smoke screens and tracer bullets 61 A special incendiary bullet was developed to shoot at hydrogen filled Zeppelins over Britain hydrogen being highly flammable 61 During World War II Molotov cocktails made of phosphorus dissolved in petrol were distributed in Britain to specially selected civilians within the British resistance operation for defence and phosphorus incendiary bombs were used in war on a large scale Burning phosphorus is difficult to extinguish and if it splashes onto human skin it has horrific effects 16 Early matches used white phosphorus in their composition which was dangerous due to its toxicity Murders suicides and accidental poisonings resulted from its use An apocryphal tale tells of a woman attempting to murder her husband with white phosphorus in his food which was detected by the stew s giving off luminous steam 30 In addition exposure to the vapours gave match workers a severe necrosis of the bones of the jaw known as phossy jaw When a safe process for manufacturing red phosphorus was discovered with its far lower flammability and toxicity laws were enacted under the Berne Convention 1906 requiring its adoption as a safer alternative for match manufacture 62 The toxicity of white phosphorus led to discontinuation of its use in matches 63 The Allies used phosphorus incendiary bombs in World War II to destroy Hamburg the place where the miraculous bearer of light was first discovered 50 Production edit nbsp Mining of phosphate rock in NauruIn 2017 the USGS estimated 68 billion tons of world reserves where reserve figures refer to the amount assumed recoverable at current market prices 0 261 billion tons were mined in 2016 64 Critical to contemporary agriculture its annual demand is rising nearly twice as fast as the growth of the human population 40 The production of phosphorus may have peaked before 2011 and some scientists predict reserves will be depleted before the end of the 21st century 65 40 66 Phosphorus comprises about 0 1 by mass of the average rock and consequently the Earth s supply is vast though dilute 16 Wet process edit Most phosphorus bearing material is for agriculture fertilisers In this case where the standards of purity are modest phosphorus is obtained from phosphate rock by what is called the wet process The minerals are treated with sulfuric acid to give phosphoric acid Phosphoric acid is then neutralized to give various phosphate salts which comprise fertilizers In the wet process phosphorus does not undergo redox 67 About five tons of phosphogypsum waste are generated per ton of phosphoric acid production Annually the estimated generation of phosphogypsum worldwide is 100 to 280 Mt 68 Thermal process edit For the use of phosphorus in drugs detergents and foodstuff the standards of purity are high which led to the development of the thermal process In this process phosphate minerals are converted to white phosphorus which can be purified by distillation The white phosphorus is then oxidised to phosphoric acid and subsequently neutralised with a base to give phosphate salts The thermal process is conducted in a submerged arc furnace which is energy intensive 67 Presently about 1 000 000 short tons 910 000 t of elemental phosphorus is produced annually Calcium phosphate as phosphate rock mostly mined in Florida and North Africa can be heated to 1 200 1 500 C with sand which is mostly SiO2 and coke to produce P4 The P4 product being volatile is readily isolated 69 4 Ca5 PO4 3F 18 SiO2 30 C 3 P4 30 CO 18 CaSiO3 2 CaF2 2 Ca3 PO4 2 6 SiO2 10 C 6 CaSiO3 10 CO P4Side products from the thermal process include ferrophosphorus a crude form of Fe2P resulting from iron impurities in the mineral precursors The silicate slag is a useful construction material The fluoride is sometimes recovered for use in water fluoridation More problematic is a mud containing significant amounts of white phosphorus Production of white phosphorus is conducted in large facilities in part because it is energy intensive The white phosphorus is transported in molten form Some major accidents have occurred during transportation 70 Historical routes edit Historically before the development of mineral based extractions white phosphorus was isolated on an industrial scale from bone ash 71 In this process the tricalcium phosphate in bone ash is converted to monocalcium phosphate with sulfuric acid Ca3 PO4 2 2 H2SO4 Ca H2PO4 2 2 CaSO4Monocalcium phosphate is then dehydrated to the corresponding metaphosphate Ca H2PO4 2 Ca PO3 2 2 H2OWhen ignited to a white heat 1300 C with charcoal calcium metaphosphate yields two thirds of its weight of white phosphorus while one third of the phosphorus remains in the residue as calcium orthophosphate 3 Ca PO3 2 10 C Ca3 PO4 2 10 CO P4Peak phosphorus edit nbsp Annual global phosphate rock production megatonnes per yr 1994 2022 data from US Geological Survey 72 Peak phosphorus is a concept to describe the