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Sulfur

Sulfur (also spelled sulphur in British English) is a chemical element; it has symbol S and atomic number 16. It is abundant, multivalent and nonmetallic. Under normal conditions, sulfur atoms form cyclic octatomic molecules with the chemical formula S8. Elemental sulfur is a bright yellow, crystalline solid at room temperature.

Sulfur, 16S
Sulfur
Alternative nameSulphur (British spelling)
Allotropessee Allotropes of sulfur
AppearanceLemon yellow sintered microcrystals
Standard atomic weight Ar°(S)
Sulfur 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
O

S

Se
phosphorussulfurchlorine
Atomic number (Z)16
Groupgroup 16 (chalcogens)
Periodperiod 3
Block  p-block
Electron configuration[Ne] 3s2 3p4
Electrons per shell2, 8, 6
Physical properties
Phase at STPsolid
Melting point388.36 K ​(115.21 °C, ​239.38 °F)
Boiling point717.8 K ​(444.6 °C, ​832.3 °F)
Density (near r.t.)alpha (α-S8): 2.07 g/cm3
beta (β-S8): 1.96 g/cm3
gamma (γ-S8): 1.92 g/cm3
when liquid (at m.p.)1.819 g/cm3
Critical point1314 K, 20.7 MPa
Heat of fusionbeta (β-S8): 1.727 kJ/mol
Heat of vaporizationbeta (β-S8): 45 kJ/mol
Molar heat capacity22.75 J/(mol·K)
Vapor pressure
P (Pa) 1 10 100 1 k 10 k 100 k
at T (K) 375 408 449 508 591 717
Atomic properties
Oxidation states−2, −1, 0, +1, +2, +3, +4, +5, +6 (a strongly acidic oxide)
ElectronegativityPauling scale: 2.58
Ionization energies
  • 1st: 999.6 kJ/mol
  • 2nd: 2252 kJ/mol
  • 3rd: 3357 kJ/mol
  • (more)
Covalent radius105±3 pm
Van der Waals radius180 pm
Spectral lines of sulfur
Other properties
Natural occurrenceprimordial
Crystal structurealpha (α-S8): ​orthorhombic (oF128)
Lattice constants
a = 1.0460 nm
b = 1.2861 nm
c = 2.4481 nm (at 20 °C)[3]
Crystal structurebeta (β-S8): ​monoclinic (mP48)
Lattice constants
a = 1.0923 nm
b = 1.0851 nm
c = 1.0787 nm
β = 95.905° (at 20 °C)[3]
Thermal conductivity0.205 W/(m⋅K) (amorphous)
Electrical resistivity2×1015  Ω⋅m (at 20 °C) (amorphous)
Magnetic orderingdiamagnetic[4]
Molar magnetic susceptibilityalpha (α-S8): −15.5×10−6 cm3/mol (298 K)[5]
Bulk modulus7.7 GPa
Mohs hardness2.0
CAS Number7704-34-9
History
Discoverybefore 2000 BCE[6]
Recognized as an element byAntoine Lavoisier (1777)
Isotopes of sulfur
Main isotopes Decay
abun­dance half-life (t1/2) mode pro­duct
32S 94.8% stable
33S 0.760% stable
34S 4.37% stable
35S trace 87.37 d β 35Cl
36S 0.02% stable
34S abundances vary greatly (between 3.96 and 4.77 percent) in natural samples.
 Category: Sulfur
| references

Sulfur is the tenth most abundant element by mass in the universe and the fifth most abundant on Earth. Though sometimes found in pure, native form, sulfur on Earth usually occurs as sulfide and sulfate minerals. Being abundant in native form, sulfur was known in ancient times, being mentioned for its uses in ancient India, ancient Greece, China, and ancient Egypt. Historically and in literature sulfur is also called brimstone,[7] which means "burning stone".[8] Today, almost all elemental sulfur is produced as a byproduct of removing sulfur-containing contaminants from natural gas and petroleum.[9][10] The greatest commercial use of the element is the production of sulfuric acid for sulfate and phosphate fertilizers, and other chemical processes. Sulfur is used in matches, insecticides, and fungicides. Many sulfur compounds are odoriferous, and the smells of odorized natural gas, skunk scent, bad breath, grapefruit, and garlic are due to organosulfur compounds. Hydrogen sulfide gives the characteristic odor to rotting eggs and other biological processes.

Sulfur is an essential element for all life, almost always in the form of organosulfur compounds or metal sulfides. Amino acids (two proteinogenic: cysteine and methionine, and many other non-coded: cystine, taurine, etc.) and two vitamins (biotin and thiamine) are organosulfur compounds crucial for life. Many cofactors also contain sulfur, including glutathione, and iron–sulfur proteins. Disulfides, S–S bonds, confer mechanical strength and insolubility of the (among others) protein keratin, found in outer skin, hair, and feathers. Sulfur is one of the core chemical elements needed for biochemical functioning and is an elemental macronutrient for all living organisms.

Characteristics edit

Physical properties edit

 
As a solid, sulfur is a characteristic lemon yellow; when burned, sulfur melts into a blood-red liquid and emits a blue flame.

Sulfur forms several polyatomic molecules. The best-known allotrope is octasulfur, cyclo-S8. The point group of cyclo-S8 is D4d and its dipole moment is 0 D.[11] Octasulfur is a soft, bright-yellow solid that is odorless, but impure samples have an odor similar to that of matches.[12] It melts at 115.21 °C (239.38 °F), boils at 444.6 °C (832.3 °F)[7] and sublimes more or less between 20 °C (68 °F) and 50 °C (122 °F).[13] At 95.2 °C (203.4 °F), below its melting temperature, cyclo-octasulfur changes from α-octasulfur to the β-polymorph.[14] The structure of the S8 ring is virtually unchanged by this phase change, which affects the intermolecular interactions. Between its melting and boiling temperatures, octasulfur changes its allotrope again, turning from β-octasulfur to γ-sulfur, again accompanied by a lower density but increased viscosity due to the formation of polymers.[14] At higher temperatures, the viscosity decreases as depolymerization occurs. Molten sulfur assumes a dark red color above 200 °C (392 °F). The density of sulfur is about 2 g/cm3, depending on the allotrope; all of the stable allotropes are excellent electrical insulators.

Sulfur is insoluble in water but soluble in carbon disulfide and, to a lesser extent, in other nonpolar organic solvents, such as benzene and toluene.

Chemical properties edit

Under normal conditions, sulfur hydrolyzes very slowly to mainly form hydrogen sulfide and sulfuric acid:

12 S
8
+ 4 H
2
O
→ 3 H
2
S
+ H
2
SO
4

The reaction involves adsorption of protons onto S
8
clusters, followed by disproportionation into the reaction products.[15]

The second, fourth and sixth ionization energies of sulfur are 2252 kJ/mol, 4556 kJ/mol and 8495.8 kJ/mol, respectively. A composition of products of sulfur's reactions with oxidants (and its oxidation state) depends on that whether releasing out of a reaction energy overcomes these thresholds. Applying catalysts and / or supply of outer energy may vary sulfur's oxidation state and a composition of reaction products. While reaction between sulfur and oxygen at normal conditions gives sulfur dioxide (oxidation state +4), formation of sulfur trioxide (oxidation state +6) requires temperature 400–600 °C (750–1,100 °F) and presence of a catalyst.

In reactions with elements of lesser electronegativity, it reacts as an oxidant and forms sulfides, where it has oxidation state −2.

Sulfur reacts with nearly all other elements with the exception of the noble gases, even with the notoriously unreactive metal iridium (yielding iridium disulfide).[16] Some of those reactions need elevated temperatures.[17]

Allotropes edit

 
The structure of the cyclooctasulfur molecule, S8

Sulfur forms over 30 solid allotropes, more than any other element.[18] Besides S8, several other rings are known.[19] Removing one atom from the crown gives S7, which is of a deeper yellow than S8. HPLC analysis of "elemental sulfur" reveals an equilibrium mixture of mainly S8, but with S7 and small amounts of S6.[20] Larger rings have been prepared, including S12 and S18.[21][22]

Amorphous or "plastic" sulfur is produced by rapid cooling of molten sulfur—for example, by pouring it into cold water. X-ray crystallography studies show that the amorphous form may have a helical structure with eight atoms per turn. The long coiled polymeric molecules make the brownish substance elastic, and in bulk this form has the feel of crude rubber. This form is metastable at room temperature and gradually reverts to the crystalline molecular allotrope, which is no longer elastic. This process happens within a matter of hours to days, but can be rapidly catalyzed.

Isotopes edit

Sulfur has 23 known isotopes, four of which are stable: 32S (94.99%±0.26%), 33S (0.75%±0.02%), 34S (4.25%±0.24%), and 36S (0.01%±0.01%).[23][24] Other than 35S, with a half-life of 87 days, the radioactive isotopes of sulfur have half-lives less than 3 hours.

The preponderance of 32S is explained by its production in the so-called alpha-process (one of the main classes of nuclear fusion reactions) in exploding stars. Other stable sulfur isotopes are produced in the bypass processes related with 34Ar, and their composition depends on a type of a stellar explosion. For example, proportionally more 33S comes from novae than from supernovae.[25]

On the planet Earth the sulfur isotopic composition was determined by the Sun. Though it is assumed that the distribution of different sulfur isotopes should be more or less equal, it has been found that proportions of two most abundant sulfur isotopes 32S and 34S varies in different samples. Assaying of these isotopes ratio (δ34S) in the samples allows to make suggestions about their chemical history, and with support of other methods, it allows to age-date the samples, estimate temperature of equilibrium between ore and water, determine pH and oxygen fugacity, identify the activity of sulfate-reducing bacteria in the time of formation of the sample, or suggest the main sources of sulfur in ecosystems.[26] However, there are ongoing discussions about what is the real reason of the δ34S shifts, biological activity or postdeposital alteration.[27]

For example, when sulfide minerals are precipitated, isotopic equilibration among solids and liquid may cause small differences in the δ34S values of co-genetic minerals. The differences between minerals can be used to estimate the temperature of equilibration. The δ13C and δ34S of coexisting carbonate minerals and sulfides can be used to determine the pH and oxygen fugacity of the ore-bearing fluid during ore formation.

Scientists measure the sulfur isotopes of minerals in rocks and sediments to study the redox conditions in the oceans in the past. Sulfate-reducing bacteria in marine sediment fractionate sulfur isotopes as they take in sulfate and produce sulfide. Prior to 2010s, it was thought that sulfate reduction could fractionate sulfur isotopes up to 46 permil[28] and fractionation larger than 46 permil recorded in sediments must be due to disproportionation of sulfur compounds in the sediment. This view has changed since the 2010s as experiments show that sulfate-reducing bacteria can fractionate to 66 permil.[29] As substrates for disproportionation are limited by the product of sulfate reduction, the isotopic effect of disproportionation should be less than 16 permil in most sedimentary settings.[30]

In most forest ecosystems, sulfate is derived mostly from the atmosphere; weathering of ore minerals and evaporites contribute some sulfur. Sulfur with a distinctive isotopic composition has been used to identify pollution sources, and enriched sulfur has been added as a tracer in hydrologic studies. Differences in the natural abundances can be used in systems where there is sufficient variation in the 34S of ecosystem components. Rocky Mountain lakes thought to be dominated by atmospheric sources of sulfate have been found to have measurably different 34S values than lakes believed to be dominated by watershed sources of sulfate.

The radioactive 35S is formed in cosmic ray spallation of the atmospheric 40Ar. This fact may be used for proving the presence of recent (not more than 1 year) atmospheric sediments in various things. This isotope may be obtained artificially by different ways. In practice, the reaction 35Cl + n35S + p is used by irradiating potassium chloride with neutrons.[31] The isotope 35S is used in various sulfur-containing compounds as a radioactive tracer for many biological studies, for example, the Hershey-Chase experiment.

Because of the weak beta activity of 35S, its compounds are relatively safe as long as they are not ingested or absorbed by the body.[32]

Natural occurrence edit

 
Sulfur vat from which railroad cars are loaded, Freeport Sulphur Co., Hoskins Mound, Texas (1943)
 
Most of the yellow and orange hues of Io are due to elemental sulfur and sulfur compounds deposited by active volcanoes.
 
