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Argon: Difference between revisions

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*Argon is used in technical [[scuba diving]] to inflate a [[dry suit]], because it is inert and has low [[thermal conductivity]].
*Argon is used in technical [[scuba diving]] to inflate a [[dry suit]], because it is inert and has low [[thermal conductivity]].
*Blue argon lasers are used in surgery to weld arteries, destroy tumors, and to correct eye defects.
*Blue argon lasers are used in surgery to weld arteries, destroy tumors, and to correct eye defects.
*Due to its inert qualities, it is commonly used by museum conservators to protect old materials or documents, which are prone to gradual oxidation in the presence of air. {{Fact|date=February 2007}}
*Due to its inert qualities, it is commonly used by museum conservators to protect old materials or documents, which are prone to gradual oxidation in the presence of air. <ref> [http://www.archives.gov/national-archives-experience/charters/treasure/declaration_facts.html USA National Archives description of how the Declaration of Independence is stored and displayed]</ref>
*Argon is used to keep open bottles of wine from oxidizing, and is used in a number of dispensing units and keeper cap systems.[[Image:ArTube.jpg|left|thumb|An argon and mercury discharge tube. The mercury vapour glows brightly when an electric current is passed through it while the argon acts as the current carrier.]]
*Argon is used to keep open bottles of wine from oxidizing, and is used in a number of dispensing units and keeper cap systems.[[Image:ArTube.jpg|left|thumb|An argon and mercury discharge tube. The mercury vapour glows brightly when an electric current is passed through it while the argon acts as the current carrier.]]
*Argon is used in winemaking as barrels are often topped off with the gas to displace oxygen, thus preventing the wine from turning to vinegar during the aging process.
*Argon is used in winemaking as barrels are often topped off with the gas to displace oxygen, thus preventing the wine from turning to vinegar during the aging process.

Revision as of 17:16, 12 February 2007

This article pertains to the chemical element. For other uses, see argon (disambiguation).

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Argon (IPA:/ˈɑːgɒn/) is a chemical element designated by the symbol Ar. Argon has atomic number 18 and is the third element in group 18 of the periodic table (noble gases). Argon is present in the Earth's atmosphere at slightly less than 1%, making it the most common noble gas on Earth.

Characteristics

Argon has approximately the same solubility in water as oxygen gas and is 2.5 times more soluble in water than nitrogen gas.[1] This highly stable chemical element is colorless, odorless, tasteless and nontoxic in both its liquid and gaseous forms. Argon is inert under most conditions and forms no confirmed stable compounds at room temperature. The creation of argon hydrofluoride (HArF), a metastable compound of argon with fluorine and hydrogen, was first reported by researchers at the University of Helsinki in 2000.

Although the neutral ground-state chemical compounds of argon are presently limited to HArF, argon can form clathrates with water when atoms of it are trapped in a lattice of the water molecules. Also argon-containing ions e.g. ArH+ and excited state complexes e.g. ArF are well known. Theoretical calculations on computers have shown several argon compounds that should be stable but for which no synthesis routes are currently known.

Applications

Canisters containing Argon Gas for use in extinguishing fire without damaging server equipment

Argon is used in incandescent lighting and other applications in which diatomic nitrogen is not sufficiently inert. Argon will not react with the filament of light bulbs even at high temperatures. Other uses:

  • Argon is used as an inert gas shield in many forms of welding, including metal inert gas welding and tungsten inert gas welding.
  • as the gas of choice for the plasma used in ICP spectroscopy.
  • as a non-reactive blanket in the manufacture of titanium and other reactive elements.
  • as a protective atmosphere for growing silicon and germanium crystals.
  • as a gas for use in plasma globes.
  • as an inert gas for partial pressure heat treat furnaces.
  • as a gas for thermal insulation in energy efficient windows.
  • Argon-39 has been used for a number of applications, primarily ice coring. It has also been used for ground water dating.
  • Cryosurgery procedures such as cryoablation use liquified argon to destroy cancer cells.
  • Liquid argon is used in calorimetry in experimental particle physics.
  • Argon is used in technical scuba diving to inflate a dry suit, because it is inert and has low thermal conductivity.
  • Blue argon lasers are used in surgery to weld arteries, destroy tumors, and to correct eye defects.
  • Due to its inert qualities, it is commonly used by museum conservators to protect old materials or documents, which are prone to gradual oxidation in the presence of air. [2]
  • Argon is used to keep open bottles of wine from oxidizing, and is used in a number of dispensing units and keeper cap systems.
    An argon and mercury discharge tube. The mercury vapour glows brightly when an electric current is passed through it while the argon acts as the current carrier.
  • Argon is used in winemaking as barrels are often topped off with the gas to displace oxygen, thus preventing the wine from turning to vinegar during the aging process.
  • Argon is used in surgery in a procedure called "argon enhanced coagulation" which is a form of argon plasma beam electrosurgery. The procedure carries a risk of producing gas embolism in the patient and has resulted in the death of one person via this type of accident. [1]
  • Its triple point temperature of 83.8058 K is a defining fixed point in the International Temperature Scale of 1990. [3]

History

Argon (Greek αργός meaning "inactive") was suspected to be present in air by Henry Cavendish in 1785 but was not discovered until 1894 by Lord Rayleigh and Sir William Ramsay in an experiment in which they removed all of the oxygen and nitrogen from the air. Argon was also encountered in 1882 through independent research of H.F. Newall and W.N. Hartley. Each observed new lines in the color spectrum of air but were unable to identify the element responsible for the lines. Argon became the first member of the noble gases to be discovered.

The symbol for Argon is now Ar, but up until 1957 it was A.[4]

Occurrence

Argon constitutes 0.934% by volume and 1.29% by mass of the Earth's atmosphere, and air is the primary raw material used by industry to produce purified argon products. Argon is isolated from air by fractionation, most commonly by cryogenic fractional distillation, a process that also produces purified nitrogen, oxygen, neon, krypton and xenon.

The Martian atmosphere in contrast contains 1.6% of argon-40 and 5 ppm of argon-36. The Mariner spaceprobe fly-by of the planet Mercury in 1973 found that Mercury has a very thin atmosphere with 70% argon, believed to result from releases of the gas as a decay product from radioactive materials on the planet. In 2005, the Huygens probe also discovered the presence of argon-40 on Titan, the largest moon of Saturn.[5]

Compounds

Argon’s complete octet of electrons indicates full s and p subshells. This full outer energy level makes argon very stable and extremely resistant to bonding with other elements. Before 1962, argon and the other noble gases were considered to be chemically inert and unable to form compounds; however, compounds of the heavier noble gases have since been synthesized. In 2000, the first argon compounds were formed by researchers at the University of Helsinki. By shining ultraviolet light onto frozen argon containing a small amount of hydrogen fluoride, argon hydrofluoride (HArF) was formed.[6] It is stable up to 40 kelvins (−233 °C).

Isotopes

The main isotopes of argon found on Earth are 40Ar, 36Ar, and 38Ar. Naturally occurring 40K with a half-life of 1.250×109 years, decays to stable 40Ar (11.2%) by electron capture and by positron emission, and also transforms to stable 40Ca (88.8%) via beta decay. These properties and ratios are used to determine the age of rocks.

In the Earth's atmosphere, 39Ar is made by cosmic ray activity, primarily with 40Ar. In the subsurface environment, it is also produced through neutron capture by 39K or alpha emission by calcium. 37Ar is created from the decay of 40Ca as a result of subsurface nuclear explosions. It has a half-life of 35 days.

References

  • Los Alamos National Laboratory – Argon
  • USGS Periodic Table - Argon
  • Emsley, J. Nature’s Building Blocks; Oxford University Press: Oxford, NY, 2001; pp 35-39.
  • Brown, T.L.; Bursten, B.E.; LeMay, H.E. In Chemistry: The Central Science, 10th ed.; Challice, J.; Draper, P.; Folchetti, N. et al.; Eds.; Pearson Education, Inc.: Upper Saddle River, NJ, 2006; pp 276 and 289.