point in time when humanity reaches the maximum global production rate of phosphorus as an industrial and commercial raw material The term is used in an equivalent way to the better known term peak oil 73 The issue was raised as a debate on whether phosphorus shortages might be imminent around 2010 which was largely dismissed after USGS and other organizations 74 increased world estimates on available phosphorus resources mostly in the form of additional resources in Morocco However exact reserve quantities remain uncertain as do the possible impacts of increased phosphate use on future generations 75 This is important because rock phosphate is a key ingredient in many inorganic fertilizers Hence a shortage in rock phosphate or just significant price increases might negatively affect the world s food security 76 Phosphorus is a finite limited resource that is widespread in the Earth s crust and in living organisms but is relatively scarce in concentrated forms which are not evenly distributed across the Earth The only cost effective production method to date is the mining of phosphate rock but only a few countries have significant commercial reserves The top five are Morocco including reserves located in Western Sahara China Egypt Algeria and Syria 77 Estimates for future production vary significantly depending on modelling and assumptions on extractable volumes but it is inescapable that future production of phosphate rock will be heavily influenced by Morocco in the foreseeable future 78 Means of commercial phosphorus production besides mining are few because the phosphorus cycle does not include significant gas phase transport 79 The predominant source of phosphorus in modern times is phosphate rock as opposed to the guano that preceded it According to some researchers Earth s commercial and affordable phosphorus reserves are expected to be depleted in 50 100 years and peak phosphorus to be reached in approximately 2030 73 65 Others suggest that supplies will last for several hundreds of years 80 As with the timing of peak oil the question is not settled and researchers in different fields regularly publish different estimates of the rock phosphate reserves 81 Background edit nbsp Phosphate rock mined in the United States 1900 2015 data from US Geological Survey The peak phosphorus concept is connected with the concept of planetary boundaries Phosphorus as part of biogeochemical processes belongs to one of the nine Earth system processes which are known to have boundaries As long as the boundaries are not crossed they mark the safe zone for the planet 82 Estimates of world phosphate reserves edit nbsp Global distribution of commercial reserves of rock phosphate in 2016 83 The accurate determination of peak phosphorus is dependent on knowing the total world s commercial phosphate reserves and resources especially in the form of phosphate rock a summarizing term for over 300 ores of different origin composition and phosphate content Reserves refers to the amount assumed recoverable at current market prices and resources refers to estimated amounts of such a grade or quality that they have reasonable prospects for economic extraction 84 85 Unprocessed phosphate rock has a concentration of 1 7 8 7 phosphorus by mass 4 20 phosphorus pentoxide By comparison the Earth s crust contains 0 1 phosphorus by mass 86 and vegetation 0 03 to 0 2 87 Although quadrillions of tons of phosphorus exist in the Earth s crust 88 these are currently not economically extractable In 2023 the United States Geological Survey USGS estimated that economically extractable phosphate rock reserves worldwide are 72 billion tons while world mining production in 2022 was 220 million tons 77 Assuming zero growth the reserves would thus last for around 300 years This broadly confirms a 2010 International Fertilizer Development Center IFDC report that global reserves would last for several hundred years 80 74 Phosphorus reserve figures are intensely debated 84 89 90 Gilbert suggest that there has been little external verification of the estimate 91 A 2014 review 81 concluded that the IFDC report presents an inflated picture of global reserves in particular those of Morocco where largely hypothetical and inferred resources have simply been relabeled reserves The countries with most phosphate rock commercial reserves in billion metric tons Morocco 50 China 3 2 Egypt 2 8 Algeria 2 2 Syria 1 8 Brazil 1 6 Saudi Arabia 1 4 South Africa 1 4 Australia 1 1 United States 1 0 Finland 1 0 Russia 0 6 Jordan 0 8 92 77 Rock phosphate shortages or just significant price increases might negatively affect the world s food security 76 Many agricultural systems depend on supplies of inorganic fertilizer which use rock phosphate Under the food production regime in developed countries shortages of rock phosphate could lead to shortages of inorganic fertilizer which could in turn reduce the global food