Part A: The Essentials
The properties of the Group 15 elements are diverse and more difficult to rationalize in terms of atomic radii and electron configuration than the p-block elements encountered so far. The usual trends of increasing metallic character down a group and stability of low oxidation states at the foot of the group are still evident but they are complicated by the wide range of oxidation states available.
15.1 The Elements
All members of the group other than N are solids under normal conditions. However, the trend to increasing metallic character down the group is not clear-cut because the electrical conductivities of the heavier elements actually decrease from As to Bi.
Properties Table
| Property | N | P | As | Sb | Bi |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Atomic radius/pm | 74 | 110 | 121 | 141 | 170 |
| First ionization energy/kJ mol⁻¹ | 1402 | 1011 | 947 | 833 | 704 |
| Electrical conductivity/10⁶ S m⁻¹ | — | 10 | 3.33 | 2.50 | 0.77 |
| Electron affinity/kJ mol⁻¹ | −8 | 72 | 78 | 103 | 105 |
| B(E−H)/kJ mol⁻¹ | 390 | 322 | 297 | 254 | — |
Allotropes of Phosphorus
Arsenic exists in two solid forms: yellow arsenic (tetrahedral As₄ molecules) and grey/metallic arsenic (more stable, puckered hexagonal layers). Bismuth has recently been found to be radioactive, decaying by α emission with a half-life of 1.9 × 10¹⁹ years.
Natural Occurrence: Nitrogen makes up 78% by mass of the atmosphere. Phosphorus is found as fluorapatite, Ca₅(PO₄)₃F, and hydroxyapatite, Ca₅(PO₄)₃OH. The chemically softer elements As, Sb, and Bi are often found in sulfide ores such as realgar (As₄S₄), orpiment (As₂S₃), stibnite (Sb₂S₃), and bismuthinite (Bi₂S₃).
15.2 Simple Compounds
The wide variety of possible oxidation states can be understood by considering the valence-electron configuration ns²np³. This configuration suggests the highest oxidation state should be +5. According to the inert-pair effect, the +3 oxidation state should be more stable for Bi.
Common Oxidation States
Key distinctions of nitrogen:
- High electronegativity (exceeded only by O and F)
- Small atomic radius
- Absence of accessible d orbitals
- Coordination numbers rarely exceed 4 in simple molecular compounds
Heavier elements frequently reach coordination numbers of 5 and 6, as in PCl₅ and AsF₆⁻.
Nitrides
Nitrogen forms binary compounds (nitrides) with almost all elements. They are classified as:
Contain N³⁻ ion (highly polarizable). Found in Li₃N and Group 2 elements M₃N₂. Have considerable covalent character.
E−N bond is covalent. Examples: BN (boron nitride), (CN)₂ (cyanogen), P₃N₅, S₄N₄, S₂N₂. Properties vary widely depending on element bonded to N.
Largest category—d-block elements with formulas MN, M₂N, or M₄N. N atoms occupy octahedral sites in close-packed metal lattice. Hard, inert, metallic lustre and conductivity. Used as refractory materials, crucibles, thermocouple sheaths.
Phosphides
P atoms may be arranged in rings, chains, or cages, for example P₇³⁻, P₈²⁻, and P₁₁³⁻. Formulas range from M₄P to MP₁₅.
Hydrides
All elements form simple hydrides EH₃. Ammonia (NH₃) is a pungent, toxic gas and excellent solvent for Group 1 metals. The other hydrides—phosphine (PH₃), arsine (AsH₃), and stibine (SbH₃)—are all poisonous gases.
Halides
Trihalides are known for all Group 15 elements. Pentafluorides exist for P to Bi, but pentachlorides only for P, As, and Sb. The pentabromide is known only for P. Nitrogen cannot form NF₅ (atom too small), but NF₄⁺ exists.
Problem: Draw the Lewis structure of P₄, and discuss its possible role as a ligand.
Answer: There are 4 × 5 = 20 valence electrons. Each P forms bonds to three other P atoms (12 electrons), leaving 8 electrons as one lone pair on each P. This structure, with moderate electronegativity (χP = 2.06), suggests P₄ might be a moderately good donor ligand. Indeed, P₄ complexes with d-block metals are known.
15.3 Oxides and Oxoanions of Nitrogen
Nitrogen forms oxo compounds and oxoanions in all oxidation states from +5 to +1.