Sulfur extraction, East Java
 
A man carrying sulfur blocks from Kawah Ijen, a volcano in East Java, Indonesia, 2009

32S is created inside massive stars, at a depth where the temperature exceeds 2.5×109 K, by the fusion of one nucleus of silicon plus one nucleus of helium.[33] As this nuclear reaction is part of the alpha process that produces elements in abundance, sulfur is the 10th most common element in the universe.

Sulfur, usually as sulfide, is present in many types of meteorites. Ordinary chondrites contain on average 2.1% sulfur, and carbonaceous chondrites may contain as much as 6.6%. It is normally present as troilite (FeS), but there are exceptions, with carbonaceous chondrites containing free sulfur, sulfates and other sulfur compounds.[34] The distinctive colors of Jupiter's volcanic moon Io are attributed to various forms of molten, solid, and gaseous sulfur.[35]

It is the fifth most common element by mass in the Earth. Elemental sulfur can be found near hot springs and volcanic regions in many parts of the world, especially along the Pacific Ring of Fire; such volcanic deposits are currently mined in Indonesia, Chile, and Japan. These deposits are polycrystalline, with the largest documented single crystal measuring 22×16×11 cm.[36] Historically, Sicily was a major source of sulfur in the Industrial Revolution.[37] Lakes of molten sulfur up to about 200 m (660 ft) in diameter have been found on the sea floor, associated with submarine volcanoes, at depths where the boiling point of water is higher than the melting point of sulfur.[38]

Native sulfur is synthesised by anaerobic bacteria acting on sulfate minerals such as gypsum in salt domes.[39][40] Significant deposits in salt domes occur along the coast of the Gulf of Mexico, and in evaporites in eastern Europe and western Asia. Native sulfur may be produced by geological processes alone. Fossil-based sulfur deposits from salt domes were once the basis for commercial production in the United States, Russia, Turkmenistan, and Ukraine.[41] Currently, commercial production is still carried out in the Osiek mine in Poland. Such sources are now of secondary commercial importance, and most are no longer worked.

Common naturally occurring sulfur compounds include the sulfide minerals, such as pyrite (iron sulfide), cinnabar (mercury sulfide), galena (lead sulfide), sphalerite (zinc sulfide), and stibnite (antimony sulfide); and the sulfate minerals, such as gypsum (calcium sulfate), alunite (potassium aluminium sulfate), and barite (barium sulfate). On Earth, just as upon Jupiter's moon Io, elemental sulfur occurs naturally in volcanic emissions, including emissions from hydrothermal vents.

The main industrial source of sulfur is now petroleum and natural gas.[9]

Compounds edit

Common oxidation states of sulfur range from −2 to +6. Sulfur forms stable compounds with all elements except the noble gases.

Electron transfer reactions edit

 
Lapis lazuli owes its blue color to a trisulfur radical anion (S
3
)

Sulfur polycations, S82+, S42+ and S162+ are produced when sulfur is reacted with oxidising agents in a strongly acidic solution.[42] The colored solutions produced by dissolving sulfur in oleum were first reported as early as 1804 by C.F. Bucholz, but the cause of the color and the structure of the polycations involved was only determined in the late 1960s. S82+ is deep blue, S42+ is yellow and S162+ is red.[14]

Reduction of sulfur gives various polysulfides with the formula Sx2−, many of which have been obtained in crystalline form. Illustrative is the production of sodium tetrasulfide:

4 Na + S8 → 2 Na2S4

Some of these dianions dissociate to give radical anions, such as S3 gives the blue color of the rock lapis lazuli.

 
Two parallel sulfur chains grown inside a single-wall carbon nanotube (CNT, a). Zig-zag (b) and straight (c) S chains inside double-wall CNTs[43]

This reaction highlights a distinctive property of sulfur: its ability to catenate (bind to itself by formation of chains). Protonation of these polysulfide anions produces the polysulfanes, H2Sx, where x = 2, 3, and 4.[44] Ultimately, reduction of sulfur produces sulfide salts:

16 Na + S8 → 8 Na2S

The interconversion of these species is exploited in the sodium–sulfur battery.

Hydrogenation edit

Treatment of sulfur with hydrogen gives hydrogen sulfide. When dissolved in water, hydrogen sulfide is mildly acidic:[7]

H2S ⇌ HS + H+

Hydrogen sulfide gas and the hydrosulfide anion are extremely toxic to mammals, due to their inhibition of the oxygen-carrying capacity of hemoglobin and certain cytochromes in a manner analogous to cyanide and azide (see below, under precautions).

Combustion edit

The two principal sulfur oxides are obtained by burning sulfur:

S + O2 → SO2 (sulfur dioxide)
2 SO2 + O2 → 2 SO3 (sulfur trioxide)

Many other sulfur oxides are observed including the sulfur-rich oxides include sulfur monoxide, disulfur monoxide, disulfur dioxides, and higher oxides containing peroxo groups.

Halogenation edit

Sulfur reacts with fluorine to give the highly reactive sulfur tetrafluoride and the highly inert sulfur hexafluoride.[45] Whereas fluorine gives S(IV) and S(VI) compounds, chlorine gives S(II) and S(I) derivatives. Thus, sulfur dichloride, disulfur dichloride, and higher chlorosulfanes arise from the chlorination of sulfur. Sulfuryl chloride and chlorosulfuric acid are derivatives of sulfuric acid; thionyl chloride (SOCl2) is a common reagent in organic synthesis.[46] Bromine also oxidizes sulfur to form sulfur dibromide and disulfur dibromide.[46]

Pseudohalides edit

Sulfur oxidizes cyanide and sulfite to give thiocyanate and thiosulfate, respectively.

Metal sulfides edit

Sulfur reacts with many metals. Electropositive metals give polysulfide salts. Copper, zinc, and silver are attacked by sulfur; see tarnishing. Although many metal sulfides are known, most are prepared by high temperature reactions of the elements.[47] Geoscientists also study the isotopes of metal sulfides in rocks and sediment to study environmental conditions in the Earth's past.[48]

Organic compounds edit

Some of the main classes of sulfur-containing organic compounds include the following:[49]

Compounds with carbon–sulfur multiple bonds are uncommon, an exception being carbon disulfide, a volatile colorless liquid that is structurally similar to carbon dioxide. It is used as a reagent to make the polymer rayon and many organosulfur compounds. Unlike carbon monoxide, carbon monosulfide is stable only as an extremely dilute gas, found between solar systems.[50]

Organosulfur compounds are responsible for some of the unpleasant odors of decaying organic matter. They are widely known as the odorant in domestic natural gas, garlic odor, and skunk spray, as well as a component of bad breath odor. Not all organic sulfur compounds smell unpleasant at all concentrations: the sulfur-containing monoterpenoid grapefruit mercaptan in small concentrations is the characteristic scent of grapefruit, but has a generic thiol odor at larger concentrations. Sulfur mustard, a potent vesicant, was used in World War I as a disabling agent.[51]

Sulfur–sulfur bonds are a structural component used to stiffen rubber, similar to the disulfide bridges that rigidify proteins (see biological below). In the most common type of industrial "curing" or hardening and strengthening of natural rubber, elemental sulfur is heated with the rubber to the point that chemical reactions form disulfide bridges between isoprene units of the polymer. This process, patented in 1843, made rubber a major industrial product, especially in automobile tires. Because of the heat and sulfur, the process was named vulcanization, after the Roman god of the forge and volcanism.

History edit

Antiquity edit

 
Pharmaceutical container for sulfur from the first half of the 20th century. From the Museo del Objeto del Objeto collection

Being abundantly available in native form, sulfur was known in ancient times and is referred to in the Torah (Genesis). English translations of the Christian Bible commonly referred to burning sulfur as "brimstone", giving rise to the term "fire-and-brimstone" sermons, in which listeners are reminded of the fate of eternal damnation that await the unbelieving and unrepentant. It is from this part of the Bible[52] that Hell is implied to "smell of sulfur" (likely due to its association with volcanic activity). According to the Ebers Papyrus, a sulfur ointment was used in ancient Egypt to treat granular eyelids. Sulfur was used for fumigation in preclassical Greece;[53] this is mentioned in the Odyssey.[54] Pliny the Elder discusses sulfur in book 35 of his Natural History, saying that its best-known source is the island of Melos. He mentions its use for fumigation, medicine, and bleaching cloth.[55]

A natural form of sulfur known as shiliuhuang (石硫黄) was known in China since the 6th century BC and found in Hanzhong.[56] By the 3rd century, the Chinese had discovered that sulfur could be extracted from pyrite.[56] Chinese Daoists were interested in sulfur's flammability and its reactivity with certain metals, yet its earliest practical uses were found in traditional Chinese medicine.[56] The Wujing Zongyao of 1044 AD described various formulas for Chinese black powder, which is a mixture of potassium nitrate (KNO
3
), charcoal, and sulfur.[57]

 
Sulfur
 
Brimstone
Alchemical signs for sulfur, or the combustible elements, and brimstone, an older/archaic name for sulfur[58]

Indian alchemists, practitioners of the "science of chemicals" (Sanskrit: रसशास्त्र, romanizedrasaśāstra), wrote extensively about the use of sulfur in alchemical operations with mercury, from the eighth century AD onwards.[59] In the rasaśāstra tradition, sulfur is called "the smelly" (गन्धक, gandhaka).

Early European alchemists gave sulfur a unique alchemical symbol, a triangle atop a cross (🜍). (This is sometimes confused with the astronomical crossed-spear symbol ⚴ for 2 Pallas.) The variation known as brimstone has a symbol combining a two-barred cross atop a lemniscate (🜏). In traditional skin treatment, elemental sulfur was used (mainly in creams) to alleviate such conditions as scabies, ringworm, psoriasis, eczema, and acne. The mechanism of action is unknown—though elemental sulfur does oxidize slowly to sulfurous acid, which is (through the action of sulfite) a mild reducing and antibacterial agent.[60][61][62]

Modern times edit

 
Today sulfur is known to have antifungal, antibacterial, and keratolytic activity; in the past it was used against acne vulgaris, rosacea, seborrheic dermatitis, dandruff, pityriasis versicolor, scabies, and warts.[63] This 1881 advertisement baselessly claims efficacy against rheumatism, gout, baldness, and graying of hair.

Sulfur appears in a column of fixed (non-acidic) alkali in a chemical table of 1718.[64] Antoine Lavoisier used sulfur in combustion experiments, writing of some of these in 1777.[65]

Sulfur deposits in Sicily were the dominant source for more than a century. By the late 18th century, about 2,000 tonnes per year of sulfur were imported into Marseille, France, for the production of sulfuric acid for use in the Leblanc process. In industrializing Britain, with the repeal of tariffs on salt in 1824, demand for sulfur from Sicily surged upward. The increasing British control and exploitation of the mining, refining, and transportation of the sulfur, coupled with the failure of this lucrative export to transform Sicily's backward and impoverished economy, led to the Sulfur Crisis of 1840, when King Ferdinand II gave a monopoly of the sulfur industry to a French firm, violating an earlier 1816 trade agreement with Britain. A peaceful solution was eventually negotiated by France.[66][67]

In 1867, elemental sulfur was discovered in underground deposits in Louisiana and Texas. The highly successful Frasch process was developed to extract this resource.[68]

In the late 18th century, furniture makers used molten sulfur to produce decorative inlays.[69] Molten sulfur is sometimes still used for setting steel bolts into drilled concrete holes where high shock resistance is desired for floor-mounted equipment attachment points. Pure powdered sulfur was used as a medicinal tonic and laxative.[41]

With the advent of the contact process, the majority of sulfur today is used to make sulfuric acid for a wide range of uses, particularly fertilizer.[70]

In recent times, the main source of sulfur has become petroleum and natural gas. This is due to the requirement to remove sulfur from fuels in order to prevent acid rain, and has resulted in a surplus of sulfur.[9]

Spelling and etymology edit

Sulfur is derived from the Latin word sulpur, which was Hellenized to sulphur in the erroneous belief that the Latin word came from Greek. This spelling was later reinterpreted as representing an /f/ sound and resulted in the spelling sulfur, which appears in Latin toward the end of the Classical period. The true Ancient Greek word for sulfur, θεῖον, theîon (from earlier θέειον, théeion), is the source of the international chemical prefix thio-. The Modern Standard Greek word for sulfur is θείο, theío.

