Povidone Iodine
Povidone Iodine
Povidone Iodine
PVP is soluble in water and other polar solvents. When dry it is a light flaky powder, which readily absorbs up to 40% of its weight in atmospheric water. In solution, it has excellent wetting properties and readily forms films. This makes it good as a coating or an additive to coatings. PVP is a branched polymer, that is its structure is more complicated than linear polymer but it too is in a twodimensional plane. The structure of a polymer greatly depends on its integrity and strength, formed through cross-links and bonds. Firstly, composition of polymers takes place through polymerisation of mers, many simple molecules that are repeating structural units called monomers. A single polymer molecule may consist of hundreds to a million monomers and may have a linear, branched, or network structure. Covalent bonds hold the atoms in the polymer molecules together and secondary bonds then hold groups of polymer chains together to form the polymeric material. Copolymers are polymers composed of two or more different types of monomers.
History
PVP was first synthesized by Prof. Walter Reppe and a patent was filed in 1939 for one of the most interesting derivatives of acetylene chemistry. PVP was initially used as a blood plasma substitute and later in a wide variety of applications in medicine, pharmacy, cosmetics and industrial production.[2]
Uses
The monomer is extremely toxic to aquatic life.
Iodine is a chemical element with the symbol I and atomic number 53. The name is pronounced /a.dan/ EYE-o-dyne, /a.dn/ EYE-o-dn, or /a.din/ EYE-o-deen in both American
[2]
and
British[3] English.[4] The name is from Greek ioeids, meaning violet or purple, due to the color of elemental iodine vapor.[5] Iodine and its compounds are primarily used in nutrition, and industrially in the production of acetic acid and certain polymers. Iodine's relatively high atomic number, low toxicity, and ease of attachment to organic compounds have made it a part of many Xray contrastmaterials in modern medicine. Iodine has only one stable isotope. A number of iodine radioisotopes are also used in medical applications. Iodine is found on Earth mainly as the highly water-soluble iodide I-, which concentrates it in oceans and brine pools. Like the other halogens, free iodine occurs mainly as adiatomic molecule I2, and then only momentarily after being oxidized from iodide by an oxidant like free oxygen. In the universe and on Earth, iodine's high atomic number makes it a relatively rare element. However, its presence in ocean water has given it a role in biology. It is the heaviest essential element utilized widely by life in biological functions (only tungsten, employed in enzymes by a few species of bacteria, is heavier). Iodine's rarity in many soils, due to initial low abundance as a crust-element, and also leaching of soluble iodide by rainwater, has led to many deficiency problems in land animals and inland human populations. Iodine deficiency affects about two billion people and is the leading preventable cause of intellectual disabilities.[6]
Iodine is required by higher animals, which use it to synthesize thyroid hormones, which contain the element. Because of this function, radioisotopes of iodine are concentrated in the thyroid gland along with nonradioactive iodine. The radioisotope iodine-131, which has a high fission product yield, concentrates in the thyroid, and is one of the mostcarcinogenic of nuclear fission products.
Characteristics
Iodine under standard conditions is a bluish-black solid. It can be seen apparentlysublimating at standard temperatures into a violetpink gas that has an irritating odor. This halogen forms compounds with many elements, but is less reactive than the other members of its Group VII (halogens) and has some metallic light reflectance.
Elemental iodine dissolves easily in most organic solvents such as hexane or chloroform owing to its lack of polarity, but is only slightly soluble in water. However, the solubility of elemental iodine in water can be increased by the addition of potassium iodide. The molecular iodine reacts reversibly with the negative ion, generating the triiodideanion I3 in equilibrium, which is soluble in water. This is also the formulation of some types of medicinal (antiseptic) iodine, although tincture of iodine classically dissolves the element in aqueous ethanol. The colour of solutions of elemental iodine changes depending on the polarity of the solvent. In non-polar solvents like hexane, solutions are violet; in moderately polar dichloromethane, the solution is dark crimson, and, in strongly polar solvents such asacetone or ethanol, it appears orange or brown. This effect is due to the formation of adducts. Iodine melts at the relatively low temperature of 113.7 C, although the liquid is often obscured by a dense violet vapor of gaseous iodine
Crystalline iodine
Iodine normally exists as a diatomic molecule with a I-I bond length of 270 pm,[10] one of the longest single bonds known. The I2 molecules tend to interact via the weak van der Waalsforce called the London Forces, and this interaction is responsible for the higher melting point compared to more compact halogens, which are also diatomic. Since the atomic size of Iodine is larger, its melting point is higher. The solid crystallizes as orthorhombic crystals. The crystal motif in the HermannMauguin notation is Cmca (No 64), Pearson symbol oS8. The I-I bond is relatively weak, with a bond dissociation energy of 36 kcal/mol, and most bonds to iodine are weaker than for the lighter halides. One consequence of this weak bonding is the relatively high tendency of I2 molecules to dissociate into atomic iodine.
