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Tetrahalomethane

Tetrahalomethanes are chemical compounds in which all four hydrogen atoms of a methane molecule are replaced by halogen atoms—such as chlorine, bromine, fluorine, iodine, or astatine.

Overview

The compounds are fully halogenated methane derivatives of general formula CF<sub>k</sub>Cl<sub>l</sub>Br<sub>m</sub>I<sub>n</sub>At<sub>p</sub>, where:Tetrahalomethanes are on the border of inorganic and organic chemistry, thus they can be assigned both inorganic and organic names by IUPAC: tetrafluoromethane - carbon tetrafluoride, tetraiodomethane - carbon tetraiodide, dichlorodifluoromethane - carbon dichloride difluoride.

Taxonomy

Each halogen (F, Cl, Br, I, At) forms a corresponding halomethane, but their stability decreases in order CF<sub>4</sub> > CCl<sub>4</sub> > CBr<sub>4</sub> > CI<sub>4</sub> from exceptionally stable gaseous tetrafluoromethane with bond energy 515&nbsp;kJ·mol<sup>−1</sup> to solid tetraiodomethane, depending on bond energy.

Many mixed halomethanes are also known, such as CBrClF<sub>2</sub>.

Uses

Fluorine, chlorine, and sometimes bromine-substituted halomethanes were used as refrigerants, commonly known as CFCs (chlorofluorocarbons).

See also

References