In 12th-century Anglo-French, it was sulfre. In the 14th century, the erroneously Hellenized Latin -ph- was restored in Middle English sulphre. By the 15th century, both full Latin spelling variants sulfur and sulphur became common in English. The parallel f~ph spellings continued in Britain until the 19th century, when the word was standardized as sulphur.[71] On the other hand, sulfur was the form chosen in the United States, whereas Canada uses both.

The IUPAC adopted the spelling sulfur in 1990 or 1971, depending on the source cited,[72] as did the Nomenclature Committee of the Royal Society of Chemistry in 1992, restoring the spelling sulfur to Britain.[73] Oxford Dictionaries note that "in chemistry and other technical uses ... the -f- spelling is now the standard form for this and related words in British as well as US contexts, and is increasingly used in general contexts as well."[74]

Production edit

 
Sicilian kiln used to obtain sulfur from volcanic rock (diagram from a 1906 chemistry book)
 
Traditional sulfur mining at Ijen Volcano, East Java, Indonesia. This image shows the dangerous and rugged conditions the miners face, including toxic smoke and high drops, as well as their lack of protective equipment. The pipes over which they are standing are for condensing sulfur vapors.

Sulfur may be found by itself and historically was usually obtained in this form; pyrite has also been a source of sulfur.[75] In volcanic regions in Sicily, in ancient times, it was found on the surface of the Earth, and the "Sicilian process" was used: sulfur deposits were piled and stacked in brick kilns built on sloping hillsides, with airspaces between them. Then, some sulfur was pulverized, spread over the stacked ore and ignited, causing the free sulfur to melt down the hills. Eventually the surface-borne deposits played out, and miners excavated veins that ultimately dotted the Sicilian landscape with labyrinthine mines. Mining was unmechanized and labor-intensive, with pickmen freeing the ore from the rock, and mine-boys or carusi carrying baskets of ore to the surface, often through a mile or more of tunnels. Once the ore was at the surface, it was reduced and extracted in smelting ovens. The conditions in Sicilian sulfur mines were horrific, prompting Booker T. Washington to write "I am not prepared just now to say to what extent I believe in a physical hell in the next world, but a sulfur mine in Sicily is about the nearest thing to hell that I expect to see in this life."[76] Sulfur is still mined from surface deposits in poorer nations with volcanoes, such as Indonesia, and worker conditions have not improved much since Booker T. Washington's days.[77]

Elemental sulfur was extracted from salt domes (in which it sometimes occurs in nearly pure form) until the late 20th century. Sulfur is now produced as a side product of other industrial processes such as in oil refining, in which sulfur is undesired. As a mineral, native sulfur under salt domes is thought to be a fossil mineral resource, produced by the action of anaerobic bacteria on sulfate deposits. It was removed from such salt-dome mines mainly by the Frasch process.[41] In this method, superheated water was pumped into a native sulfur deposit to melt the sulfur, and then compressed air returned the 99.5% pure melted product to the surface. Throughout the 20th century this procedure produced elemental sulfur that required no further purification. Due to a limited number of such sulfur deposits and the high cost of working them, this process for mining sulfur has not been employed in a major way anywhere in the world since 2002.[78][79]

 
Sulfur recovered from hydrocarbons in Alberta, stockpiled for shipment in North Vancouver, British Columbia

Today, sulfur is produced from petroleum, natural gas, and related fossil resources, from which it is obtained mainly as hydrogen sulfide.[9] Organosulfur compounds, undesirable impurities in petroleum, may be upgraded by subjecting them to hydrodesulfurization, which cleaves the C–S bonds:[78][79]

R-S-R + 2 H2 → 2 RH + H2S

The resulting hydrogen sulfide from this process, and also as it occurs in natural gas, is converted into elemental sulfur by the Claus process. This process entails oxidation of some hydrogen sulfide to sulfur dioxide and then the comproportionation of the two:[78][79]

3 O2 + 2 H2S → 2 SO2 + 2 H2O
SO2 + 2 H2S → 3 S + 2 H2O
 
Production and price (US market) of elemental sulfur

Owing to the high sulfur content of the Athabasca Oil Sands, stockpiles of elemental sulfur from this process now exist throughout Alberta, Canada.[80] Another way of storing sulfur is as a binder for concrete, the resulting product having some desirable properties (see sulfur concrete).[81]

The world production of sulfur in 2011 amounted to 69 million tonnes (Mt), with more than 15 countries contributing more than 1 Mt each. Countries producing more than 5 Mt are China (9.6), the United States (8.8), Canada (7.1) and Russia (7.1).[82] Production has been slowly increasing from 1900 to 2010; the price was unstable in the 1980s and around 2010.[83]

Applications edit

Sulfuric acid edit

Elemental sulfur is used mainly as a precursor to other chemicals. Approximately 85% (1989) is converted to sulfuric acid (H2SO4):

18 S8 + 32 O2 + H2OH2SO4
 
Sulfuric acid production in 2000

In 2010, the United States produced more sulfuric acid than any other inorganic industrial chemical.[83] The principal use for the acid is the extraction of phosphate ores for the production of fertilizer manufacturing. Other applications of sulfuric acid include oil refining, wastewater processing, and mineral extraction.[41]

Other important sulfur chemistry edit

Sulfur reacts directly with methane to give carbon disulfide, which is used to manufacture cellophane and rayon.[41] One of the uses of elemental sulfur is in vulcanization of rubber, where polysulfide chains crosslink organic polymers. Large quantities of sulfites are used to bleach paper and to preserve dried fruit. Many surfactants and detergents (e.g. sodium lauryl sulfate) are sulfate derivatives. Calcium sulfate, gypsum (CaSO4·2H2O) is mined on the scale of 100 million tonnes each year for use in Portland cement and fertilizers.

When silver-based photography was widespread, sodium and ammonium thiosulfate were widely used as "fixing agents". Sulfur is a component of gunpowder ("black powder").

Fertilizer edit

Amino acids synthesized by living organisms such as methionine and cysteine contain organosulfur groups (thioester and thiol respectively). The antioxidant glutathione protecting many living organisms against free radicals and oxidative stress also contains organic sulfur. Some crops such as onion and garlic also produce different organosulfur compounds such as syn-propanethial-S-oxide responsible of lacrymal irritation (onions), or diallyl disulfide and allicin (garlic). Sulfates, commonly found in soils and groundwaters are often a sufficient natural source of sulfur for plants and bacteria. Atmospheric deposition of sulfur dioxide (SO2) is also a common artificial source (coal combustion) of sulfur for the soils. Under normal circumstances, in most agricultural soils, sulfur is not a limiting nutrient for plants and microorganisms (see Liebig's barrel). However, in some circumstances, soils can be depleted in sulfate, e.g. if this later is leached by meteoric water (rain) or if the requirements in sulfur for some types of crops are high. This explains that sulfur is increasingly recognized and used as a component of fertilizers. The most important form of sulfur for fertilizer is calcium sulfate, commonly found in nature as the mineral gypsum (CaSO4·2H2O). Elemental sulfur is hydrophobic (not soluble in water) and cannot be used directly by plants. Elemental sulfur (ES) is sometimes mixed with bentonite to amend depleted soils for crops with high requirement in organo-sulfur. Over time, oxidation abiotic processes with atmospheric oxygen and soil bacteria can oxidize and convert elemental sulfur to soluble derivatives, which can then be used by microorganisms and plants. Sulfur improves the efficiency of other essential plant nutrients, particularly nitrogen and phosphorus.[84] Biologically produced sulfur particles are naturally hydrophilic due to a biopolymer coating and are easier to disperse over the land in a spray of diluted slurry, resulting in a faster uptake by plants.

The plants requirement for sulfur equals or exceeds the requirement for phosphorus. It is an essential nutrient for plant growth, root nodule formation of legumes, and immunity and defense systems. Sulfur deficiency has become widespread in many countries in Europe.[85][86][87] Because atmospheric inputs of sulfur continue to decrease, the deficit in the sulfur input/output is likely to increase unless sulfur fertilizers are used. Atmospheric inputs of sulfur decrease because of actions taken to limit acid rains.[88][84]

Fungicide and pesticide edit

 
Sulfur candle originally sold for home fumigation

Elemental sulfur is one of the oldest fungicides and pesticides. "Dusting sulfur", elemental sulfur in powdered form, is a common fungicide for grapes, strawberry, many vegetables and several other crops. It has a good efficacy against a wide range of powdery mildew diseases as well as black spot. In organic production, sulfur is the most important fungicide. It is the only fungicide used in organically farmed apple production against the main disease apple scab under colder conditions. Biosulfur (biologically produced elemental sulfur with hydrophilic characteristics) can also be used for these applications.

Standard-formulation dusting sulfur is applied to crops with a sulfur duster or from a dusting plane. Wettable sulfur is the commercial name for dusting sulfur formulated with additional ingredients to make it water miscible.[81][89] It has similar applications and is used as a fungicide against mildew and other mold-related problems with plants and soil.

Elemental sulfur powder is used as an "organic" (i.e., "green") insecticide (actually an acaricide) against ticks and mites. A common method of application is dusting the clothing or limbs with sulfur powder.

A diluted solution of lime sulfur (made by combining calcium hydroxide with elemental sulfur in water) is used as a dip for pets to destroy ringworm (fungus), mange, and other dermatoses and parasites.

Sulfur candles of almost pure sulfur were burned to fumigate structures and wine barrels, but are now considered too toxic for residences.

Pharmaceuticals edit

Sulfur (specifically octasulfur, S8) is used in pharmaceutical skin preparations for the treatment of acne and other conditions. It acts as a keratolytic agent and also kills bacteria, fungi, scabies mites, and other parasites.[90] Precipitated sulfur and colloidal sulfur are used, in form of lotions, creams, powders, soaps, and bath additives, for the treatment of acne vulgaris, acne rosacea, and seborrhoeic dermatitis.[91]

Many drugs contain sulfur.[92] Early examples include antibacterial sulfonamides, known as sulfa drugs. A more recent example is mucolytic acetylcysteine. Sulfur is a part of many bacterial defense molecules. Most β-lactam antibiotics, including the penicillins, cephalosporins and monobactams contain sulfur.[49]

Batteries edit

Due to their high energy density and the availability of sulfur, there is ongoing research in creating rechargeable lithium–sulfur batteries. Until now, carbonate electrolytes have caused failures in such batteries after a single cycle. In February 2022, researchers at Drexel University have not only created a prototypical battery that lasted 4000 recharge cycles, but also found the first monoclinic gamma sulfur that remained stable below 95 degrees Celsius.[93]

Biological role edit

Sulfur is an essential component of all living cells. It is the eighth most abundant element in the human body by weight,[94] about equal in abundance to potassium, and slightly greater than sodium and chlorine.[95] A 70 kg (150 lb) human body contains about 140 grams (4.9 oz) of sulfur.[96] The main dietary source of sulfur for humans is sulfur-containing amino-acids,[97] which can be found in plant and animal proteins.[98]

Transferring sulfur between inorganic and biomolecules edit

In the 1880s, while studying Beggiatoa (a bacterium living in a sulfur rich environment), Sergei Winogradsky found that it oxidized hydrogen sulfide (H2S) as an energy source, forming intracellular sulfur droplets. Winogradsky referred to this form of metabolism as inorgoxidation (oxidation of inorganic compounds).[99] Another contributor, who continued to study it was Selman Waksman.[100] Primitive bacteria that live around deep ocean volcanic vents oxidize hydrogen sulfide for their nutrition, as discovered by Robert Ballard.[10]

Sulfur oxidizers can use as energy sources reduced sulfur compounds, including hydrogen sulfide, elemental sulfur, sulfite, thiosulfate, and various polythionates (e.g., tetrathionate).[101] They depend on enzymes such as sulfur oxygenase and sulfite oxidase to oxidize sulfur to sulfate. Some lithotrophs can even use the energy contained in sulfur compounds to produce sugars, a process known as chemosynthesis. Some bacteria and archaea use hydrogen sulfide in place of water as the electron donor in chemosynthesis, a process similar to photosynthesis that produces sugars and uses oxygen as the electron acceptor. Sulfur-based chemosynthesis may be simplifiedly compared with photosynthesis:

H2S + CO2 → sugars + S
H2O + CO2 → sugars + O2

There are bacteria combining these two ways of nutrition: green sulfur bacteria and purple sulfur bacteria.[102] Also sulfur-oxidizing bacteria can go into symbiosis with larger organisms, enabling the later to use hydrogen sulfide as food to be oxidized. Example: the giant tube worm.[103]

There are sulfate-reducing bacteria, that, by contrast, "breathe sulfate" instead of oxygen. They use organic compounds or molecular hydrogen as the energy source. They use sulfur as the electron acceptor, and reduce various oxidized sulfur compounds back into sulfide, often into hydrogen sulfide. They can grow on other partially oxidized sulfur compounds (e.g. thiosulfates, thionates, polysulfides, sulfites).