nuclide is also newly-made by cosmic rays and as a byproduct of human nuclear fission, which it is used to monitor as a very longlived environmental contaminant. The next-longest-lived radioisotope, iodine-125, has a half-life of 59 days. It is used as a convenient gamma-emitting tag for proteins in biological assays, and a few nuclear medicine imaging tests where a longer half-life is required. It is also commonly used inbrachytherapy implanted capsules, which kill tumors by local short-range gamma radiation (but where the isotope is never released into the body). Iodine-123 (half-life 13 hours) is the isotope of choice for nuclear medicine imaging of the thyroid gland, which naturally accumulates all iodine isotopes. Iodine-131 (half-life 8 days) is a beta-emitting isotope, which is a common nuclear fission product. It is preferably administered to humans only in very high doses which destroy all tissues that accumulate it (usually the thyroid), which in turn prevents these tissues from developing cancer from a lower dose (paradoxically, a high dose of this isotope appears safer for the thyroid than a low dose). Like other radioiodines, I-131 accumulates in the thyroid gland, but unlike the others, in small amounts it is highly carcinogenic there, it seems, owing to the high local cell mutation due to damage from beta decay. Because of this tendency of
131
to cause high damage to cells that accumulate it and other cells near them (0.6 to 2 mm away, the range of the beta rays), it is the only iodine radioisotope used as direct therapy, to kill tissues such as cancers that take up artificially iodinated molecules (example, the compound iobenguane, also known as MIBG). For the same reason, only the iodine isotope I-131 is used to treat Grave's disease and those types of thyroid cancers (sometimes in metastatic form) where the tissue that requires destruction, still functions to naturally accumulate iodide. Nonradioactive ordinary potassium iodide (iodine-127), in a number of convenient forms (tablets or solution) may be used to saturate the thyroid gland's ability to take up further iodine, and thus protect against accidental contamination from iodine-131 generated by nuclear fission accidents, such as the Chernobyl disaster and more recently the Fukushima I nuclear accidents, as well as from contamination from this isotope in nuclear fallout from nuclear weapons.
[edit]History
Iodine was discovered by Bernard Courtois in 1811.[14][15] He was born to a manufacturer of saltpeter (a vital part of gunpowder). At the time of the Napoleonic Wars, France was at war and saltpeter was in great demand. Saltpeter produced from French niter beds requiredsodium carbonate, which could be isolated from seaweed collected on the coasts of Normandy and Brittany. To isolate the sodium carbonate, seaweed was burned and the ash washed with water. The remaining waste was destroyed by adding sulfuric acid. Courtois once added excessive sulfuric acid and a cloud of purple vapor rose. He noted that the vapor crystallized on cold surfaces, making dark crystals. Courtois suspected that this was a new element but lacked funding to pursue it further. Courtois gave samples to his friends, Charles Bernard Desormes (17771862) and Nicolas Clment (17791841), to continue research. He also gave some of the substance to chemist Joseph Louis Gay-Lussac (17781850), and to physicist Andr-Marie Ampre (17751836). On 29 November 1813, Dersormes and Clment made public Courtois's discovery. They described the substance to a meeting of the Imperial Institute of France. On December 6, Gay-Lussac announced that the new substance was
either an element or a compound of oxygen.[16][17][18] It was Gay-Lussac who suggested the name "iode", from the Greek word (iodes) for violet (because of the color of iodine vapor).[14][16] Ampre had given some of his sample to Humphry Davy (17781829). Davy did some experiments on the substance and noted its similarity to chlorine.[19] Davy sent a letter dated December 10 to the Royal Society of London stating that he had identified a new element.[20] Arguments erupted between Davy and Gay-Lussac over who identified iodine first, but both scientists acknowledged Courtois as the first to isolate the element.
