Revision as of 22:06, 20 May 2009 by imported>Milton Beychok
Tetraethyl lead (TEL) is a liquid with the chemical formula (CH3CH2)4Pb. Once widely used (circa 1925 to 1990) to increase the octane rating of gasoline (petrol), TEL usage in gasoline has been largely phased out by most nations[1] primarily because of the toxicity of the lead emissions from spark-ignited internal combustion engines burning gasoline containing TEL. Another reason for discontinuing TEL usage was that it degraded the efficiency of the catalytic converters installed in automotive vehicles to reduce their emissions of air pollutants.
Manufacture and properties
TEL is produced by the alkylation of a sodium-lead alloy using chloroethane as expressed by this chemical equation:
- 4 CH3CH2Cl + 4 NaPb → (CH3CH2)4Pb + 4 NaCl + 3 Pb
which can also be written as:
- 4 moles of chloroethane + 4 moles of sodium-lead alloy → 1 mole of tetraethyl lead + 4 moles of sodium chloride + 3 moles of lead
Properties
Property |
Value
|
Common name |
tetraethyl lead
|
Other names |
tetra-ethyl lead, lead tetraethyl, tetraethyl plumbane, TEL
|
IUPAC name |
tetraethylplumbane
|
CAS number |
78-00-2
|
Molecular formula |
(CH3CH2)4Pb
|
Molecular mass |
323.4 g/mol[2]
|
Density |
1.653 g/ml for liquid at 20 °C, 1 atm
|
Boiling point |
455.7 K (182.6 °C) at 1 atm[2]
|
Melting point |
142.94 K (-130.2 °C)[2]
|
Specific heat, cp |
0.956 J/(g·K) for liquid at 20 °C[2]
|
Heat of vaporization |
175.0 J/g for liquid at 182.6 °C[2]
|
Heat of fusion |
27.2 J/g for solid at -130.2 °C[2]
|
Viscosity |
0.862 mPa·s (0.862 cP) at 20 °CCite error: Closing </ref> missing for <ref> tag
- Tetraethyl lead 61.45%
- 1,2-Dibromoethane 17.85%
- 1,2-Dichloroethane 18.80%
- Inerts & color dye 1.90%
The addition of as little as 0.8 ml of TEL fluid per liter of gasoline (3 ml/gallon) of gasoline was equivalent to adding 0.5 g of lead per liter of gasoline and resulted in significant increases in the octane rating of the gasoline.
History of tetraethyl lead as a gasoline octane enhancer
- For more information, see: Lead, Gasoline, and Octane rating.
Good sources for TEL history.[3]
[4]
References
|
|