β‘ Group 17: The Halogens
Complete Guide - Properties, Reactions, Industrial Uses & Exam Tips (JEE, NEET, Boards)
Group 17 elements, also called halogens, occupy the seventeenth group of the periodic table. They are the most reactive non-metals, with seven valence electrons and a strong tendency to gain ONE electron to achieve the noble gas configuration. All halogens exist as diatomic molecules (Fβ, Clβ, Brβ, Iβ, Atβ) at room temperature. These elements form compounds with nearly all other elements and have critical applications in industry, medicine, and everyday life.
π Group 17 Elements (Halogens)
| Element | Symbol | Atomic # | Electron Config | State at RT |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Fluorine | F | 9 | [He] 2sΒ² 2pβ΅ | Pale Yellow Gas |
| Chlorine | Cl | 17 | [Ne] 3sΒ² 3pβ΅ | Yellow-Green Gas |
| Bromine | Br | 35 | [Ar] 3dΒΉβ° 4sΒ² 4pβ΅ | Red-Brown Liquid |
| Iodine | I | 53 | [Kr] 4dΒΉβ° 5sΒ² 5pβ΅ | Dark Purple Solid |
| Astatine | At | 85 | [Xe] 4fΒΉβ΄ 5dΒΉβ° 6sΒ² 6pβ΅ | Radioactive (Rare) |
βοΈ Characteristic Properties
π― Physical Properties
- π‘οΈ State variations: Fβ & Clβ are gases, Brβ is liquid, Iβ is solid (increases molecular mass & intermolecular forces)
- π¨ Colors: Fβ (pale yellow), Clβ (yellow-green), Brβ (red-brown), Iβ (dark purple) - unique colors aid identification
- π Odors: All halogens have pungent, unpleasant odors (warning property for safety)
- π§ Boiling points increase β: Fβ (-188Β°C) < Clβ (-34Β°C) < Brβ (59Β°C) < Iβ (184Β°C)
- βοΈ Exist as diatomic molecules: Fβ, Clβ, Brβ, Iβ, Atβ (never found as monatomic at RT)
- π Solubility: Fβ reacts with water, Clβ partly soluble, Brβ moderately soluble, Iβ slightly soluble (forms Iββ» complex in KI solution)
π¬ Chemical Properties
π¨ Important Anomalies
- Fluorine (F): ANOMALOUSLY HIGH reactivity! More reactive than Cl despite lower group position. Small size + high electronegativity + weak F-F bond (repulsion) = extremely reactive
- Fluorine: Does NOT show positive oxidation states (too electronegative). No FβOββ like ClβOββ
- Iodine (I): Least reactive halogen, lowest oxidizing power, less vigorous reactions
- Cl, Br, I: Show multiple oxidation states in oxyacids (HClO, HClOβ, HClOβ, HClOβ)
π§ͺ Important Compounds
π₯ Fluorine Compounds
- HF - Hydrofluoric acid (unique: weak acid, dissolves glass!)
- CaFβ - Calcium fluoride (fluorite mineral, source of Fβ)
- CFCs - Chlorofluorocarbons (refrigerants, ozone depletion concern)
- SFβ - Sulfur hexafluoride (electron tracer gas, insulator)
- NaF - Sodium fluoride (toothpaste, water fluoridation)
π Chlorine Compounds
- HCl - Hydrochloric acid (strong acid, gastric acid in stomach)
- NaCl - Sodium chloride (common salt, dietary essential)
- ClβO - Dichlorine monoxide (bleaching agent)
- NaClO - Sodium hypochlorite (household bleach, disinfectant)
- KMnOβ + Clβ» - KMnOβ DOES oxidize Clβ» to Clβ in acidic solution (used in lab Clβ preparation). For qualitative tests, AgNOβ or Chromyl test is preferred
π€ Bromine Compounds
- HBr - Hydrobromic acid (strong acid, laboratory reagent)
- NaBr - Sodium bromide (antifreeze, photographic films, sedatives)
