Safety Profile |
A poison gas. A skin,
eye, and mucous membrane irritant. A most
powerful caustic irritant to tissue. Mutation
data reported. A very dangerous fire and
explosion hazard. A powerful oxidizer.
Reacts violently with many materials.
with ammonia, cesium fluoride +
fluorocarboxylic acids, cesium
heptafluoropropoxide, 1or 2
fluoriminoperfluoropropane, graphite,
halocarbons (e.g., carbon tetrachloride,
chloroform, perfluorocyclobutane, iodo form, 1,2-d~hlorotetrafluoroethane), liquid
hydrocarbons (e.g., anthracene, turpentine),
hydrogen, hydrogen + oxygen, hydrogen
fluoride + seleninyl fluoride + heat, nitric
acid, silver cyanide, sulfur dioxide, carbon
monoxide, sodium acetate, sodium bromate,
stainless steel, water.
Reacts to form explosive products with
alkanes + oxygen (forms peroxides), cyano guanidine, perchloric acid (forms fluorine
perchlorate gas), potassium chlorate (forms
fluorine perchlorate gas), potassium
hydroxide (forms potassium trioxide).
Forms explosive mixtures with acetonitrile
+ chlorine fluoride, ice.
Ignition or violent reaction on contact
with acetylene, ceramic materials, covalent
halides (e.g., chromyl chloride, phosphorus
pentachloride, phosphorus trichloride,
phosphorus trifluoride, boron trichloride,
silicon tetrachloride), halogens (e.g.,
bromine, iodine, chlorine + spark or heating
to 100°C), dcyanogen, gaseous
hydrocarbons (e.g., town gas, methane,
benzene), hydrogen halide gases or
concentrated solutions (e.g., hydrogen
bromide, hydrogen chloride, hydrogen iodide, hydrogen fluoride), metal acetylides
and carbides (e.g., monocesium acetylide,
cesium acetylide, lithium acetylide, rubidium
acetylide, tungsten carbide, ditungsten
carbide, zirconium dicarbide, uranium
dicarbide), metal cyano complexes [e.g.,
potassium hexacyanoferrate(II), lead
hexacyanoferrate(lII), potassium hexa cyanoferrate(III)], metal hydrides (e.g.,
copper hydride, potassium hydride, sodum
hydride), metal iodides (e.g., lead iodide,
calcium iodde, mercury iodide, potassium
iodde), metals, metal salts, metal shcides
(e.g., calcium disihcide, lithium hexasilicide),
nickel(IV) oxide, nonmetals (e.g., boron,
yellow or red phosphorus, selenium,
tellurium, sdicon, carbon, charcoal, sulfur),
oxygenated organic compounds (e.g.,
methanol, ethanol, 3-methyl butanol,
acetaldehyde, trichloroacetaldehyde, acetone,
lactic acid, benzoic acid, salicylic acid, ethyl
acetate, methyl borate), nonmetal oxides
(e.g., arsenic trioxide, nitrogen oxide,
dinitrogen tetroxide), oxygen + polymers
[e.g., phenol-formaldehyde resins (bakelite),
polpacrylonitrile-butadiene (Buna N),
polyamides (nylons), polychloropene
(neoprene), polyethylene,
polytrifluoroprop ylmethylsiloxane,
poljrvin~7lchloride-vinyl acetate (Tygon),
poljrvinylidene fluoride-hexafluoropropylene
(Won), polyurethane foam, polymethyl
methacrylate (Perspex),
polytetrafluooethylene (Teflon)], sulfides
(e.g., antimony trisulfide, carbon disulfide
vapor, chromium (II) sulfide, hydrogen
sulfide, barium sulfide, potassium sulfide,
zinc sulfide, molybdenum sulfide), xenon +
catalysts (e.g., nickel fluoride, silver
difluoride, nickel(IⅡ) oxide, silver (I) oxide).
Incandescent reaction with boron nitride,
hexalithium dshcide + heat, metal borides,
metal oxides (e.g., nickel(Ⅱ) oxide, alkali
metal oxides, alkaline earth oxides),
nitrogenous bases (e.g., aniline,
dmethylamine, pyridne), gahc acid.
Incompatible with cesium heptafluoro
propoxide, cyanoguanid~ne, halocarbons,hexalithmm dishcide, seleninyl fluoride,
hydrogen sulfide, oxygen, sodium acetate,
sodium bromate, sodium dicyanamides,
most organic matter, H-containing
molecules, oxides of S, N, P, alkali
metals,and alkaline earths. It reacts violently
with halogen acids, hydrazine, ClO2, coke,
cyanamide, cyanides, KNO3, (PbO +
glycerol), CCl4, shcides, skates,
trinitromethane, alkenes, alkyl benzenes,
CS2, Cr(OCl)2, Al, T1, Sn, Sb, As, natural gas,
liquid air, perfluoropropionyl fluoride,
polyvinyl chloride acetate. Many reactions
go on even at <-160°. Reacts with water or
steam to produce heat and toxic and
corrosive fumes. Used as one component of
liquid rocket fuel and in chemical lasers. See
also FLUORIDES.
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