There are studies pointing that many deposits of native sulfur in places that were the bottom of the ancient oceans have biological origin.[104][105][106] These studies indicate that this native sulfur have been obtained through biological activity, but what is responsible for that (sulfur-oxidizing bacteria or sulfate-reducing bacteria) is still unknown for sure.

Sulfur is absorbed by plants roots from soil as sulfate and transported as a phosphate ester. Sulfate is reduced to sulfide via sulfite before it is incorporated into cysteine and other organosulfur compounds.[107]

SO42− → SO32− → H2S → cysteine (thiol) → methionine (thioether)

While the plants' role in transferring sulfur to animals by food chains is more or less understood, the role of sulfur bacteria is just getting investigated.[108][109]

Protein and organic metabolites edit

In all forms of life, most of the sulfur is contained in two proteinogenic amino acids (cysteine and methionine), thus the element is present in all proteins that contain these amino acids, as well as in respective peptides.[110] Some of the sulfur is comprised in certain metabolites—many of which are cofactors—and sulfated polysaccharides of connective tissue (chondroitin sulfates, heparin).

 
Schematic representation of disulfide bridges (in yellow) between two protein helices

Proteins, to execute their biological function, need to have specific space geometry. Formation of this geometry is performed in a process called protein folding, and is provided by intra- and inter-molecular bonds. The process has several stages. While at premier stages a polypeptide chain folds due to hydrogen bonds, at later stages folding is provided (apart from hydrogen bonds) by covalent bonds between two sulfur atoms of two cysteine residues (so called disulfide bridges) at different places of a chain (tertiary protein structure) as well as between two cysteine residues in two separated protein subunits (quaternary protein structure). Both structures easily may be seen in insulin. As the bond energy of a covalent disulfide bridge is higher than the energy of a coordinate bond or hydrophobic interaction, higher disulfide bridges content leads to higher energy needed for protein denaturation. In general disulfide bonds are necessary in proteins functioning outside cellular space, and they do not change proteins' conformation (geometry), but serve as its stabilizers.[111] Within cytoplasm cysteine residues of proteins are saved in reduced state (i.e. in -SH form) by thioredoxins.[112]

This property manifests in following examples. Lysozyme is stable enough to be applied as a drug.[113] Feathers and hair have relative strength, and consisting in them keratin is considered indigestible by most organisms. However, there are fungi and bacteria containing keratinase, and are able to destruct keratin.

Many important cellular enzymes use prosthetic groups ending with -SH moieties to handle reactions involving acyl-containing biochemicals: two common examples from basic metabolism are coenzyme A and alpha-lipoic acid.[114] Cysteine-related metabolites homocysteine and taurine are other sulfur-containing amino acids that are similar in structure, but not coded by DNA, and are not part of the primary structure of proteins, take part in various locations of mammalian physiology.[115][116] Two of the 13 classical vitamins, biotin and thiamine, contain sulfur, and serve as cofactors to several enzymes.[117][118] In intracellular chemistry, sulfur operates as a carrier of reducing hydrogen and its electrons for cellular repair of oxidation. Reduced glutathione, a sulfur-containing tripeptide, is a reducing agent through its sulfhydryl (-SH) moiety derived from cysteine.

Methanogenesis, the route to most of the world's methane, is a multistep biochemical transformation of carbon dioxide. This conversion requires several organosulfur cofactors. These include coenzyme M, CH3SCH2CH2SO3, the immediate precursor to methane.[119]

Metalloproteins and inorganic cofactors edit

Metalloproteins—in which the active site is a transition metal ion (or metal-sulfide cluster) often coordinated by sulfur atoms of cysteine residues[120]—are essential components of enzymes involved in electron transfer processes. Examples include plastocyanin (Cu2+) and nitrous oxide reductase (Cu–S). The function of these enzymes is dependent on the fact that the transition metal ion can undergo redox reactions. Other examples include many zinc proteins,[121] as well as iron–sulfur clusters. Most pervasive are the ferrodoxins, which serve as electron shuttles in cells. In bacteria, the important nitrogenase enzymes contain an Fe–Mo–S cluster and is a catalyst that performs the important function of nitrogen fixation, converting atmospheric nitrogen to ammonia that can be used by microorganisms and plants to make proteins, DNA, RNA, alkaloids, and the other organic nitrogen compounds necessary for life.[122]

Sulfur is also present in molybdenum cofactor.[123]

 
Easiness of electron flow in a cluster provides catalytic effect of a respective enzyme.

Sulfate edit

Deficiency edit

In humans methionine is an essential amino acid; cysteine is conditionally essential and may be synthesized from non-essential serine (sulfur donor would be methionine in this case). Dietary deficiency rarely happens in common conditions. Artificial methionine deficiency is attempted to apply in cancer treatment,[124] but the method is still potentially dangerous.[125]

Isolated sulfite oxidase deficiency is a rare, fatal genetic disease preventing production of sulfite oxidase, needed to metabolize sulfites to sulfates.[126]

Precautions edit

Sulfur
Hazards
GHS labelling:
   
Warning
H315[127]
NFPA 704 (fire diamond)
 Health 2: Intense or continued but not chronic exposure could cause temporary incapacitation or possible residual injury. E.g. chloroformFlammability 1: Must be pre-heated before ignition can occur. Flash point over 93 °C (200 °F). E.g. canola oilInstability 0: Normally stable, even under fire exposure conditions, and is not reactive with water. E.g. liquid nitrogenSpecial hazards (white): no code
2
1
0
 
Effect of acid rain on a forest, Jizera Mountains, Czech Republic

Though elemental sulfur is only minimally absorbed through the skin and is of low toxicity to humans, inhalation of sulfur dust or contact with eyes or skin may cause irritation. Excessive ingestion of sulfur can cause a burning sensation or diarrhea,[129] and cases of life-threatening metabolic acidosis have been reported after patients deliberately consumed sulfur as a folk remedy.[130][131]

Toxicity of sulfur compounds edit

When sulfur burns in air, it produces sulfur dioxide. In water, this gas produces sulfurous acid and sulfites; sulfites are antioxidants that inhibit growth of aerobic bacteria and a useful food additive in small amounts. At high concentrations these acids harm the lungs, eyes, or other tissues.[132] In organisms without lungs such as insects, sulfite in high concentration prevents respiration.[133]

Sulfur trioxide (made by catalysis from sulfur dioxide) and sulfuric acid are similarly highly acidic and corrosive in the presence of water. Concentrated sulfuric acid is a strong dehydrating agent that can strip available water molecules and water components from sugar and organic tissue.[134]

The burning of coal and/or petroleum by industry and power plants generates sulfur dioxide (SO2) that reacts with atmospheric water and oxygen to produce sulfurous acid (H2SO3).[135] These acids are components of acid rain, lowering the pH of soil and freshwater bodies, sometimes resulting in substantial damage to the environment and chemical weathering of statues and structures. Fuel standards increasingly require that fuel producers extract sulfur from fossil fuels to prevent acid rain formation. This extracted and refined sulfur represents a large portion of sulfur production. In coal-fired power plants, flue gases are sometimes purified. More modern power plants that use synthesis gas extract the sulfur before they burn the gas.

Hydrogen sulfide is about one-half as toxic as hydrogen cyanide, and intoxicates by the same mechanism (inhibition of the respiratory enzyme cytochrome oxidase),[136] though hydrogen sulfide is less likely to cause sudden poisonings from small inhaled amounts (near its permissible exposure limit (PEL) of 20 ppm) because of its disagreeable odor.[137] However, its presence in ambient air at concentration over 100–150 ppm quickly deadens the sense of smell,[138] and a victim may breathe increasing quantities without noticing until severe symptoms cause death. Dissolved sulfide and hydrosulfide salts are toxic by the same mechanism.

See also edit

References edit

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Further reading edit

Sigel, Astrid; Freisinger, Eva; Sigel, Roland K.O., eds. (2020). Transition Metals and Sulfur: A Strong Relationship for Life. Guest Editors Martha E Sosa Torres and Peter M.H.Kroneck. Berlin/Boston: de Gruyter. pp. xlv+455. ISBN 978-3-11-058889-7.

External links edit

  • Sulfur at The Periodic Table of Videos (University of Nottingham)
  • Atomic Data for Sulfur, NIST Physical Measurement Laboratory
  • Sulfur phase diagram 23 February 2010 at the Wayback Machine, Introduction to Chemistry for Ages 13–17
  • Crystalline, liquid and polymerization of sulfur on Vulcano Island, Italy
  • Sulfur and its use as a pesticide
  • The Sulphur Institute