- AgBr - Silver bromide (photography, light-sensitive film)
- Brβ - Bromine water (red-brown solution, used in qualitative tests)
- KBr - Potassium bromide (medical use, scintillation counters)
π£ Iodine Compounds
- HI - Hydroiodic acid (strong acid, reducing agent)
- KI - Potassium iodide (iodized salt, medical antidote for Tc-99m)
- Iβ - Iodine (antiseptic, tincture of iodine, starch test)
- AgI - Silver iodide (photography, cloud seeding)
- Iβ + starch β blue-black complex (qualitative test for Iβ)
π Periodic Trends in Group 17
π Atomic Radius
Increases β
F < Cl < Br < I < At
Why: More electron shells add size despite unchanged valence shell size
β‘ Electronegativity
Decreases β
F (3.98) > Cl (3.16) > Br (2.96) > I (2.66) > At (2.2)
Why: Valence electrons farther from nucleus = less electronegative
π Bond Dissociation Energy (X-X bond)
Decreases β (with anomaly)
Cl-Cl (243) > Br-Br (193) > F-F (158) > I-I (151) kJ/mol (overall decreasing with anomaly)
Why: F-F is weak due to electron repulsion (small atoms, electron clouds close)
π₯ Reactivity & Oxidizing Power
Decreases β (exception: F anomaly)
Fβ >> Clβ > Brβ > Iβ (strongest to weakest oxidizing agents)
Why: Higher electronegativity + lower bond dissociation = higher oxidizing power
π§ Solubility in Water
Varies (F reacts, others dissolve)
- Fβ: Reacts with water (2Fβ + 2HβO β 4HF + Oββ)
- Clβ: Moderately soluble, disproportionates (Clβ + HβO β HCl + HClO)
- Brβ & Iβ: Slightly soluble, but form complexes with halide ions (Iβ + Iβ» β Iββ», brown solution)
π‘οΈ Boiling Points
Increases β
Fβ (-188Β°C) < Clβ (-34Β°C) < Brβ (59Β°C) < Iβ (184Β°C)
Why: More electrons = stronger London dispersion forces as group descends
𧬠Detailed Element Profiles
F Fluorine (Atomic # 9)
- Config: 1sΒ² 2sΒ² 2pβ΅ | Mass: 19.00 g/mol
- Reactivity: MOST REACTIVE non-metal! Forms compounds with all elements except noble gases (and O with Xe, Kr)
- Anomaly: More reactive than Clβ despite lower group position (weak F-F bond + high electronegativity)
- No positive oxidation states: F always -1 (too electronegative to lose electrons)
- HF anomaly: Weak acid (strong H-F bond), dissolves glass (SiOβ: SiOβ + 4HF β SiFβ + 2HβO)
- Biological: Essential micronutrient (strengthens tooth enamel, prevents decay)
- Color: Pale yellow gas (most common identification)
Cl Chlorine (Atomic # 17)
- Config: [Ne] 3sΒ² 3pβ΅ | Mass: 35.45 g/mol
- Industrial importance: One of most produced chemicals globally (bleaching, disinfection, organic synthesis)
- Water treatment: Clβ + HβO β HCl + HClO (hypochlorous acid disinfects)
- Oxidation states: -1 (chloride), +1 (HClO), +3 (HClOβ), +5 (HClOβ), +7 (HClOβ - perchloric acid, strongest oxyacid)
- Lab test: KMnOβ + Clβ» in acidic solution: 2KMnOβ + 16HCl β 2KCl + 2MnClβ + 5Clβ + 8HβO (purple β colorless, yellow-green Clβ gas forms). Used for lab preparation of Clβ
- Toxicity: Poisonous gas (WWI chemical weapon), respiratory damage at ppm levels
- Color: Yellow-green gas (characteristic pungent odor)
Br Bromine (Atomic # 35)
- Config: [Ar] 3dΒΉβ° 4sΒ² 4pβ΅ | Mass: 79.90 g/mol
- Unique state: Only non-metal liquid at room temperature (liquid Brβ has metallic appearance!)