production 93 Economists have pointed out that price fluctuations of rock phosphate do not necessarily indicate peak phosphorus as these have already occurred due to various demand and supply side factors 94 United States edit Further information Phosphate mining in the United States US production of phosphate rock peaked in 1980 at 54 4 million metric tons The United States was the world s largest producer of phosphate rock from at least 1900 up until 2006 when US production was exceeded by that of China In 2019 the US produced 10 percent of the world s phosphate rock 95 Exhaustion of guano reserves edit Main article Guano In 1609 Garcilaso de la Vega wrote the book Comentarios Reales in which he described many of the agricultural practices of the Incas prior to the arrival of the Spaniards and introduced the use of guano as a fertilizer As Garcilaso described the Incas near the coast harvested guano 96 In the early 1800s Alexander von Humboldt introduced guano as a source of agricultural fertilizer to Europe after having discovered it on islands off the coast of South America It has been reported that at the time of its discovery the guano on some islands was over 30 meters deep 97 The guano had previously been used by the Moche people as a source of fertilizer by mining it and transporting it back to Peru by boat International commerce in guano did not start until after 1840 97 By the start of the 20th century guano had been nearly completely depleted and was eventually overtaken with the discovery of methods of production of superphosphate Phosphorus conservation and recycling edit nbsp Phosphate mine on Nauru once one of the world s major sources of phosphate rock Overview edit Phosphorus can be transferred from the soil in one location to another as food is transported across the world taking the phosphorus it contains with it Once consumed by humans it can end up in the local environment in the case of open defecation which is still widespread on a global scale or in rivers or the ocean via sewage systems and sewage treatment plants in the case of cities connected to sewer systems An example of one crop that takes up large amounts of phosphorus is soy In an effort to postpone the onset of peak phosphorus several methods of reducing and reusing phosphorus are in practice such as in agriculture and in sanitation systems The Soil Association the UK organic agriculture certification and pressure group issued a report in 2010 A Rock and a Hard Place encouraging more recycling of phosphorus 98 One potential solution to the shortage of phosphorus is greater recycling of human and animal wastes back into the environment 99 Agricultural practices edit Reducing agricultural runoff and soil erosion can slow the frequency with which farmers have to reapply phosphorus to their fields Agricultural methods such as no till farming terracing contour tilling and the use of windbreaks have been shown to reduce the rate of phosphorus depletion from farmland These methods are still dependent on a periodic application of phosphate rock to the soil and as such methods to recycle the lost phosphorus have also been proposed Perennial vegetation such as grassland or forest is much more efficient in its use of phosphate than arable land Strips of grassland and or forest between arable land and rivers can greatly reduce losses of phosphate and other nutrients 100 Integrated farming systems which use animal sources to supply phosphorus for crops do exist at smaller scales and application of the system to a larger scale is a potential alternative for supplying the nutrient although it would require significant changes to the widely adopted modern crop fertilizing methods Excreta reuse edit Main article Excreta reuse The oldest method of recycling phosphorus is through the reuse of animal manure and human excreta in agriculture Via this method phosphorus in the foods consumed are excreted and the animal or human excreta are subsequently collected and re applied to the fields Although this method has maintained civilizations for centuries the current system of manure management is not logistically geared towards application to crop fields on a large scale At present manure application could not meet the phosphorus needs of large scale agriculture Despite that it is still an efficient method of recycling used phosphorus and returning it to the soil Sewage sludge edit Sewage treatment plants that have an enhanced biological phosphorus removal step produce a sewage sludge that is rich in phosphorus Various processes have been developed to extract phosphorus from sewage sludge directly from the ash after incineration of the sewage sludge or from other products of sewage sludge treatment This includes the extraction of phosphorus rich materials such as struvite from waste processing plants 91 The struvite can be made by adding magnesium to the waste Some companies such as Ostara in