Iodine chemistry
Iodine adopts a variety of oxidation states, commonly ranging from (formally) I7+ to I-, and including the intermediate states of I5+, I3+and I+. Practically, only the 1- oxidation state is of significance, being the form found in iodide salts and organoiodine compounds. Iodine is a Lewis acid. With electron donors such as triphenylphosphine and pyridine it forms a charge-transfer complex. With the iodide anion it forms the triiodide ion. [23] Iodine and the iodide ion form a redox couple. I2 is easily reduced and I- is easily oxidized.
[edit]Solubility
Being a nonpolar molecule, iodine is highly soluble in nonpolar organic solvents, including ethanol (20.5 g/100 ml at 15 C, 21.43 g/100 ml at 25 C), diethyl ether (20.6 g/100 ml at 17 C, 25.20 g/100 ml at 25 C), chloroform, acetic acid, glycerol, benzene(14.09 g/100 ml at 25 C), carbon tetrachloride (2.603 g/100 ml at 35 C), and carbon disulfide (16.47 g/100 ml at 25 C).[24] Elemental iodine is poorly soluble in water, with one gram dissolving in 3450 ml at 20 C and 1280 ml at 50 C. Aqueous and ethanol solutions are brown reflecting the role of these solvents as Lewis bases. Solutions in chloroform, carbon tetrachloride, and carbon disulfide are violet, the color of iodine vapor. One of the most distinctive properties of iodine is the way that its solubility in water is enhanced by the presence of iodide ions. The dissolution of iodine in aqueous solutions containing iodide (e.g., from hydroiodic acid, potassium iodide, etc.) results from the formation of the I3 ion. Dissolved bromides also improve water solubility of iodine.
[edit]Redox
reactions
In everyday life, iodides are slowly oxidized by atmospheric oxygen in the atmosphere to give free iodine. Evidence for this conversion is the yellow tint of certain aged samples of iodide salts and some organoiodine compounds. [7] The oxidation of iodide to iodine in air is also responsible for the slow loss of iodide content in iodized salt if exposed to air.[25] Some salts use iodate to prevent the loss of iodine. Iodine is easily reduced. Most common is the interconversion of I - and I2. Molecular iodine can be prepared by oxidizing iodides with chlorine: 2 I + Cl2 I2 + 2 Cl or with manganese dioxide in acid solution:[26]
2 I + 4 H+ + MnO2 I2 + 2 H2O + Mn2+ Iodine is reduced to hydroiodic acid by hydrogen sulfide and hydrazine:[27] 8 I2 + 8 H2S 16 HI + S8 2 I2 + N2H4 4 HI + N2 When dissolved in fuming sulfuric acid (65% oleum), iodine forms an intense blue solution. The blue color is due to I+ 2 cation, the result of iodine being oxidized by SO3:[28] 2 I2 + 2 SO3 + H2SO4 2 I+ 2 + SO2 + 2 HSO 4
The I+ 2 cation is also formed in the oxidation of iodine by SbF5 or TaF5. The resulting I+ 2Sb2F 11 or I+ 2Ta2F 11 can be isolated as deep blue crystals. The solutions of these salts turn red when cooled below 60C, owing to the formation of the I2+ 4 cation:[28] 2 I+ 2 4 I2+
Under slightly more alkaline conditions, I2+ 4 disproportionates into I+ 3 and an iodine(III) compound. Excess iodine can then react with I+ 3 to form I+ 5 (green) and I3+ 15 (black).[28]
[edit]Oxides
of iodine
The best-known oxides are the anions, IO3 and IO4, but several other oxides are known, such as the strong oxidant iodine pentoxide. By contrast with chlorine, the formation of the hypohalite ion (IO) in neutral aqueous solutions of iodine is negligible.
I2 + H2O
H+ + I + HIO (K = 2.01013)[26] In basic solutions (such as aqueous sodium hydroxide), iodine converts in a
two stage reaction to iodide and iodate:[26] I2 + 2 OH I + IO + H2O (K = 30) 3 IO 2 I + IO3 (K = 1020)
Organic derivatives of hypoiodate (2-Iodoxybenzoic acid, and Dess-Martin periodinane) are used in organic chemistry. Iodic acid (HIO3), periodic acid (HIO4) and their salts are strong oxidizers and are of some use in organic synthesis. Iodine is oxidized toiodate by nitric acid as well as by chlorates:[29] I2 + 10 HNO3 2 HIO3 + 10 NO2 + 4 H2O I2 + 2 ClO3 2 IO3 + Cl2 [edit]Inorganic
iodine compounds
[edit]Organic
compounds