Introduction

Phosphorus: essential nonmetal, atomic number 15, group 15 element. Discovered 1669 by Hennig Brand. Vital in chemical industry, agriculture, and biochemistry. Exhibits multiple allotropes with distinct properties. Forms diverse compounds including oxides, halides, and oxyacids. Exhibits oxidation states from -3 to +5. Integral to fertilizers, detergents, flame retardants, and biochemical molecules like ATP.

"Phosphorus is the key to life’s energy transformations and a cornerstone of inorganic chemistry." -- Linus Pauling

Occurrence and Extraction

Natural Occurrence

Phosphorus not free in nature due to high reactivity. Found mainly as phosphate minerals: apatite [Ca5(PO4)3(F,Cl,OH)]. Deposits widespread in sedimentary rocks. Minor presence in guano and bones.

Extraction Methods

Primary method: thermal reduction of phosphate rock with coke and silica in electric furnace. Produces white phosphorus vapor condensed under water. Alternative: wet-process phosphoric acid from phosphate rock by sulfuric acid digestion.

Purification

White phosphorus purified by distillation under water. Red and black allotropes obtained by heating or pressure treatment of white phosphorus.

Allotropes

White Phosphorus (P4)

Tetraphosphorus tetrahedral molecule. Highly reactive, waxy solid, soft, low melting point (44 °C). Pyrophoric, glows in air (chemiluminescence). Insoluble in water; soluble in carbon disulfide.

Red Phosphorus

Polymeric network structure. Amorphous or crystalline forms. More stable and less reactive than white phosphorus. Non-toxic, used in matchstick striking surfaces.

Black Phosphorus

Layered structure similar to graphite. Most thermodynamically stable allotrope. Semiconducting properties. High melting point (~590 °C). Prepared under high pressure and temperature.

Other Allotropes

Violet phosphorus (Hittorf’s phosphorus) - crystalline, formed by sublimation of red phosphorus. Also various amorphous forms exist.

Oxidation States

Common Oxidation Numbers

-3, +1, +3, +4, +5. Predominantly +3 and +5 in compounds. -3 state in phosphides. Variable redox behavior.

Phosphorus (-3) Compounds

Metal phosphides (e.g. Ca3P2), phosphine (PH3) gas. Strong reducing agents.

Phosphorus (+3) Compounds

Phosphorous acid (H3PO3), phosphites (PO3 3-), phosphorus trichloride (PCl3). Intermediate oxidation state, often prone to oxidation.

Phosphorus (+5) Compounds

Phosphoric acid (H3PO4), phosphates (PO4 3-), phosphorus pentachloride (PCl5). Most stable oxidation state, strong oxidizing properties.

Binary Compounds

Phosphides

Salts and alloys with metals. Ionic or covalent character. Exhibit metallic conductivity or semiconducting properties.

Phosphides of Nonmetals

Examples: phosphorus nitrides (PN), phosphorus sulfides (P4S3). Used in specialized materials and catalysts.

Phosphorus Hydrides

Phosphine (PH3): colorless, toxic gas. Analogous to ammonia. Weak base, flammable, decomposes at elevated temperature.

CompoundFormulaOxidation StateNotes
Calcium PhosphideCa3P2-3Releases PH3 on hydrolysis
PhosphinePH3-3Toxic, flammable gas

Oxides and Oxyacids

Phosphorus Oxides

Common oxides: P4O6 (phosphorus(III) oxide), P4O10 (phosphorus(V) oxide). Molecular solids with cage-like structures.

Phosphoric Acids

H3PO4 and derivatives: triprotic acids, form various salts (phosphates). Central in biochemistry and fertilizers.

Acid-Base Behavior

Phosphoric acid: triprotic, pKa1=2.15, pKa2=7.2, pKa3=12.35. Forms dihydrogen phosphate (H2PO4-), hydrogen phosphate (HPO4 2-) ions.