Canada and NuReSys in Belgium are already using this technique to recover phosphate Ostara has eight operating plants worldwide citation needed Research on phosphorus recovery methods from sewage sludge has been carried out in Sweden and Germany since around 2003 but the technologies currently under development are not yet cost effective given the current price of phosphorus on the world market 101 102 Applications editFlame retardant edit Phosphorus compounds are used as flame retardants Flame retardant materials and coatings are being developed that are both phosphorus and bio based 103 Food additive edit Phosphorus is an essential mineral for humans listed in the Dietary Reference Intake DRI Food grade phosphoric acid additive E338 104 is used to acidify foods and beverages such as various colas and jams providing a tangy or sour taste The phosphoric acid also serves as a preservative 105 Soft drinks containing phosphoric acid including Coca Cola are sometimes called phosphate sodas or phosphates Phosphoric acid in soft drinks has the potential to cause dental erosion 106 Phosphoric acid also has the potential to contribute to the formation of kidney stones especially in those who have had kidney stones previously 107 Fertiliser edit Main article Fertiliser See also Phosphorus cycle Phosphorus is an essential plant nutrient the most often limiting nutrient after nitrogen 108 and the bulk of all phosphorus production is in concentrated phosphoric acids for agriculture fertilisers containing as much as 70 to 75 P2O5 That led to large increase in phosphate PO43 production in the second half of the 20th century 40 Artificial phosphate fertilisation is necessary because phosphorus is essential to all living organisms it is involved in energy transfers strength of root and stems photosynthesis the expansion of plant roots formation of seeds and flowers and other important factors effecting overall plant health and genetics 108 Heavy use of phosphorus fertilizers and their runoff have resulted in eutrophication overenrichment of aquatic ecosystems 109 110 Natural phosphorus bearing compounds are mostly inaccessible to plants because of the low solubility and mobility in soil 111 Most phosphorus is very stable in the soil minerals or organic matter of the soil Even when phosphorus is added in manure or fertilizer it can become fixed in the soil Therefore the natural phosphorus cycle is very slow Some of the fixed phosphorus is released again over time sustaining wild plant growth however more is needed to sustain intensive cultivation of crops 112 Fertiliser is often in the form of superphosphate of lime a mixture of calcium dihydrogen phosphate Ca H2PO4 2 and calcium sulfate dihydrate CaSO4 2H2O produced reacting sulfuric acid and water with calcium phosphate Processing phosphate minerals with sulfuric acid for obtaining fertiliser is so important to the global economy that this is the primary industrial market for sulfuric acid and the greatest industrial use of elemental sulfur 113 Widely used compounds UseCa H2PO4 2 H2O Baking powder and fertilisersCaHPO4 2H2O Animal food additive toothpowderH3PO4 Manufacture of phosphate fertilisersPCl3 Manufacture of POCl3 and pesticidesPOCl3 Manufacture of plasticiserP4S10 Manufacturing of additives and pesticidesNa5P3O10 DetergentsOrganophosphorus edit White phosphorus is widely used to make organophosphorus compounds through intermediate phosphorus chlorides and two phosphorus sulfides phosphorus pentasulfide and phosphorus sesquisulfide 114 Organophosphorus compounds have many applications including in plasticisers flame retardants pesticides extraction agents nerve agents and water treatment 16 115 Metallurgical aspects edit Phosphorus is also an important component in steel production in the making of phosphor bronze and in many other related products 116 117 Phosphorus is added to metallic copper during its smelting process to react with oxygen present as an impurity in copper and to produce phosphorus containing copper CuOFP alloys with a higher hydrogen embrittlement resistance than normal copper 118 Phosphate conversion coating is a chemical treatment applied to steel parts to improve their corrosion resistance Matches edit nbsp Match striking surface made of a mixture of red phosphorus glue and ground glass The glass powder is used to increase the friction Main article Match The first striking match with a phosphorus head was invented by Charles Sauria in 1830 These matches and subsequent modifications were made with heads of white phosphorus an oxygen releasing compound potassium chlorate lead dioxide or sometimes nitrate and a binder They were poisonous to the workers in manufacture 119 sensitive to storage conditions toxic if ingested and hazardous when accidentally ignited on a rough surface 120 121 Production in several countries was banned between 1872 and 1925 122 The international Berne Convention