- Reactivity: Less reactive than Clβ but more than Iβ (intermediate behavior)
- Photography: AgBr is light-sensitive (photographic films, now largely digital)
- Lab test: Brβ + KMnOβ β MnOββ» oxidizes Brβ» (KMnOβ color fades, brown Brβ appears)
- Toxicity: Liquid Brβ causes severe burns, vapor harmful to lungs and eyes
- Seawater source: Extracted from seawater (0.065% Br) - important economic source
I Iodine (Atomic # 53)
- Config: [Kr] 4dΒΉβ° 5sΒ² 5pβ΅ | Mass: 126.90 g/mol
- Biological importance: Essential for thyroid hormone synthesis (T3, T4)
- Deficiency: Iodine deficiency β goiter (thyroid enlargement), cretinism (mental retardation in infants)
- Iodized salt: KI or potassium iodide added to salt (public health measure)
- Starch test: Iβ + starch β blue-black complex (classic qualitative test, highly visible)
- Reactivity: Least reactive halogen (weakest oxidizing agent)
- Color: Dark purple solid, sublime to violet vapor (Iβ β I(g))
At Astatine (Atomic # 85)
- Config: [Xe] 4fΒΉβ΄ 5dΒΉβ° 6sΒ² 6pβ΅ | Mass: ~210 g/mol (most stable isotope Β²ΒΉβ°At)
- Rarity: Extremely rare! Less than 1 gram exists in Earth's crust at any time
- Radioactivity: ALL isotopes are radioactive (no stable isotope exists)
- Half-life: Β²ΒΉβ°At has 8.1-hour half-life (decays rapidly)
- Expected properties: Should behave like I (least reactive halogen, but radioactive)
- Research only: Essentially unknown chemistry (too rare and radioactive for practical study)
- Medical potential: Potential for targeted cancer therapy (alpha emitter)
βοΈ Important Reactions of Halogens
1οΈβ£ Reaction with Water (Disproportionation)
Xβ + HβO β HX + HXO (slower for Iβ, faster for Fβ)
- Fβ: 2Fβ + 2HβO β 4HF + Oββ (vigorous, oxidizes water to Oβ)
- Clβ: Clβ + HβO β HCl + HClO (equilibrium, hypochlorous acid disinfects)
- Brβ: Brβ + HβO β HBr + HBrO (similar to Cl, but HBrO even more unstable)
- Iβ: Minimal reaction with water (Iβ mostly unreacted, dissolves slightly)
2οΈβ£ Reaction with Metals
2M + nXβ β 2MXβ (vigorous, releases heat, light)
- Fβ: Burns metals at room temperature (even Pt reacts at high temp): 2Ca + Fβ β CaFβ (white powder, vigorous)
- Clβ: Burns hot metals: 2Fe + 3Clβ β 2FeClβ (iron(III) chloride, bright flame)
- Brβ & Iβ: Less vigorous, require heating (2Fe + 3Brβ β 2FeBrβ)
3οΈβ£ Displacement Reactions (Halogen Reactivity)
Xβ + 2Yβ» β 2Xβ» + Yβ (more reactive halogen displaces less reactive)
- Reactivity order: Fβ > Clβ > Brβ > Iβ (ALWAYS true for displacements)
- Examples: Clβ + 2KBr β 2KCl + Brβ (brown Brβ forms), Clβ + 2KI β 2KCl + Iβ (purple Iβ forms)
- Exam trick: Never see reverse displacement; Fβ is bottom lord!
4οΈβ£ Reaction with Non-metals (Covalent Compounds)
Xβ + nonmetal β covalent compound (forms covalent halides with P, S, etc.)
- With P: 3Fβ + P β PFβ (or PFβ excess, stable), 3Clβ + 2P β 2PClβ (PClβ with excess Clβ)
- With S: Fβ + S β SFβ (or SFβ), Clβ + S β SβClβ
- Pattern: F tends to form higher oxidation state compounds
5οΈβ£ Oxidation of Halide Ions with Strong Oxidizers
MnOββ» (or other strong oxidizers) + Xβ» β oxidized halogen (except Fβ»)
- Clβ»: KMnOβ DOES oxidize Clβ» to Clβ in acidic medium (EΒ°=+1.51 V for MnOββ»/MnΒ²βΊ; EΒ°=+1.36 V for Clβ/Clβ»). Reaction: 2KMnOβ + 16HCl β 2KCl + 2MnClβ + 5Clβ + 8HβO. This is why HβSOβ (not HCl) is used in titrations with KMnOβ
- Brβ»: 2KMnOβ + 10KBr + 8HβSOβ β 2MnSOβ + 5Brβ + 6KβSOβ + 8HβO (purple β colorless, brown Brβ forms)
- Iβ»: 2KMnOβ + 10KI + 8HβSOβ β 2MnSOβ + 5Iβ + 6KβSOβ + 8HβO (purple β colorless, dark purple Iβ forms)
- Fβ»: Never oxidized (F already at -1, cannot be further oxidized)
6οΈβ£ Oxyacid Formation & Disproportionation
Xβ + base β Xβ» + XOβ» (in base, disproportionation occurs)
- In cold dilute base: Clβ + 2NaOH β NaCl + NaClO + HβO (sodium hypochlorite)
- In hot concentrated base: 3Clβ + 6NaOH β 5NaCl + NaClOβ + 3HβO (sodium chlorate)
- Oxidation states: Cl goes from 0 (Clβ) to -1 (Clβ») and +1 (ClOβ») or +5 (ClOββ»)
7οΈβ£ Starch Test (Qualitative Detection)
Iβ + starch β blue-black complex (most sensitive test for halogens!)