sulfur, this, article, about, chemical, element, other, uses, disambiguation, also, spelled, sulphur, british, english, chemical, element, symbol, atomic, number, abundant, multivalent, nonmetallic, under, normal, conditions, sulfur, atoms, form, cyclic, octat. This article is about the chemical element For other uses see Sulfur disambiguation Sulfur also spelled sulphur in British English is a chemical element it has symbol S and atomic number 16 It is abundant multivalent and nonmetallic Under normal conditions sulfur atoms form cyclic octatomic molecules with the chemical formula S8 Elemental sulfur is a bright yellow crystalline solid at room temperature Sulfur 16SSulfurAlternative nameSulphur British spelling Allotropessee Allotropes of sulfurAppearanceLemon yellow sintered microcrystalsStandard atomic weight Ar S 32 059 32 076 1 32 06 0 02 abridged 2 Sulfur 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 O S Sephosphorus sulfur chlorineAtomic number Z 16Groupgroup 16 chalcogens Periodperiod 3Block p blockElectron configuration Ne 3s2 3p4Electrons per shell2 8 6Physical propertiesPhase at STPsolidMelting point388 36 K 115 21 C 239 38 F Boiling point717 8 K 444 6 C 832 3 F Density near r t alpha a S8 2 07 g cm3 beta b S8 1 96 g cm3 gamma g S8 1 92 g cm3when liquid at m p 1 819 g cm3Critical point1314 K 20 7 MPaHeat of fusionbeta b S8 1 727 kJ molHeat of vaporizationbeta b S8 45 kJ molMolar heat capacity22 75 J mol K Vapor pressureP Pa 1 10 100 1 k 10 k 100 kat T K 375 408 449 508 591 717Atomic propertiesOxidation states 2 1 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 a strongly acidic oxide ElectronegativityPauling scale 2 58Ionization energies1st 999 6 kJ mol2nd 2252 kJ mol3rd 3357 kJ mol more Covalent radius105 3 pmVan der Waals radius180 pmSpectral lines of sulfurOther propertiesNatural occurrenceprimordialCrystal structurealpha a S8 orthorhombic oF128 Lattice constantsa 1 0460 nmb 1 2861 nmc 2 4481 nm at 20 C 3 Crystal structurebeta b S8 monoclinic mP48 Lattice constantsa 1 0923 nmb 1 0851 nmc 1 0787 nmb 95 905 at 20 C 3 Thermal conductivity0 205 W m K amorphous Electrical resistivity2 1015 W m at 20 C amorphous Magnetic orderingdiamagnetic 4 Molar magnetic susceptibilityalpha a S8 15 5 10 6 cm3 mol 298 K 5 Bulk modulus7 7 GPaMohs hardness2 0CAS Number7704 34 9HistoryDiscoverybefore 2000 BCE 6 Recognized as an element byAntoine Lavoisier 1777 Isotopes of sulfurveMain isotopes Decayabun dance half life t1 2 mode pro duct32S 94 8 stable33S 0 760 stable34S 4 37 stable35S trace 87 37 d b 35Cl36S 0 02 stable34S abundances vary greatly between 3 96 and 4 77 percent in natural samples Category Sulfurviewtalkedit referencesSulfur is the tenth most abundant element by mass in the universe and the fifth most abundant on Earth Though sometimes found in pure native form sulfur on Earth usually occurs as sulfide and sulfate minerals Being abundant in native form sulfur was known in ancient times being mentioned for its uses in ancient India ancient Greece China and ancient Egypt Historically and in literature sulfur is also called brimstone 7 which means burning stone 8 Today almost all elemental sulfur is produced as a byproduct of removing sulfur containing contaminants from natural gas and petroleum 9 10 The greatest commercial use of the element is the production of sulfuric acid for sulfate and phosphate fertilizers and other chemical processes Sulfur is used in matches insecticides and fungicides Many sulfur compounds are odoriferous and the smells of odorized natural gas skunk scent bad breath grapefruit and garlic are due to organosulfur compounds Hydrogen sulfide gives the characteristic odor to rotting eggs and other biological processes Sulfur is an essential element for all life almost always in the form of organosulfur compounds or metal sulfides Amino acids two proteinogenic cysteine and methionine and many other non coded cystine taurine etc and two vitamins biotin and thiamine are organosulfur compounds crucial for life Many cofactors also contain sulfur including glutathione and iron sulfur proteins Disulfides S S bonds confer mechanical strength and insolubility of the among others protein keratin found in outer skin hair and feathers Sulfur is one of the core chemical elements needed for biochemical functioning and is an elemental macronutrient for all living organisms Contents 1 Characteristics 1 1 Physical properties 1 2 Chemical properties 1 3 Allotropes 1 4 Isotopes 1 5 Natural occurrence 2 Compounds 2 1 Electron transfer reactions 2 2 Hydrogenation 2 3 Combustion 2 4 Halogenation 2 5 Pseudohalides 2 6 Metal sulfides 2 7 Organic compounds 3 History 3 1 Antiquity 3 2 Modern times 3 3 Spelling and etymology 4 Production 5 Applications 5 1 Sulfuric acid 5 2 Other important sulfur chemistry 5 3 Fertilizer 5 4 Fungicide and pesticide 5 5 Pharmaceuticals 5 6 Batteries 6 Biological role 6 1 Transferring sulfur between inorganic and biomolecules 6 2 Protein and organic metabolites 6 3 Metalloproteins and inorganic cofactors 6 4 Sulfate 6 5 Deficiency 7 Precautions 7 1 Toxicity of sulfur compounds 8 See also 9 References 10 Further reading 11 External linksCharacteristics editPhysical properties edit nbsp As a solid sulfur is a characteristic lemon yellow when burned sulfur melts into a blood red liquid and emits a blue flame Sulfur forms several polyatomic molecules The best known allotrope is octasulfur cyclo S8 The point group of cyclo S8 is D4d and its dipole moment is 0 D 11 Octasulfur is a soft bright yellow solid that is odorless but impure samples have an odor similar to that of matches 12 It melts at 115 21 C 239 38 F boils at 444 6 C 832 3 F 7 and sublimes more or less between 20 C 68 F and 50 C 122 F 13 At 95 2 C 203 4 F below its melting temperature cyclo octasulfur changes from a octasulfur to the b polymorph 14 The structure of the S8 ring is virtually unchanged by this phase change which affects the intermolecular interactions Between its melting and boiling temperatures octasulfur changes its allotrope again turning from b octasulfur to g sulfur again accompanied by a lower density but increased viscosity due to the formation of polymers 14 At higher temperatures the viscosity decreases as depolymerization occurs Molten sulfur assumes a dark red color above 200 C 392 F The density of sulfur is about 2 g cm3 depending on the allotrope all of the stable allotropes are excellent electrical insulators Sulfur is insoluble in water but soluble in carbon disulfide and to a lesser extent in other nonpolar organic solvents such as benzene and toluene Chemical properties edit Under normal conditions sulfur hydrolyzes very slowly to mainly form hydrogen sulfide and sulfuric acid 1 2 S8 4 H2 O 3 H2 S H2 SO4 The reaction involves adsorption of protons onto S8 clusters followed by disproportionation into the reaction products 15 The second fourth and sixth ionization energies of sulfur are 2252 kJ mol 4556 kJ mol and 8495 8 kJ mol respectively A composition of products of sulfur s reactions with oxidants and its oxidation state depends on that whether releasing out of a reaction energy overcomes these thresholds Applying catalysts and or supply of outer energy may vary sulfur s oxidation state and a composition of reaction products While reaction between sulfur and oxygen at normal conditions gives sulfur dioxide oxidation state 4 formation of sulfur trioxide oxidation state 6 requires temperature 400 600 C 750 1 100 F and presence of a catalyst In reactions with elements of lesser electronegativity it reacts as an oxidant and forms sulfides where it has oxidation state 2 Sulfur reacts with nearly all other elements with the exception of the noble gases even with the notoriously unreactive metal iridium yielding iridium disulfide 16 Some of those reactions need elevated temperatures 17 Allotropes edit Main article Allotropes of sulfur nbsp The structure of the cyclooctasulfur molecule S8Sulfur forms over 30 solid allotropes more than any other element 18 Besides S8 several other rings are known 19 Removing one atom from the crown gives S7 which is of a deeper yellow than S8 HPLC analysis of elemental sulfur reveals an equilibrium mixture of mainly S8 but with S7 and small amounts of S6 20 Larger rings have been prepared including S12 and S18 21 22 Amorphous or plastic sulfur is produced by rapid cooling of molten sulfur for example by pouring it into cold water X ray crystallography studies show that the amorphous form may have a helical structure with eight atoms per turn The long coiled polymeric molecules make the brownish substance elastic and in bulk this form has the feel of crude rubber This form is metastable at room temperature and gradually reverts to the crystalline molecular allotrope which is no longer elastic This process happens within a matter of hours to days but can be rapidly catalyzed Isotopes edit Main article Isotopes of sulfur Sulfur has 23 known isotopes four of which are stable 32S 94 99 0 26 33S 0 75 0 02 34S 4 25 0 24 and 36S 0 01 0 01 23 24 Other than 35S with a half life of 87 days the radioactive isotopes of sulfur have half lives less than 3 hours The preponderance of 32S is explained by its production in the so called alpha process one of the main classes of nuclear fusion reactions in exploding stars Other stable sulfur isotopes are produced in the bypass processes related with 34Ar and their composition depends on a type of a stellar explosion For example proportionally more 33S comes from novae than from supernovae 25 On the planet Earth the sulfur isotopic composition was determined by the Sun Though it is assumed that the distribution of different sulfur isotopes should be more or less equal it has been found that proportions of two most abundant sulfur isotopes 32S and 34S varies in different samples Assaying of these isotopes ratio d34S in the samples allows to make suggestions about their chemical history and with support of other methods it allows to age date the samples estimate temperature of equilibrium between ore and water determine pH and oxygen fugacity identify the activity of sulfate reducing bacteria in the time of formation of the sample or suggest the main sources of sulfur in ecosystems 26 However there are ongoing discussions about what is the real reason of the d34S shifts biological activity or postdeposital alteration 27 For example when sulfide minerals are precipitated isotopic equilibration among solids and liquid may cause small differences in the d34S values of co genetic minerals The differences between minerals can be used to estimate the temperature of equilibration The d13C and d34S of coexisting carbonate minerals and sulfides can be used to determine the pH and oxygen fugacity of the ore bearing fluid during ore formation Scientists measure the sulfur isotopes of minerals in rocks and sediments to study the redox conditions in the oceans in the past Sulfate reducing bacteria in marine sediment fractionate sulfur isotopes as they take in sulfate and produce sulfide Prior to 2010s it was thought that sulfate reduction could fractionate sulfur isotopes up to 46 permil 28 and fractionation larger than 46 permil recorded in sediments must be due to disproportionation of sulfur compounds in the sediment This view has changed since the 2010s as experiments show that sulfate reducing bacteria can fractionate to 66 permil 29 As substrates for disproportionation are limited by the product of sulfate reduction the isotopic effect of disproportionation should be less than 16 permil in most sedimentary settings 30 In most forest ecosystems sulfate is derived mostly from the atmosphere weathering of ore minerals and evaporites contribute some sulfur Sulfur with a distinctive isotopic composition has been used to identify pollution sources and enriched sulfur has been added as a tracer in hydrologic studies Differences in the natural abundances can be used in systems where there is sufficient variation in the 34S of ecosystem components Rocky Mountain lakes thought to be dominated by atmospheric sources of sulfate have been found to have measurably different 34S values than lakes believed to be dominated by watershed sources of sulfate The radioactive 35S is formed in cosmic ray spallation of the atmospheric 40Ar This fact may be used for proving the presence of recent not more than 1 year atmospheric sediments in various things This isotope may be obtained artificially by different ways In practice the reaction 35Cl n 35S p is used by irradiating potassium chloride with neutrons 31 The isotope 35S is used in various sulfur containing compounds as a radioactive tracer for many biological studies for example the Hershey Chase experiment Because of the weak beta activity of 35S its compounds are relatively safe as long as they are not ingested or absorbed by the body 32 Natural occurrence edit nbsp Sulfur vat from which railroad cars are loaded Freeport Sulphur Co Hoskins Mound Texas 1943 nbsp Most of the yellow and orange hues of Io are due to elemental sulfur and sulfur compounds deposited by active volcanoes nbsp Sulfur extraction East Java nbsp A man carrying sulfur blocks from Kawah Ijen a volcano in East Java Indonesia 200932S is created inside massive stars at a depth where the temperature exceeds 2 5 109 K by the fusion of one nucleus of silicon plus one nucleus of helium 33 As this nuclear reaction is part of the alpha process that produces elements in abundance sulfur is the 10th most common element in the universe Sulfur usually as sulfide is present in many types of meteorites Ordinary chondrites contain on average 2 1 sulfur and carbonaceous chondrites may contain as much as 6 6 It is normally present as troilite FeS but there are exceptions with carbonaceous chondrites