ratified in 1906 prohibited the use of white phosphorus in matches In consequence phosphorous matches were gradually replaced by safer alternatives Around 1900 French chemists Henri Sevene and Emile David Cahen invented the modern strike anywhere match wherein the white phosphorus was replaced by phosphorus sesquisulfide P4S3 a non toxic and non pyrophoric compound that ignites under friction For a time these safer strike anywhere matches were quite popular but in the long run they were superseded by the modern safety match Safety matches are very difficult to ignite on any surface other than a special striker strip The strip contains non toxic red phosphorus and the match head potassium chlorate an oxygen releasing compound When struck small amounts of abrasion from match head and striker strip are mixed intimately to make a small quantity of Armstrong s mixture a very touch sensitive composition The fine powder ignites immediately and provides the initial spark to set off the match head Safety matches separate the two components of the ignition mixture until the match is struck This is the key safety advantage as it prevents accidental ignition Nonetheless safety matches invented in 1844 by Gustaf Erik Pasch and market ready by the 1860s did not gain consumer acceptance until the prohibition of white phosphorus Using a dedicated striker strip was considered clumsy 21 114 123 Water softening edit Sodium tripolyphosphate made from phosphoric acid is used in laundry detergents in some countries but banned for this use in others 23 This compound softens the water to enhance the performance of the detergents and to prevent pipe boiler tube corrosion 124 Miscellaneous edit Phosphates are used to make special glasses for sodium lamps 23 Bone ash mostly calcium phosphate is used in the production of fine china 23 Phosphoric acid made from elemental phosphorus is used in food applications such as soft drinks and as a starting point for food grade phosphates 114 These include monocalcium phosphate for baking powder and sodium tripolyphosphate 114 Phosphates are used to improve the characteristics of processed meat and cheese and in toothpaste 114 White phosphorus called WP slang term Willie Peter is used in military applications as incendiary bombs for smoke screening as smoke pots and smoke bombs and in tracer ammunition It is also a part of an obsolete M34 White Phosphorus US hand grenade This multipurpose grenade was mostly used for signaling smoke screens and inflammation it could also cause severe burns and had a psychological impact on the enemy 125 Military uses of white phosphorus are constrained by international law 32P and 33P are used as radioactive tracers in biochemical laboratories 126 Biological role editSee also Calcium metabolism Inorganic phosphorus in the form of the phosphate PO3 4 is required for all known forms of life 127 Phosphorus plays a major role in the structural framework of DNA and RNA Living cells use phosphate to transport cellular energy with adenosine triphosphate ATP necessary for every cellular process that uses energy ATP is also important for phosphorylation a key regulatory event in cells Phospholipids are the main structural components of all cellular membranes Calcium phosphate salts assist in stiffening bones 16 Biochemists commonly use the abbreviation Pi to refer to inorganic phosphate 128 Every living cell is encased in a membrane that separates it from its surroundings Cellular membranes are composed of a phospholipid matrix and proteins typically in the form of a bilayer Phospholipids are derived from glycerol with two of the glycerol hydroxyl OH protons replaced by fatty acids as an ester and the third hydroxyl proton has been replaced with phosphate bonded to another alcohol 129 An average adult human contains about 0 7 kg of phosphorus about 85 90 in bones and teeth in the form of apatite and the remainder in soft tissues and extracellular fluids The phosphorus content increases from about 0 5 by mass in infancy to 0 65 1 1 by mass in adults Average phosphorus concentration in the blood is about 0 4 g L about 70 of that is organic and 30 inorganic phosphates 130 An adult with healthy diet consumes and excretes about 1 3 grams of phosphorus per day with consumption in the form of inorganic phosphate and phosphorus containing biomolecules such as nucleic acids and phospholipids and excretion almost exclusively in the form of phosphate ions such as H2 PO 4 and HPO2 4 Only about 0 1 of body phosphate circulates in the blood paralleling the amount of phosphate available to soft tissue cells Bone and teeth enamel edit The main component of bone is hydroxyapatite as well as amorphous forms of calcium phosphate possibly including carbonate Hydroxyapatite is the main component of tooth enamel Water fluoridation enhances the resistance of teeth to decay by the partial conversion of this mineral to the still harder