P4O10 + 6 H2O → 4 H3PO4H3PO4 ⇌ H2PO4⁻ + H⁺ (pKa1 ≈ 2.15)H2PO4⁻ ⇌ HPO4²⁻ + H⁺ (pKa2 ≈ 7.2)HPO4²⁻ ⇌ PO4³⁻ + H⁺ (pKa3 ≈ 12.35) 

Halides

Phosphorus Trichloride (PCl3)

Trigonal pyramidal molecule, reactive with water forming phosphorous acid. Used as chlorinating agent and intermediate in synthesis.

Phosphorus Pentachloride (PCl5)

Trigonal bipyramidal geometry, solid at room temperature. Strong chlorinating agent, dissociates in solution.

Other Halides

Phosphorus tribromide (PBr3), phosphorus pentafluoride (PF5), phosphorus trifluoride (PF3). Varied applications in synthesis and materials.

HalideFormulaGeometryUse
Phosphorus TrichloridePCl3Trigonal pyramidalChlorinating agent
Phosphorus PentachloridePCl5Trigonal bipyramidalChlorinating agent

Coordination Chemistry

Phosphorus Ligands

Phosphines (PR3) act as neutral ligands in coordination complexes. Strong σ-donors, variable sterics and electronics.

Complex Formation

Phosphines stabilize transition metals, key in homogeneous catalysis (e.g. Wilkinson’s catalyst). Coordination number varies from 2 to 6.

Applications

Catalysis in hydrogenation, hydroformylation, carbonylation. Tailored ligands alter selectivity and activity.

Reactivity and Redox Behavior

Reactivity of Allotropes

White phosphorus: highly reactive, self-ignites in air. Red phosphorus: less reactive, ignition requires heating. Black phosphorus: inert under ambient conditions.

Oxidation Reactions

Oxidizes to P4O10 or phosphoric acids. Red phosphorus burns to form P4O10.

Reduction Reactions

Phosphorus compounds reduced to phosphine or elemental phosphorus under controlled conditions.

White P + O2 → P4O10 (highly exothermic)PCl3 + H2O → H3PO3 + HClPCl5 ⇌ PCl3 + Cl2 (equilibrium) 

Industrial Applications

Fertilizers

Phosphates critical macronutrients. Superphosphates and ammonium phosphates produced from phosphate rock.

Detergents and Flame Retardants

Phosphates used as water softeners. Organophosphorus compounds employed as flame retardants.

Chemical Intermediates

Phosphorus halides and oxyacids serve as intermediates in agrochemicals, plasticizers, and pharmaceuticals.

Biological Role

Structural Component

Phosphorus part of DNA, RNA backbone via phosphate groups. Maintains nucleic acid integrity.

Energy Transfer

ATP (adenosine triphosphate) stores and transfers cellular energy. Phosphorylation controls metabolism.

Cell Membranes

Phospholipids form bilayers, essential for membrane structure and function.

Safety and Handling

Toxicity

White phosphorus: highly toxic, causes severe burns, systemic poisoning. Handle under water or inert atmosphere.

Storage

Store white phosphorus submerged in water. Red and black phosphorus safer but still require caution.

Disposal

Phosphorus waste must be neutralized and oxidized before disposal to prevent fire and toxicity hazards.

References

  • Greenwood, N.N., Earnshaw, A. "Chemistry of the Elements," 2nd ed., Butterworth-Heinemann, 1997, pp. 1052-1090.
  • Cotton, F.A., Wilkinson, G., Murillo, C.A., Bochmann, M. "Advanced Inorganic Chemistry," 6th ed., Wiley, 1999, pp. 560-583.
  • Brady, J.E., Senese, F. "Chemistry: The Molecular Science," 4th ed., Wiley, 2009, pp. 700-705.
  • Housecroft, C.E., Sharpe, A.G. "Inorganic Chemistry," 4th ed., Pearson, 2012, pp. 403-430.
  • Lide, D.R. (ed.) "CRC Handbook of Chemistry and Physics," 84th ed., CRC Press, 2003, pp. 4-44 to 4-50.