containing free sulfur sulfates and other sulfur compounds 34 The distinctive colors of Jupiter s volcanic moon Io are attributed to various forms of molten solid and gaseous sulfur 35 It is the fifth most common element by mass in the Earth Elemental sulfur can be found near hot springs and volcanic regions in many parts of the world especially along the Pacific Ring of Fire such volcanic deposits are currently mined in Indonesia Chile and Japan These deposits are polycrystalline with the largest documented single crystal measuring 22 16 11 cm 36 Historically Sicily was a major source of sulfur in the Industrial Revolution 37 Lakes of molten sulfur up to about 200 m 660 ft in diameter have been found on the sea floor associated with submarine volcanoes at depths where the boiling point of water is higher than the melting point of sulfur 38 Native sulfur is synthesised by anaerobic bacteria acting on sulfate minerals such as gypsum in salt domes 39 40 Significant deposits in salt domes occur along the coast of the Gulf of Mexico and in evaporites in eastern Europe and western Asia Native sulfur may be produced by geological processes alone Fossil based sulfur deposits from salt domes were once the basis for commercial production in the United States Russia Turkmenistan and Ukraine 41 Currently commercial production is still carried out in the Osiek mine in Poland Such sources are now of secondary commercial importance and most are no longer worked Common naturally occurring sulfur compounds include the sulfide minerals such as pyrite iron sulfide cinnabar mercury sulfide galena lead sulfide sphalerite zinc sulfide and stibnite antimony sulfide and the sulfate minerals such as gypsum calcium sulfate alunite potassium aluminium sulfate and barite barium sulfate On Earth just as upon Jupiter s moon Io elemental sulfur occurs naturally in volcanic emissions including emissions from hydrothermal vents The main industrial source of sulfur is now petroleum and natural gas 9 Compounds editMain article Sulfur compounds Common oxidation states of sulfur range from 2 to 6 Sulfur forms stable compounds with all elements except the noble gases Electron transfer reactions edit nbsp Lapis lazuli owes its blue color to a trisulfur radical anion S 3 Sulfur polycations S82 S42 and S162 are produced when sulfur is reacted with oxidising agents in a strongly acidic solution 42 The colored solutions produced by dissolving sulfur in oleum were first reported as early as 1804 by C F Bucholz but the cause of the color and the structure of the polycations involved was only determined in the late 1960s S82 is deep blue S42 is yellow and S162 is red 14 Reduction of sulfur gives various polysulfides with the formula Sx2 many of which have been obtained in crystalline form Illustrative is the production of sodium tetrasulfide 4 Na S8 2 Na2S4 Some of these dianions dissociate to give radical anions such as S3 gives the blue color of the rock lapis lazuli nbsp Two parallel sulfur chains grown inside a single wall carbon nanotube CNT a Zig zag b and straight c S chains inside double wall CNTs 43 This reaction highlights a distinctive property of sulfur its ability to catenate bind to itself by formation of chains Protonation of these polysulfide anions produces the polysulfanes H2Sx where x 2 3 and 4 44 Ultimately reduction of sulfur produces sulfide salts 16 Na S8 8 Na2S The interconversion of these species is exploited in the sodium sulfur battery Hydrogenation edit Treatment of sulfur with hydrogen gives hydrogen sulfide When dissolved in water hydrogen sulfide is mildly acidic 7 H2S HS H Hydrogen sulfide gas and the hydrosulfide anion are extremely toxic to mammals due to their inhibition of the oxygen carrying capacity of hemoglobin and certain cytochromes in a manner analogous to cyanide and azide see below under precautions Combustion edit The two principal sulfur oxides are obtained by burning sulfur S O2 SO2 sulfur dioxide 2 SO2 O2 2 SO3 sulfur trioxide Many other sulfur oxides are observed including the sulfur rich oxides include sulfur monoxide disulfur monoxide disulfur dioxides and higher oxides containing peroxo groups Halogenation edit Sulfur reacts with fluorine to give the highly reactive sulfur tetrafluoride and the highly inert sulfur hexafluoride 45 Whereas fluorine gives S IV and S VI compounds chlorine gives S II and S I derivatives Thus sulfur dichloride disulfur dichloride and higher chlorosulfanes arise from the chlorination of sulfur Sulfuryl chloride and chlorosulfuric acid are derivatives of sulfuric acid thionyl chloride SOCl2 is a common reagent in organic synthesis 46 Bromine also oxidizes sulfur to form sulfur dibromide and disulfur dibromide 46 Pseudohalides edit Sulfur oxidizes cyanide and sulfite to give thiocyanate and thiosulfate respectively Metal sulfides edit Sulfur reacts with many metals Electropositive metals give polysulfide salts Copper zinc and silver are attacked by sulfur see tarnishing Although many metal sulfides are known most are prepared by high temperature reactions of the elements 47 Geoscientists also study the isotopes of metal sulfides in rocks and sediment to study environmental conditions in the Earth s past 48 Organic compounds edit Main article Organosulfur compounds Illustrative organosulfur compounds nbsp L cysteine an amino acid containing a thiol group nbsp Methionine an amino acid containing a thioether nbsp Thiamine or vitamin B1 nbsp Biotin or vitamin B7 nbsp Penicillin an antibiotic R is the variable group nbsp Allicin a chemical compound in garlic nbsp Diphenyl disulfide a representative disulfide nbsp Dibenzothiophene a component of crude oil nbsp Perfluorooctanesulfonic acid PFOS a surfactantSome of the main classes of sulfur containing organic compounds include the following 49 Thiols or mercaptans so called because they capture mercury as chelators are the sulfur analogs of alcohols treatment of thiols with base gives thiolate ions Thioethers are the sulfur analogs of ethers Sulfonium ions have three groups attached to a cationic sulfur center Dimethylsulfoniopropionate DMSP is one such compound important in the marine organic sulfur cycle Sulfoxides and sulfones are thioethers with one and two oxygen atoms attached to the sulfur atom respectively The simplest sulfoxide dimethyl sulfoxide is a common solvent a common sulfone is sulfolane Sulfonic acids are used in many detergents Compounds with carbon sulfur multiple bonds are uncommon an exception being carbon disulfide a volatile colorless liquid that is structurally similar to carbon dioxide It is used as a reagent to make the polymer rayon and many organosulfur compounds Unlike carbon monoxide carbon monosulfide is stable only as an extremely dilute gas found between solar systems 50 Organosulfur compounds are responsible for some of the unpleasant odors of decaying organic matter They are widely known as the odorant in domestic natural gas garlic odor and skunk spray as well as a component of bad breath odor Not all organic sulfur compounds smell unpleasant at all concentrations the sulfur containing monoterpenoid grapefruit mercaptan in small concentrations is the characteristic scent of grapefruit but has a generic thiol odor at larger concentrations Sulfur mustard a potent vesicant was used in World War I as a disabling agent 51 Sulfur sulfur bonds are a structural component used to stiffen rubber similar to the disulfide bridges that rigidify proteins see biological below In the most common type of industrial curing or hardening and strengthening of natural rubber elemental sulfur is heated with the rubber to the point that chemical reactions form disulfide bridges between isoprene units of the polymer This process patented in 1843 made rubber a major industrial product especially in automobile tires Because of the heat and sulfur the process was named vulcanization after the Roman god of the forge and volcanism History editAntiquity edit nbsp Pharmaceutical container for sulfur from the first half of the 20th century From the Museo del Objeto del Objeto collectionBeing abundantly available in native form sulfur was known in ancient times and is referred to in the Torah Genesis English translations of the Christian Bible commonly referred to burning sulfur as brimstone giving rise to the term fire and brimstone sermons in which listeners are reminded of the fate of eternal damnation that await the unbelieving and unrepentant It is from this part of the Bible 52 that Hell is implied to smell of sulfur likely due to its association with volcanic activity According to the Ebers Papyrus a sulfur ointment was used in ancient Egypt to treat granular eyelids Sulfur was used for fumigation in preclassical Greece 53 this is mentioned in the Odyssey 54 Pliny the Elder discusses sulfur in book 35 of his Natural History saying that its best known source is the island of Melos He mentions its use for fumigation medicine and bleaching cloth 55 A natural form of sulfur known as shiliuhuang 石硫黄 was known in China since the 6th century BC and found in Hanzhong 56 By the 3rd century the Chinese had discovered that sulfur could be extracted from pyrite 56 Chinese Daoists were interested in sulfur s flammability and its reactivity with certain metals yet its earliest practical uses were found in traditional Chinese medicine 56 The Wujing Zongyao of 1044 AD described various formulas for Chinese black powder which is a mixture of potassium nitrate KNO3 charcoal and sulfur 57 nbsp Sulfur nbsp BrimstoneAlchemical signs for sulfur or the combustible elements and brimstone an older archaic name for sulfur 58 Indian alchemists practitioners of the science of chemicals Sanskrit रसश स त र romanized rasasastra wrote extensively about the use of sulfur in alchemical operations with mercury from the eighth century AD onwards 59 In the rasasastra tradition sulfur is called the smelly गन धक gandhaka Early European alchemists gave sulfur a unique alchemical symbol a triangle atop a cross This is sometimes confused with the astronomical crossed spear symbol for 2 Pallas The variation known as brimstone has a symbol combining a two barred cross atop a lemniscate In traditional skin treatment elemental sulfur was used mainly in creams to alleviate such conditions as scabies ringworm psoriasis eczema and acne The mechanism of action is unknown though elemental sulfur does oxidize slowly to sulfurous acid which is through the action of sulfite a mild reducing and antibacterial agent 60 61 62 Modern times edit nbsp Today sulfur is known to have antifungal antibacterial and keratolytic activity in the past it was used against acne vulgaris rosacea seborrheic dermatitis dandruff pityriasis versicolor scabies and warts 63 This 1881 advertisement baselessly claims efficacy against rheumatism gout baldness and graying of hair Sulfur appears in a column of fixed non acidic alkali in a chemical table of 1718 64 Antoine Lavoisier used sulfur in combustion experiments writing of some of these in 1777 65 Sulfur deposits in Sicily were the dominant source for more than a century By the late 18th century about 2 000 tonnes per year of sulfur were imported into Marseille France for the production of sulfuric acid for use in the Leblanc process In industrializing Britain with the repeal of tariffs on salt in 1824 demand for sulfur from Sicily surged upward The increasing British control and exploitation of the mining refining and transportation of the sulfur coupled with the failure of this lucrative export to transform Sicily s backward and impoverished economy led to the Sulfur Crisis of 1840 when King Ferdinand II gave a monopoly of the sulfur industry to a French firm violating an earlier 1816 trade agreement with Britain A peaceful solution was eventually negotiated by France 66 67 In 1867 elemental sulfur was discovered in underground deposits in Louisiana and Texas The highly successful Frasch process was developed to extract this resource 68 In the late 18th century furniture makers used molten sulfur to produce decorative inlays 69 Molten sulfur is sometimes still used for setting steel bolts into drilled concrete holes where high shock resistance is desired for floor mounted equipment attachment points Pure powdered sulfur was used as a medicinal tonic and laxative 41 With the advent of the contact process the majority of sulfur today is used to make sulfuric acid for a wide range of uses particularly fertilizer 70 In recent times the main source of sulfur has become petroleum and natural gas This is due to the requirement to remove sulfur from fuels in order to prevent acid rain and has resulted in a surplus of sulfur 9 Spelling and etymology edit Sulfur is derived from the Latin word sulpur which was Hellenized to sulphur in the erroneous belief that the Latin word came from Greek This spelling was later reinterpreted as representing an f sound and resulted in the spelling sulfur which appears in Latin toward the end of the Classical period The true Ancient Greek word for sulfur 8eῖon theion from earlier 8eeion theeion is the source of the international chemical prefix thio The Modern Standard Greek word for sulfur is 8eio theio In 12th century Anglo French it was sulfre In the 14th century the erroneously Hellenized Latin ph was restored in Middle English sulphre By the 15th century both full Latin spelling variants sulfur and sulphur became common in English The parallel f ph spellings continued in Britain until the 19th century when the word was standardized as sulphur 71 On the other hand sulfur was the form chosen in the United States whereas Canada uses both The IUPAC adopted the spelling sulfur in 1990 or 1971 depending on the source cited 72 as did the Nomenclature Committee of the Royal Society of