material fluorapatite 16 Ca5 PO4 3 OH F Ca5 PO4 3 F OH Phosphorus deficiency edit In medicine phosphate deficiency syndrome may be caused by malnutrition by failure to absorb phosphate and by metabolic syndromes that draw phosphate from the blood such as in refeeding syndrome after malnutrition 131 or passing too much of it into the urine All are characterised by hypophosphatemia which is a condition of low levels of soluble phosphate levels in the blood serum and inside the cells Symptoms of hypophosphatemia include neurological dysfunction and disruption of muscle and blood cells due to lack of ATP Too much phosphate can lead to diarrhoea and calcification hardening of organs and soft tissue and can interfere with the body s ability to use iron calcium magnesium and zinc 132 Phosphorus is an essential macromineral for plants which is studied extensively in edaphology to understand plant uptake from soil systems Phosphorus is a limiting factor in many ecosystems that is the scarcity of phosphorus limits the rate of organism growth An excess of phosphorus can also be problematic especially in aquatic systems where eutrophication sometimes leads to algal blooms 40 Nutrition edit Dietary recommendations edit The U S Institute of Medicine IOM updated Estimated Average Requirements EARs and Recommended Dietary Allowances RDAs for phosphorus in 1997 If there is not sufficient information to establish EARs and RDAs an estimate designated Adequate Intake AI is used instead The current EAR for phosphorus for people ages 19 and up is 580 mg day The RDA is 700 mg day RDAs are higher than EARs so as to identify amounts that will cover people with higher than average requirements RDA for pregnancy and lactation are also 700 mg day For people ages 1 18 years the RDA increases with age from 460 to 1250 mg day As for safety the IOM sets Tolerable upper intake levels ULs for vitamins and minerals when evidence is sufficient In the case of phosphorus the UL is 4000 mg day Collectively the EARs RDAs AIs and ULs are referred to as Dietary Reference Intakes DRIs 133 The European Food Safety Authority EFSA refers to the collective set of information as Dietary Reference Values with Population Reference Intake PRI instead of RDA and Average Requirement instead of EAR AI and UL are defined the same as in the United States For people ages 15 and older including pregnancy and lactation the AI is set at 550 mg day For children ages 4 10 the AI is 440 mg day and for ages 11 17 it is 640 mg day These AIs are lower than the U S RDAs In both systems teenagers need more than adults 134 The European Food Safety Authority reviewed the same safety question and decided that there was not sufficient information to set a UL 135 For U S food and dietary supplement labeling purposes the amount in a serving is expressed as a percent of Daily Value DV For phosphorus labeling purposes 100 of the Daily Value was 1000 mg but as of May 27 2016 it was revised to 1250 mg to bring it into agreement with the RDA 136 137 A table of the old and new adult daily values is provided at Reference Daily Intake Food sources edit The main food sources for phosphorus are the same as those containing protein although proteins do not contain phosphorus For example milk meat and soya typically also have phosphorus As a rule if a diet has sufficient protein and calcium the amount of phosphorus is probably sufficient 138 Precautions edit nbsp Phosphorus explosionOrganic compounds of phosphorus form a wide class of materials many are required for life but some are extremely toxic Fluorophosphate esters are among the most potent neurotoxins known A wide range of organophosphorus compounds are used for their toxicity as pesticides herbicides insecticides fungicides etc and weaponised as nerve agents against enemy humans Most inorganic phosphates are relatively nontoxic and essential nutrients 16 The white phosphorus allotrope presents a significant hazard because it ignites in the air and produces phosphoric acid residue Chronic white phosphorus poisoning leads to necrosis of the jaw called phossy jaw White phosphorus is toxic causing severe liver damage on ingestion and may cause a condition known as Smoking Stool Syndrome 139 In the past external exposure to elemental phosphorus was treated by washing the affected area with 2 copper II sulfate solution to form harmless compounds that are then washed away According to the recent US Navy s Treatment of Chemical Agent Casualties and Conventional Military Chemical Injuries FM8 285 Part 2 Conventional Military Chemical Injuries Cupric copper II sulfate has been used by U S personnel in the past and is still being used by some nations However copper sulfate is toxic and its use will be discontinued Copper sulfate may produce kidney and cerebral toxicity as well as intravascular hemolysis 140 The manual suggests instead a bicarbonate solution to neutralise phosphoric