- Sensitivity: Extremely sensitive (detects 0.1 ppm Iβ)
- Mechanism: Iβ fits into helical starch structure, charge transfer complex absorbs blue light
- Reversibility: Heat destroys complex (blue color disappears, reappears on cooling)
- Specificity: Works ONLY with Iβ (not Clβ or Brβ - they react with starch)
π Industrial Applications & Economic Importance
π§ Water Disinfection & Purification
- Clβ water treatment: Primary disinfectant globally (Clβ + HβO produces HClO which kills bacteria/viruses)
- Chlorine dosage: 0.5-2 ppm applied to municipal water supplies
- Byproducts: Trihalomethanes (THMs) form when Clβ reacts with organics (regulatory concern)
- Fβ alternative: Ozone (Oβ) or UV + HβOβ used for more advanced treatment
- Iodine: Portable water purification tablets (emergency, camping, travel)
π₯ Medical & Pharmaceutical
- Iodine compounds: Iodized salt (iodine deficiency prevention), Betadine (iodine antiseptic)
- Halogenated drugs: Many pharmaceuticals contain halogens (25% of drugs contain F, Cl, or Br)
- HF in pharmaceuticals: Used in synthesis of many medicines and agrochemicals
- Fluoride toothpaste: NaF strengthens enamel, prevents caries
- Disinfectants: Chlorine solutions (bleach, 0.5%), iodine solutions for wound care
π§ͺ Chemical Industry
- Chlor-alkali process: 2NaCl + 2HβO β Clββ + Hββ + 2NaOH (electrolysis, produces 40 million tons Clβ/year!)
- HCl production: Hβ + Clβ β 2HCl (strong acid for industry, ~20 million tons/year)
- HF production: CaFβ + HβSOβ β CaSOβ + 2HF (used in oil refining, uranium enrichment)
- Organic synthesis: Halogens used to create halogenated compounds (pesticides, solvents, refrigerants)
π¬ Bleaching & Disinfection
- Household bleach: 5-6% NaClO (sodium hypochlorite) solution
- Mechanism: HClO generated: ClOβ» + HβΊ β HClO β oxidizes colors/microbes
- Textile bleaching: Clβ or hypochlorite bleaches cotton, linen at industrial scale
- Paper bleaching: Clβ, ClOβ, and hypochlorite used in pulp & paper industry
π Environmental Concerns
- Ozone depletion: CFCs (chlorofluorocarbons) release Cl atoms in stratosphere (break Oβ bonds)
- CFC phaseout: Montreal Protocol (1987) phased out CFCs; HCFCs now being phased
- Persistent organic pollutants: Chlorinated compounds bioaccumulate (DDT, PCBs)
- Trihalomethanes: DBP (disinfection byproducts) from chlorination - potential health concern
πΈ Photography & Imaging
- Silver halides: AgCl, AgBr, AgI (light-sensitive for photographic films)
- Film emulsion: Fine crystals of AgBr suspended in gelatin (most sensitive component)
- Color film: Multiple layers of AgBr with different dyes
- Legacy technology: Being replaced by digital sensors, but still used in specialized photography
β οΈ Safety, Storage & Hazards
π Storage & Handling
- Fβ: Store in steel cylinders with copper/nickel alloy valves (passivation with Fβ layer prevents corrosion)
- Clβ: Store in steel cylinders at increased pressure, cool dark place (liquid Clβ in cylinder)
- Brβ: Store in sealed glass bottles with water (aqueous solution safer than pure liquid)
- Iβ: Store in airtight containers (slow sublimation), can be stored as iodide solutions
- Ventilation: All halogen work requires fume hood (fumes toxic!)