Chemistry in 1992 restoring the spelling sulfur to Britain 73 Oxford Dictionaries note that in chemistry and other technical uses the f spelling is now the standard form for this and related words in British as well as US contexts and is increasingly used in general contexts as well 74 Production edit nbsp Sicilian kiln used to obtain sulfur from volcanic rock diagram from a 1906 chemistry book nbsp Traditional sulfur mining at Ijen Volcano East Java Indonesia This image shows the dangerous and rugged conditions the miners face including toxic smoke and high drops as well as their lack of protective equipment The pipes over which they are standing are for condensing sulfur vapors Sulfur may be found by itself and historically was usually obtained in this form pyrite has also been a source of sulfur 75 In volcanic regions in Sicily in ancient times it was found on the surface of the Earth and the Sicilian process was used sulfur deposits were piled and stacked in brick kilns built on sloping hillsides with airspaces between them Then some sulfur was pulverized spread over the stacked ore and ignited causing the free sulfur to melt down the hills Eventually the surface borne deposits played out and miners excavated veins that ultimately dotted the Sicilian landscape with labyrinthine mines Mining was unmechanized and labor intensive with pickmen freeing the ore from the rock and mine boys or carusi carrying baskets of ore to the surface often through a mile or more of tunnels Once the ore was at the surface it was reduced and extracted in smelting ovens The conditions in Sicilian sulfur mines were horrific prompting Booker T Washington to write I am not prepared just now to say to what extent I believe in a physical hell in the next world but a sulfur mine in Sicily is about the nearest thing to hell that I expect to see in this life 76 Sulfur is still mined from surface deposits in poorer nations with volcanoes such as Indonesia and worker conditions have not improved much since Booker T Washington s days 77 Elemental sulfur was extracted from salt domes in which it sometimes occurs in nearly pure form until the late 20th century Sulfur is now produced as a side product of other industrial processes such as in oil refining in which sulfur is undesired As a mineral native sulfur under salt domes is thought to be a fossil mineral resource produced by the action of anaerobic bacteria on sulfate deposits It was removed from such salt dome mines mainly by the Frasch process 41 In this method superheated water was pumped into a native sulfur deposit to melt the sulfur and then compressed air returned the 99 5 pure melted product to the surface Throughout the 20th century this procedure produced elemental sulfur that required no further purification Due to a limited number of such sulfur deposits and the high cost of working them this process for mining sulfur has not been employed in a major way anywhere in the world since 2002 78 79 nbsp Sulfur recovered from hydrocarbons in Alberta stockpiled for shipment in North Vancouver British ColumbiaToday sulfur is produced from petroleum natural gas and related fossil resources from which it is obtained mainly as hydrogen sulfide 9 Organosulfur compounds undesirable impurities in petroleum may be upgraded by subjecting them to hydrodesulfurization which cleaves the C S bonds 78 79 R S R 2 H2 2 RH H2S The resulting hydrogen sulfide from this process and also as it occurs in natural gas is converted into elemental sulfur by the Claus process This process entails oxidation of some hydrogen sulfide to sulfur dioxide and then the comproportionation of the two 78 79 3 O2 2 H2S 2 SO2 2 H2O SO2 2 H2S 3 S 2 H2O nbsp Production and price US market of elemental sulfurOwing to the high sulfur content of the Athabasca Oil Sands stockpiles of elemental sulfur from this process now exist throughout Alberta Canada 80 Another way of storing sulfur is as a binder for concrete the resulting product having some desirable properties see sulfur concrete 81 The world production of sulfur in 2011 amounted to 69 million tonnes Mt with more than 15 countries contributing more than 1 Mt each Countries producing more than 5 Mt are China 9 6 the United States 8 8 Canada 7 1 and Russia 7 1 82 Production has been slowly increasing from 1900 to 2010 the price was unstable in the 1980s and around 2010 83 Applications editSulfuric acid edit Elemental sulfur is used mainly as a precursor to other chemicals Approximately 85 1989 is converted to sulfuric acid H2SO4 1 8 S8 3 2 O2 H2O H2SO4 nbsp Sulfuric acid production in 2000In 2010 the United States produced more sulfuric acid than any other inorganic industrial chemical 83 The principal use for the acid is the extraction of phosphate ores for the production of fertilizer manufacturing Other applications of sulfuric acid include oil refining wastewater processing and mineral extraction 41 Other important sulfur chemistry edit Sulfur reacts directly with methane to give carbon disulfide which is used to manufacture cellophane and rayon 41 One of the uses of elemental sulfur is in vulcanization of rubber where polysulfide chains crosslink organic polymers Large quantities of sulfites are used to bleach paper and to preserve dried fruit Many surfactants and detergents e g sodium lauryl sulfate are sulfate derivatives Calcium sulfate gypsum CaSO4 2H2O is mined on the scale of 100 million tonnes each year for use in Portland cement and fertilizers When silver based photography was widespread sodium and ammonium thiosulfate were widely used as fixing agents Sulfur is a component of gunpowder black powder Fertilizer edit Amino acids synthesized by living organisms such as methionine and cysteine contain organosulfur groups thioester and thiol respectively The antioxidant glutathione protecting many living organisms against free radicals and oxidative stress also contains organic sulfur Some crops such as onion and garlic also produce different organosulfur compounds such as syn propanethial S oxide responsible of lacrymal irritation onions or diallyl disulfide and allicin garlic Sulfates commonly found in soils and groundwaters are often a sufficient natural source of sulfur for plants and bacteria Atmospheric deposition of sulfur dioxide SO2 is also a common artificial source coal combustion of sulfur for the soils Under normal circumstances in most agricultural soils sulfur is not a limiting nutrient for plants and microorganisms see Liebig s barrel However in some circumstances soils can be depleted in sulfate e g if this later is leached by meteoric water rain or if the requirements in sulfur for some types of crops are high This explains that sulfur is increasingly recognized and used as a component of fertilizers The most important form of sulfur for fertilizer is calcium sulfate commonly found in nature as the mineral gypsum CaSO4 2H2O Elemental sulfur is hydrophobic not soluble in water and cannot be used directly by plants Elemental sulfur ES is sometimes mixed with bentonite to amend depleted soils for crops with high requirement in organo sulfur Over time oxidation abiotic processes with atmospheric oxygen and soil bacteria can oxidize and convert elemental sulfur to soluble derivatives which can then be used by microorganisms and plants Sulfur improves the efficiency of other essential plant nutrients particularly nitrogen and phosphorus 84 Biologically produced sulfur particles are naturally hydrophilic due to a biopolymer coating and are easier to disperse over the land in a spray of diluted slurry resulting in a faster uptake by plants The plants requirement for sulfur equals or exceeds the requirement for phosphorus It is an essential nutrient for plant growth root nodule formation of legumes and immunity and defense systems Sulfur deficiency has become widespread in many countries in Europe 85 86 87 Because atmospheric inputs of sulfur continue to decrease the deficit in the sulfur input output is likely to increase unless sulfur fertilizers are used Atmospheric inputs of sulfur decrease because of actions taken to limit acid rains 88 84 Fungicide and pesticide edit nbsp Sulfur candle originally sold for home fumigationElemental sulfur is one of the oldest fungicides and pesticides Dusting sulfur elemental sulfur in powdered form is a common fungicide for grapes strawberry many vegetables and several other crops It has a good efficacy against a wide range of powdery mildew diseases as well as black spot In organic production sulfur is the most important fungicide It is the only fungicide used in organically farmed apple production against the main disease apple scab under colder conditions Biosulfur biologically produced elemental sulfur with hydrophilic characteristics can also be used for these applications Standard formulation dusting sulfur is applied to crops with a sulfur duster or from a dusting plane Wettable sulfur is the commercial name for dusting sulfur formulated with additional ingredients to make it water miscible 81 89 It has similar applications and is used as a fungicide against mildew and other mold related problems with plants and soil Elemental sulfur powder is used as an organic i e green insecticide actually an acaricide against ticks and mites A common method of application is dusting the clothing or limbs with sulfur powder A diluted solution of lime sulfur made by combining calcium hydroxide with elemental sulfur in water is used as a dip for pets to destroy ringworm fungus mange and other dermatoses and parasites Sulfur candles of almost pure sulfur were burned to fumigate structures and wine barrels but are now considered too toxic for residences Pharmaceuticals edit Main article Sulfur pharmacy Sulfur specifically octasulfur S8 is used in pharmaceutical skin preparations for the treatment of acne and other conditions It acts as a keratolytic agent and also kills bacteria fungi scabies mites and other parasites 90 Precipitated sulfur and colloidal sulfur are used in form of lotions creams powders soaps and bath additives for the treatment of acne vulgaris acne rosacea and seborrhoeic dermatitis 91 Many drugs contain sulfur 92 Early examples include antibacterial sulfonamides known as sulfa drugs A more recent example is mucolytic acetylcysteine Sulfur is a part of many bacterial defense molecules Most b lactam antibiotics including the penicillins cephalosporins and monobactams contain sulfur 49 Batteries edit Due to their high energy density and the availability of sulfur there is ongoing research in creating rechargeable lithium sulfur batteries Until now carbonate electrolytes have caused failures in such batteries after a single cycle In February 2022 researchers at Drexel University have not only created a prototypical battery that lasted 4000 recharge cycles but also found the first monoclinic gamma sulfur that remained stable below 95 degrees Celsius 93 Biological role editSulfur is an essential component of all living cells It is the eighth most abundant element in the human body by weight 94 about equal in abundance to potassium and slightly greater than sodium and chlorine 95 A 70 kg 150 lb human body contains about 140 grams 4 9 oz of sulfur 96 The main dietary source of sulfur for humans is sulfur containing amino acids 97 which can be found in plant and animal proteins 98 Transferring sulfur between inorganic and biomolecules edit See also Sulfur cycle and Sulfur metabolism In the 1880s while studying Beggiatoa a bacterium living in a sulfur rich environment Sergei Winogradsky found that it oxidized hydrogen sulfide H2S as an energy source forming intracellular sulfur droplets Winogradsky referred to this form of metabolism as inorgoxidation oxidation of inorganic compounds 99 Another contributor who continued to study it was Selman Waksman 100 Primitive bacteria that live around deep ocean volcanic vents oxidize hydrogen sulfide for their nutrition as discovered by Robert Ballard 10 Sulfur oxidizers can use as energy sources reduced sulfur compounds including hydrogen sulfide elemental sulfur sulfite thiosulfate and various polythionates e g tetrathionate 101 They depend on enzymes such as sulfur oxygenase and sulfite oxidase to oxidize sulfur to sulfate Some lithotrophs can even use the energy contained in sulfur compounds to produce sugars a process known as chemosynthesis Some bacteria and archaea use hydrogen sulfide in place of water as the electron donor in chemosynthesis a process similar to photosynthesis that produces sugars and uses oxygen as the electron acceptor Sulfur based chemosynthesis may be simplifiedly compared with photosynthesis H2S CO2 sugars S H2O CO2 sugars O2 There are bacteria combining these two ways of nutrition green sulfur bacteria and purple sulfur bacteria 102 Also sulfur oxidizing bacteria can go into symbiosis with larger organisms enabling the later to use hydrogen sulfide as food to be oxidized Example the giant tube worm 103 There are sulfate reducing bacteria that by contrast breathe sulfate instead of oxygen They use organic compounds or molecular hydrogen as the energy source They use sulfur as the electron acceptor and reduce various oxidized sulfur compounds back into sulfide often into hydrogen sulfide They can grow on other partially oxidized sulfur compounds e g thiosulfates thionates polysulfides sulfites There are studies pointing that many deposits of native sulfur in places that were the bottom of the ancient oceans have biological origin 104 105 106 These studies indicate that this native sulfur have been obtained through biological activity but what is responsible for that sulfur oxidizing bacteria or sulfate reducing bacteria is still unknown for sure Sulfur is absorbed by plants roots from soil as sulfate and