acid which will then allow removal of visible white phosphorus Particles often can be located by their emission of smoke when air strikes them or by their phosphorescence in the dark In dark surroundings fragments are seen as luminescent spots Promptly debride the burn if the patient s condition will permit removal of bits of WP white phosphorus that might be absorbed later and possibly produce systemic poisoning DO NOT apply oily based ointments until it is certain that all WP has been removed Following complete removal of the particles treat the lesions as thermal burns note 1 citation needed As white phosphorus readily mixes with oils any oily substances or ointments are not recommended until the area is thoroughly cleaned and all white phosphorus removed People can be exposed to phosphorus in the workplace by inhalation ingestion skin contact and eye contact The Occupational Safety and Health Administration OSHA has set the phosphorus exposure limit Permissible exposure limit in the workplace at 0 1 mg m3 over an 8 hour workday The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health NIOSH has set a Recommended exposure limit REL of 0 1 mg m3 over an 8 hour workday At levels of 5 mg m3 phosphorus is immediately dangerous to life and health 141 US DEA List I status edit Phosphorus can reduce elemental iodine to hydroiodic acid which is a reagent effective for reducing ephedrine or pseudoephedrine to methamphetamine 142 For this reason red and white phosphorus were designated by the United States Drug Enforcement Administration as List I precursor chemicals under 21 CFR 1310 02 effective on November 17 2001 143 In the United States handlers of red or white phosphorus are 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of Internal Medicine 161 9 659 67 doi 10 7326 M13 2908 PMID 25364887 a b Etesami H 2019 Nutrient Dynamics for Sustainable Crop Production Springer p 217 ISBN 978 981 13 8660 2 Carpenter Stephen R 2005 Eutrophication of aquatic ecosystems Bistability and soil phosphorus Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 102 29 10002 10005 Bibcode 2005PNAS 10210002C doi 10 1073 pnas 0503959102 ISSN 0027 8424 PMC 1177388 PMID 15972805 Conley Daniel J Paerl Hans W Howarth Robert W et al 2009 Controlling Eutrophication Nitrogen and Phosphorus Science 323 5917 1014 1015 doi 10 1126 science 1167755 ISSN 0036 8075 PMID 19229022 Soil Phosphorous PDF United States Department of Agriculture Archived from the original PDF on 2020 10 28 Retrieved 2020 08 17 Managing Phosphorus for Crop Production Penn State Extension Archived from the original on 2020 10 20 Retrieved 2020 08 17 Jessica Elzea Kogel ed 2006 Industrial Minerals amp Rocks Commodities Markets and Uses SME 2006 p 964 ISBN 0 87335 233 5 a b c d e Threlfall 1951 Diskowski amp Hofmann sfn error no target CITEREFDiskowskiHofmann help Roland W Scholz Amit H Roy Fridolin S Brand Deborah Hellums Andrea E Ulrich eds 2014 03 12 Sustainable Phosphorus Management A Global Transdisciplinary Roadmap Springer Science amp Business Media p 175 ISBN 978 94 007 7250 2 Mel Schwartz 2016 07 06 Encyclopedia and Handbook of Materials Parts and Finishes CRC Press ISBN 978 1 138 03206 4 Joseph R Davisz ed January 2001 Copper and Copper Alloys ASM International p 181 ISBN 0 87170 726 8 Hughes J P W Baron R Buckland D H et al 1962 Phosphorus Necrosis of the Jaw A Present day Study With Clinical and Biochemical Studies Br J Ind Med 19 2 83 99 doi 10 1136 oem 19 2 83 PMC 1038164 PMID 14449812 Crass M F Jr 1941 A history of the match industry Part 9 PDF Journal of Chemical Education 18 9 428 431 Bibcode 1941JChEd 18 428C doi 10 1021 ed018p428 permanent dead link Oliver Thomas 1906 Industrial disease due to certain poisonous fumes or gases Archives of the Public Health Laboratory 1 Manchester University Press 1 21 Charnovitz Steve 1987 The Influence of International Labour Standards on the World Trading Regime A Historical Overview International Labour Review 126 5 565 571 Alexander P Hardt 2001 Matches Pyrotechnics Post Falls Idaho US Pyrotechnica Publications pp 74 84 ISBN 0 929388 06 2 Schrodter et al sfn error no target CITEREFSchrodterBettermannStaffelWahl help Dockery Kevin 1997 Special Warfare Special Weapons Chicago Emperor s Press ISBN 1 883476 00 3 David A Atwood ed 2013 02 19 Radionuclides in the Environment John Wiley amp Sons 2013 ISBN 978 1 118 63269 7 Ruttenberg Lipmann D 1944 Enzymatic Synthesis of Acetyl Phosphate J Biol Chem 155 55 70 doi 10 1016 S0021 9258 18 43172 9 Nelson D L Cox M M Lehninger Principles of Biochemistry 3rd Ed Worth Publishing New York 2000 ISBN 1 57259 153 6 Bernhardt Nancy E Kasko Artur M 2008 Nutrition for the Middle Aged and Elderly Nova Publishers p 171 ISBN 978 1 60456 146 3 Mehanna H M Moledina J Travis J June 2008 Refeeding syndrome what it is and how to prevent and treat it BMJ 336 7659 1495 8 doi 10 1136 bmj a301 PMC 2440847 PMID 18583681 Anderson John