halogens and CFC's (1 Viewer)

nippy

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hi
can someone plz be kind enough to tell me the precise difference between halogen’s and CFC’s……… all the text’s seem to have a confusing and some what contradicting explanation. I know they r both haloalkanes.

need hepl quick
 

Xayma

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Halogens are Group VII elements.

Haloalkanes are alkanes where a H atom has been replaced by a Halogen.

CFC's are where a molecule only has carbon, flourine and chlorine atoms.
 

nippy

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halons

so how do halons fit into all of this i mean in relation to CFC's . how r they different.
 

Xayma

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Halon's are Haloalkanes that contain Bromine. They are not CFC's.
 

CM_Tutor

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I think the definition is narrower. CFCs contain only C, F and Cl and no H. Halons (as Xayma has said) contain bromine, but I would not consider CH<sub>3</sub>Br, for example, a halon. To be a halon the compound should have C, Br and other halogens, and no H. For example, the old yellow BCF fire extinguishers contained a halon bromochlorodifluoromethane, CBrClF<sub>2</sub>. They are relevant to the syllabus as halons do even more damage to the ozone layer than do CFCs, because the bromine free radical is a better catalyst for ozoone destruction than is the chlorine free radical.
 

Xayma

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For a CFC no, CFC's contain no other atoms bar C, F and Cl. If it was to contain "I" it would be a haloalkane.
 

CM_Tutor

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No, Xayma is correct - CFCs are C, F and Cl ONLY.

Inclusion of iodine might be possible in a halon, or in an FIC - fluoroiodocarbon, such as CF<sub>2</sub>I<sub>2</sub>. (FICs are another class that has been developed as potential CFC alternatives.) Or, as Xayma suggests, it would probably be a haloalkane.
 

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