π₯ Toxicity & Health Hazards
- Fβ gas: Extremely toxic (IDLH ~10 ppm, immediately dangerous to life/health)
- Clβ gas: Toxic (IDLH ~10 ppm, WWI chemical weapon), respiratory tract irritant
- Brβ: Serious liquid burns, vapor causes respiratory damage and eye irritation
- Iβ: Moderate toxicity, iodine vapor irritates eyes/respiratory system
- HF (aqueous): Weak acid but extremely dangerous (fluoride ion penetrates skin, blocks Ca metabolism - cardiac arrest risk!)
β οΈ First Aid & Emergency Response
- Halogen gas exposure: Evacuate to fresh air immediately, seek medical attention
- Skin contact (Brβ liquid): Immediately flush with water for 15+ minutes, seek medical help
- HF skin exposure: MEDICAL EMERGENCY! Flush with copious water, apply calcium gluconate gel, seek emergency care (systemic fluoride toxicity)
- Inhalation: Move to fresh air, give oxygen if trained, do NOT re-enter area
- Spill cleanup: Use alkali solution (NaOH) to neutralize halogen vapors before cleanup
π Exam Preparation Tips
π― JEE Focus
- Reactivity order: Fβ > Clβ > Brβ > Iβ (displacement reactions ALWAYS follow this)
- Disproportionation in water & base: Xβ + HβO, Xβ + 2OHβ» (oxyacid formation, oxidation states)
- KMnOβ test: DOES oxidize Clβ» (2KMnOβ + 16HCl β Clβ + MnClβ + KCl + 8HβO); also oxidizes Brβ» β Brβ (brown), Iβ» β Iβ (purple). Use chromyl test or AgNOβ for Clβ» confirmation
- Oxidation state trends in oxyacids: HXO (+1), HXOβ (+3), HXOβ (+5), HXOβ (+7)
- Starch test for Iβ (blue-black complex) - exam favorite for qualitative detection
- HF anomaly: Weak acid (strong H-F bond), dissolves glass (SiOβ)
- F anomaly: Most reactive halogen despite being at top (weak F-F bond)
𧬠NEET Focus
- Iodine essential: Thyroid hormone synthesis (T3, T4 contain iodine)
- Iodine deficiency: Goiter (thyroid enlargement), cretinism (fetal mental retardation), myxedema (adult hypothyroidism)
- Dietary iodine: 150 ΞΌg/day recommended (seafood, dairy, iodized salt)
- Chlorine in blood: Regulation of osmotic pressure, acid-base balance (Clβ» vs HCOββ»)
- Fluorine: Strengthens tooth enamel, prevents dental caries
- Halogenated drugs: Many pharmaceuticals contain F, Cl, Br
- Disinfection mechanism: Halogens oxidize proteins/nucleic acids in microorganisms
π Board Exam Focus
- Physical states at RT: Fβ & Clβ = gases, Brβ = liquid (only non-metal liquid at RT!), Iβ = solid
- Colors: Fβ (pale yellow), Clβ (yellow-green), Brβ (red-brown), Iβ (dark purple)
- Reactivity decreased down group: Unlike Groups 1 & 2 (opposite trend!)
- Reaction with water: Fβ reacts vigorously, Clβ disproportionates, Brβ slightly, Iβ minimal
- Halide identification: AgNOβ precipitates halides (AgF soluble, AgCl/AgBr/AgI white/pale/yellow)
- Common industrial uses: Clβ for water treatment & bleach, F for toothpaste, I for medicine
- Oxyacid strength order: HClOβ > HClOβ > HClOβ > HClO (stronger as oxidation state β)
π‘ Memorable Mnemonics
Element Order: "For Clever Bromine, Iodine's Attitude" (F, Cl, Br, I, At)
Reactivity order (reversed!): "F is a Furious Fiend, Cl conquers, Br brims, I is indifferent" (F > Cl > Br > I - MOST reactive at TOP!)
Physical states: "Fluffy Clβ gas, Bromine is Beautiful liquid, Iodine is Icy solid" (F,Cl=gas, Br=liquid/unique!, I=solid)
Colors: "Fluorine is Faint yellow, Chlorine is Green, Bromine is Brown (liquid), Iodine is dark purple" (visual memory)
Displacement: "More reactive halogen always displaces less reactive (F > Cl > Br > I)" - Can't ever see reverse!
Starch test: "I turn starch blue-black (iodine's signature), Cl & Br don't (they react with starch)" - Iβ + starch = BLUE!