J B 1996 Calcium Phosphorus and Human Bone Development Journal of Nutrition 126 4 Suppl 1153S 1158S doi 10 1093 jn 126 suppl 4 1153S PMID 8642449 Institute of Medicine 1997 Phosphorus Dietary Reference Intakes for Calcium Phosphorus Magnesium Vitamin D and Fluoride Washington DC The National Academies Press pp 146 189 doi 10 17226 5776 ISBN 978 0 309 06403 3 PMID 23115811 S2CID 8768378 Overview on Dietary Reference Values for the EU population as derived by the EFSA Panel on Dietetic Products Nutrition and Allergies PDF 2017 Tolerable Upper Intake Levels For Vitamins And Minerals PDF European Food Safety Authority 2006 Federal Register May 27 2016 Food Labeling Revision of the Nutrition and Supplement Facts Labels FR page 33982 PDF Daily Value Reference of the Dietary Supplement Label Database DSLD Dietary Supplement Label Database DSLD Archived from the original on 7 April 2020 Retrieved 16 May 2020 Phosphorus in diet CBRNE Incendiary Agents White Phosphorus Smoking Stool Syndrome Retrieved 2009 05 05 US Navy s Treatment of Chemical Agent Casualties and Conventional Military Chemical Injuries FM8 285 Part 2 Conventional Military Chemical Injuries Archived from the original on November 22 2005 Retrieved 2009 05 05 CDC NIOSH Pocket Guide to Chemical Hazards Phosphorus yellow www cdc gov Retrieved 2015 11 21 Skinner H F 1990 Methamphetamine synthesis via hydriodic acid red phosphorus reduction of ephedrine Forensic Science International 48 2 123 134 doi 10 1016 0379 0738 90 90104 7 a b 66 FR 52670 52675 17 October 2001 Retrieved 2009 05 05 21 cfr 1309 Archived from the original on 2009 05 03 Retrieved 2009 05 05 21 USC Chapter 13 Controlled Substances Act Retrieved 2009 05 05 General sources edit Beatty Richard 2000 Phosphorus Marshall Cavendish ISBN 0 7614 0946 7 Burns Melinda 10 February 2010 The Story of P ee Miller McCune Archived from the original on 7 January 2012 Retrieved 2 February 2012 Corbridge D E C 1995 Phosphorus An Outline of its Chemistry Biochemistry and Technology 5th Edition Elsevier Amsterdam ISBN 0 444 89307 5 Cordell Dana Drangert Jan Olof White Stuart 2009 The story of phosphorus Global food security and food for thought Global Environmental Change 19 2 292 305 doi 10 1016 j gloenvcha 2008 10 009 ISSN 0959 3780 S2CID 1450932 Cordell Dana amp Stuart White 2011 Review Peak Phosphorus Clarifying the Key Issues of a Vigorous Debate about Long Term Phosphorus Security Sustainability 2011 3 10 2027 2049 doi 10 3390 su3102027 http www mdpi com 2071 1050 3 10 2027 htm Diskowski Herbert Hofmann Thomas Phosphorus Ullmann s Encyclopedia of Industrial Chemistry Weinheim Wiley VCH doi 10 1002 14356007 a19 505 ISBN 978 3527306732 Emsley John 2000 The Shocking history of Phosphorus A biography of the Devil s Element London MacMillan ISBN 0 333 76638 5 Emsley John 7 January 2002 The 13th Element The Sordid Tale of Murder Fire and Phosphorus John Wiley amp Sons ISBN 978 0 471 44149 6 Retrieved 3 February 2012 Heckenmuller M Narita D Klepper G 2014 Global availability of phosphorus and its implications for global food supply An economic overview Kiel Working Paper no 1897 Accessed 11 May 2020 Phosphorus in diet MedlinePlus Medical Encyclopedia Nlm nih gov 2011 11 07 Retrieved on 2011 11 19 Parkes G D Mellor J W 1939 Mellor s Modern Inorganic Chemistry Longman s Green and Co Ruttenberg K C Phosphorus Cycle Terrestrial Phosphorus Cycle Transport of Phosphorus from Continents to the Ocean The Marine Phosphorus Cycle Archived 2011 07 13 at archive today Sommers Michael A 2007 08 15 Phosphorus Rosen Group ISBN 978 1 4042 1960 1 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint date and year link Schrodter Klaus Bettermann Gerhard Staffel Thomas Wahl Friedrich Klein Thomas Hofmann Thomas Phosphoric Acid and Phosphates Ullmann s Encyclopedia of Industrial Chemistry Weinheim Wiley VCH doi 10 1002 14356007 a19 465 pub3 ISBN 978 3527306732 Threlfall Richard E 1951 The Story of 100 years of Phosphorus Making 1851 1951 Oldbury Albright amp Wilson Ltd Toy Arthur D F 1975 The Chemistry of Phosphorus Texts in Inorganic Chemistry Vol 3 Pergamon ISBN 978 1 4831 4741 3 Retrieved 2013 10 22 Further reading edit Podger Hugh 2002 Albright amp Wilson The Last 50 years Studley Brewin Books ISBN 1 85858 223 7 Kolbert Elizabeth Elemental Need Phosphorus helped save our way of life and now threatens to end it The New Yorker 6 March 2023 pp 24 27 T he world s phosphorus problem arising from the element s exorbitant use in agriculture resembles its carbon dioxide problem its plastics problem its groundwater use problem its soil erosion problem and its nitrogen problem The path humanity is on may lead to ruin but as of yet no one has found a workable way back p 27 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Phosphorus amp oldid 1218158991 Peak phosphorus, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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