transported as a phosphate ester Sulfate is reduced to sulfide via sulfite before it is incorporated into cysteine and other organosulfur compounds 107 SO42 SO32 H2S cysteine thiol methionine thioether While the plants role in transferring sulfur to animals by food chains is more or less understood the role of sulfur bacteria is just getting investigated 108 109 Protein and organic metabolites edit In all forms of life most of the sulfur is contained in two proteinogenic amino acids cysteine and methionine thus the element is present in all proteins that contain these amino acids as well as in respective peptides 110 Some of the sulfur is comprised in certain metabolites many of which are cofactors and sulfated polysaccharides of connective tissue chondroitin sulfates heparin nbsp Schematic representation of disulfide bridges in yellow between two protein helicesProteins to execute their biological function need to have specific space geometry Formation of this geometry is performed in a process called protein folding and is provided by intra and inter molecular bonds The process has several stages While at premier stages a polypeptide chain folds due to hydrogen bonds at later stages folding is provided apart from hydrogen bonds by covalent bonds between two sulfur atoms of two cysteine residues so called disulfide bridges at different places of a chain tertiary protein structure as well as between two cysteine residues in two separated protein subunits quaternary protein structure Both structures easily may be seen in insulin As the bond energy of a covalent disulfide bridge is higher than the energy of a coordinate bond or hydrophobic interaction higher disulfide bridges content leads to higher energy needed for protein denaturation In general disulfide bonds are necessary in proteins functioning outside cellular space and they do not change proteins conformation geometry but serve as its stabilizers 111 Within cytoplasm cysteine residues of proteins are saved in reduced state i e in SH form by thioredoxins 112 This property manifests in following examples Lysozyme is stable enough to be applied as a drug 113 Feathers and hair have relative strength and consisting in them keratin is considered indigestible by most organisms However there are fungi and bacteria containing keratinase and are able to destruct keratin Many important cellular enzymes use prosthetic groups ending with SH moieties to handle reactions involving acyl containing biochemicals two common examples from basic metabolism are coenzyme A and alpha lipoic acid 114 Cysteine related metabolites homocysteine and taurine are other sulfur containing amino acids that are similar in structure but not coded by DNA and are not part of the primary structure of proteins take part in various locations of mammalian physiology 115 116 Two of the 13 classical vitamins biotin and thiamine contain sulfur and serve as cofactors to several enzymes 117 118 In intracellular chemistry sulfur operates as a carrier of reducing hydrogen and its electrons for cellular repair of oxidation Reduced glutathione a sulfur containing tripeptide is a reducing agent through its sulfhydryl SH moiety derived from cysteine Methanogenesis the route to most of the world s methane is a multistep biochemical transformation of carbon dioxide This conversion requires several organosulfur cofactors These include coenzyme M CH3SCH2CH2SO3 the immediate precursor to methane 119 Metalloproteins and inorganic cofactors edit Metalloproteins in which the active site is a transition metal ion or metal sulfide cluster often coordinated by sulfur atoms of cysteine residues 120 are essential components of enzymes involved in electron transfer processes Examples include plastocyanin Cu2 and nitrous oxide reductase Cu S The function of these enzymes is dependent on the fact that the transition metal ion can undergo redox reactions Other examples include many zinc proteins 121 as well as iron sulfur clusters Most pervasive are the ferrodoxins which serve as electron shuttles in cells In bacteria the important nitrogenase enzymes contain an Fe Mo S cluster and is a catalyst that performs the important function of nitrogen fixation converting atmospheric nitrogen to ammonia that can be used by microorganisms and plants to make proteins DNA RNA alkaloids and the other organic nitrogen compounds necessary for life 122 Sulfur is also present in molybdenum cofactor 123 nbsp Easiness of electron flow in a cluster provides catalytic effect of a respective enzyme Sulfate edit Main article Sulfation Sulfation in biology Deficiency edit In humans methionine is an essential amino acid cysteine is conditionally essential and may be synthesized from non essential serine sulfur donor would be methionine in this case Dietary deficiency rarely happens in common conditions Artificial methionine deficiency is attempted to apply in cancer treatment 124 but the method is still potentially dangerous 125 Isolated sulfite oxidase deficiency is a rare fatal genetic disease preventing production of sulfite oxidase needed to metabolize sulfites to sulfates 126 Precautions editSulfur HazardsGHS labelling Pictograms nbsp nbsp Signal word WarningHazard statements H315 127 NFPA 704 fire diamond 128 nbsp 210 nbsp Effect of acid rain on a forest Jizera Mountains Czech RepublicThough elemental sulfur is only minimally absorbed through the skin and is of low toxicity to humans inhalation of sulfur dust or contact with eyes or skin may cause irritation Excessive ingestion of sulfur can cause a burning sensation or diarrhea 129 and cases of life threatening metabolic acidosis have been reported after patients deliberately consumed sulfur as a folk remedy 130 131 Toxicity of sulfur compounds edit When sulfur burns in air it produces sulfur dioxide In water this gas produces sulfurous acid and sulfites sulfites are antioxidants that inhibit growth of aerobic bacteria and a useful food additive in small amounts At high concentrations these acids harm the lungs eyes or other tissues 132 In organisms without lungs such as insects sulfite in high concentration prevents respiration 133 Sulfur trioxide made by catalysis from sulfur dioxide and sulfuric acid are similarly highly acidic and corrosive in the presence of water Concentrated sulfuric acid is a strong dehydrating agent that can strip available water molecules and water components from sugar and organic tissue 134 The burning of coal and or petroleum by industry and power plants generates sulfur dioxide SO2 that reacts with atmospheric water and oxygen to produce sulfurous acid H2SO3 135 These acids are components of acid rain lowering the pH of soil and freshwater bodies sometimes resulting in substantial damage to the environment and chemical weathering of statues and structures Fuel standards increasingly require that fuel producers extract sulfur from fossil fuels to prevent acid rain formation This extracted and refined sulfur represents a large portion of sulfur production In coal fired power plants flue gases are sometimes purified More modern power plants that use synthesis gas extract the sulfur before they burn the gas Hydrogen sulfide is about one half as toxic as hydrogen cyanide and intoxicates by the same mechanism inhibition of the respiratory enzyme cytochrome oxidase 136 though hydrogen sulfide is less likely to cause sudden poisonings from small inhaled amounts near its permissible exposure limit PEL of 20 ppm because of its disagreeable odor 137 However its presence in ambient air at concentration over 100 150 ppm quickly deadens the sense of smell 138 and a victim may breathe increasing quantities without noticing until severe symptoms cause death Dissolved sulfide and hydrosulfide salts are toxic by the same mechanism See also edit nbsp Chemistry portalBlue lava Stratospheric sulfur aerosols Sulfur assimilation Sulfur isotope biogeochemistry Ultra low sulfur dieselReferences edit Standard Atomic Weights Sulfur CIAAW 2009 Prohaska Thomas Irrgeher Johanna Benefield Jacqueline Bohlke John K Chesson Lesley A Coplen Tyler B Ding Tiping Dunn Philip J H Groning Manfred Holden Norman E Meijer Harro A J 4 May 2022 Standard atomic weights of the elements 2021 IUPAC Technical Report Pure and Applied Chemistry doi 10 1515 pac 2019 0603 ISSN 1365 3075 a b Arblaster John W 2018 Selected Values of the Crystallographic Properties of Elements Materials Park Ohio ASM International ISBN 978 1 62708 155 9 Lide D R ed 2005 Magnetic susceptibility of the elements and inorganic compounds CRC Handbook of Chemistry and Physics PDF 86th ed Boca Raton FL CRC Press ISBN 0 8493 0486 5 Weast Robert 1984 CRC Handbook of Chemistry and Physics Boca Raton Florida Chemical Rubber Company Publishing pp E110 ISBN 0 8493 0464 4 Sulfur History Georgiagulfsulfur com Retrieved 12 February 2022 a b c Greenwood N N Earnshaw A 1997 Chemistry of the Elements 2nd ed Oxford Butterworth Heinemann ISBN 0 7506 3365 4 Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 Brimstone Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 4 11th ed Cambridge University Press p 571 a b c d Laurence Knight 19 July 2014 Sulphur surplus Up to our necks in a diabolical element BBC a b Sulfur Elements BBC 11 October 2014 Download here Rettig S J Trotter J 15 December 1987 Refinement of the structure of orthorhombic sulfur a S8 PDF Acta Crystallographica Section C 43 12 2260 2262 Bibcode 1987AcCrC 43 2260R doi 10 1107 S0108270187088152 A strong odor called smell of sulfur actually is given off by several sulfur compounds such as hydrogen sulfide and organosulfur compounds Tucker Roy P 1 January 1929 Notes on the Sublimation of Sulfur between 25 and 50 C Industrial amp Engineering Chemistry 21 1 44 47 doi 10 1021 ie50229a014 ISSN 0019 7866 a b c Greenwood Norman N Earnshaw Alan 1997 Chemistry of the Elements 2nd ed Butterworth Heinemann pp 645 665 ISBN 978 0 08 037941 8 Maldonado Zagal S B Boden P J 1 January 1982 Hydrolysis of Elemental Sulphur in Water and its Effect on the Corrosion of Mild Steel British Corrosion Journal 17 3 116 120 doi 10 1179 000705982798274336 ISSN 0007 0599 Retrieved 23 June 2022 Munson Ronald A February 1968 The synthesis of iridium disulfide and nickel diarsenide having the pyrite structure PDF Inorganic Chemistry 7 2 389 390 doi 10 1021 ic50060a047 Archived from the original PDF on 12 April 2019 Retrieved 19 January 2019 Egon Wiberg Nils Wiberg 2001 Inorganic Chemistry Academic Press pp 513 ISBN 978 0 12 352651 9 Steudel Ralf Eckert Bodo 2003 Solid Sulfur Allotropes Sulfur Allotropes Topics in Current Chemistry Vol 230 pp 1 80 doi 10 1007 b12110 ISBN 978 3 540 40191 9 Steudel R 1982 Homocyclic sulfur molecules Inorganic Ring Systems Topics in Current Chemistry Vol 102 pp 149 176 doi 10 1007 3 540 11345 2 10 ISBN 978 3 540 11345 4 Tebbe Fred N Wasserman E Peet William G Vatvars Arturs Hayman Alan C 1982 Composition of Elemental Sulfur in Solution Equilibrium of S6 S7 and S8 at Ambient Temperatures Journal of the American Chemical Society 104 18 4971 4972 doi 10 1021 ja00382a050 Meyer Beat 1964 Solid Allotropes of Sulfur Chemical Reviews 64 4 429 451 doi 10 1021 cr60230a004 Meyer Beat 1976 Elemental sulfur Chemical Reviews 76 3 367 388 doi 10 1021 cr60301a003 Sulfur Commission on Isotopic Abundances and Atomic Weights Haynes William M ed 2011 CRC Handbook of Chemistry and Physics 92nd ed Boca Raton FL CRC Press p 1 14 ISBN 1 4398 5511 0 Searching for the Origins of Presolar Grains Energy gov Retrieved 4 February 2023 Paytan Adina Yao Weiqi Faul Kristina Gray E T 2020 Sulfur Isotope Stratigraphy Geologic Time Scale pp 259 278 doi 10 1016 B978 0 12 824360 2 00009 7 ISBN 9780128243602 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With a High Anion Gap Archives of Internal Medicine 146 7 1437 1438 doi 10 1001 archinte 1986 00360190229034 ISSN 0003 9926 PMID 3718141 Blum J Eric Coe Fredric L 13 January 2010 Metabolic Acidosis after Sulfur Ingestion New England Journal of Medicine 297 16 869 870 doi 10 1056 nejm197710202971606 PMID 904661 Retrieved 2 September 2022 Sulfur Dioxide Toxicological Profile ATSDR Centers for Disease Control and Prevention 26 March 2014 Retrieved 24 October 2023 Sulfur General Fact Sheet npic orst edu Retrieved 20 January 2024 Baker Colin 1 March 2007 The dehydration of sucrose Education in Chemistry Royal Society of Chemistry Retrieved 14 June 2018 4 1 Fossil Fuels and Products of Combustion Engineering LibreTexts 28 February 2021 Retrieved 24 October 2023 Hydrogen Sulfide Toxicity Practice Essentials Pathophysiology Etiology Medscape 30 March 2017 via eMedicine Summers Vincent 8 April 2017 Hydrogen Sulfide or Hydrogen Cyanide Which is More Dangerous Quirky Science Retrieved 23 August 2022 Hydrogen Sulfide Hazards Occupational Safety and Health Administration www osha gov Retrieved 23 August 2022 Further reading edit nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to Sulfur Sigel Astrid Freisinger Eva Sigel Roland K O eds 2020 Transition Metals and Sulfur A Strong Relationship for Life Guest Editors Martha E Sosa Torres and Peter M H Kroneck Berlin Boston de Gruyter pp xlv 455 ISBN 978 3 11 058889 7 External links editSulfur at The Periodic Table of Videos University of Nottingham Atomic Data for Sulfur NIST Physical Measurement Laboratory Sulfur phase diagram Archived 23 February 2010 at the Wayback Machine Introduction to Chemistry for Ages 13 17 Crystalline liquid and polymerization of sulfur on Vulcano Island Italy Sulfur and its use as a pesticide The Sulphur Institute Nutrient Stewardship and The Sulphur Institute Portal nbsp ChemistrySulfur at Wikipedia s sister projects nbsp Definitions from Wiktionary nbsp Media from Commons nbsp Textbooks from Wikibooks nbsp 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