Nitrogen Oxides Summary
| Ox. No. | Formula | Name | Comments |
|---|---|---|---|
| +1 | N₂O | Nitrous oxide (dinitrogen oxide) | Colourless gas, not very reactive. "Laughing gas" |
| +2 | NO | Nitric oxide (nitrogen monoxide) | Colourless, reactive, paramagnetic gas. Neurotransmitter |
| +3 | N₂O₃ | Dinitrogen trioxide | Blue liquid (m.p. −101°C). Dissociates to NO + NO₂ |
| +4 | NO₂ | Nitrogen dioxide | Brown, reactive, paramagnetic gas |
| +4 | N₂O₄ | Dinitrogen tetroxide | Colourless liquid; equilibrium with NO₂ |
| +5 | N₂O₅ | Dinitrogen pentoxide | Colourless, unstable. Crystallizes as [NO₂⁺][NO₃⁻] |
Nitric Acid and the Ostwald Process
Nitric acid (HNO₃) is a major industrial chemical produced by the Ostwald process—an indirect route from N₂ to HNO₃ via NH₃:
The NO₃⁻ ion is a moderately strong oxidizing agent but reactions are generally slow in dilute acid. Concentrated HNO₃ undergoes faster reactions. A strong reducing agent like Zn can reduce HNO₃ all the way to NH₄⁺ (oxidation state −3):
A weaker reducing agent like Cu yields NO₂ or NO:
Aqua Regia
Aqua regia ("royal water") is a mixture of concentrated HNO₃ and HCl, yellow due to NOCl and Cl₂. It can dissolve gold and platinum:
NO₂/N₂O₄ Equilibrium
Nitrogen(IV) oxide exists as an equilibrium mixture:
The N−N bond in N₂O₄ is long and weak because the unpaired electron is delocalized over all three atoms in NO₂ rather than concentrated on N.
Biological Role of Nitric Oxide
NO is generated in vivo and performs functions such as:
- Reduction of blood pressure
- Neurotransmission
- Destruction of microbes
Sodium nitrite is used in curing meats like bacon, hams, and sausage. It delays botulism, retards rancidity, and preserves spice flavours. Nitrite is converted to NO which binds to myoglobin, creating the bright pink hue of cured meats. "Nitrite burn" (green tinge in bacon) occurs when the heme group is nitrated.
Part B: The Detail
In this section we review the detailed chemistry of the Group 15 elements. We shall see the wide variety of oxidation states achieved by the elements, particularly nitrogen and phosphorus.
15.4 Occurrence and Recovery
Phosphorus production:
Elemental phosphorus is produced by carbon arc reduction at 1500°C:
Arsenic is extracted from flue dust of copper and lead smelters or by heating ores:
Antimony is extracted by heating stibnite with iron:
15.5 Uses
Nitrogen uses:
- Inert atmosphere in metal processing, petroleum refining, food processing
- Laboratory inert atmosphere
- Liquid nitrogen as refrigerant (b.p. −196°C, 77 K)
- Production of ammonia (Haber process) and nitric acid (Ostwald process)
Phosphorus uses:
- Pyrotechnics, smoke bombs, steel making
- Striking strip on matchboxes (red P + sand)
- Cleaning agents, water softeners (sodium phosphate)
- Detergent builders (condensed phosphates)
- Fertilizers (85% of phosphoric acid production)
- Biological: bones, teeth, cell membranes, DNA, RNA, ATP
Nitrogen is essential for proteins, nucleic acids, chlorophyll, enzymes, and vitamins (oxidation number −3). The nitrogen cycle involves enzymatically catalysed redox reactions with Fe, Mo, and Cu at active sites. Biological nitrogen fixation requires reduction potential below −0.30 V and consumes 16 molecules of ATP per N₂ reduced.
Human impact: Between a third and a half of all nitrogen fixed occurs through technological/agricultural means rather than natural processes, leading to potential eutrophication in lakes, wetlands, and coastal areas.
15.6 Nitrogen Activation
N₂ is strikingly unreactive due to:
- Strong N≡N triple bond (950 kJ mol⁻¹) → high activation energy
- Large HOMO−LUMO gap → resistant to electron-transfer processes
- Low polarizability → discourages polar transition states
The Haber process:
Fritz Haber won the Nobel Prize in 1918 for developing this process; Carl Bosch in 1931 for engineering the first plants. The process had major impact on civilization—before it, fertilizers came from guano and saltpetre from South America.
N₂ complexes form with metals:
Direct reduction to ammonia at room temperature has been achieved with a Mo catalyst containing a triamidoamine ligand, cycling between Mo(III) and Mo(VI).
15.10 Hydrides
(a) Ammonia
Properties of NH₃:
- Boiling point −33°C (higher than other Group 15 hydrides due to H-bonding)
- Excellent nonaqueous solvent (dissolves 330 g Cs in 100 g liquid NH₃ at −50°C)
- Weak base: pKb = 4.75
Autoprotolysis equilibrium in liquid ammonia:
Ammonium salts decompose on heating. When the anion is oxidizing (NO₃⁻, ClO₄⁻, Cr₂O₇²⁻), the NH₄⁺ is oxidized to N₂ or N₂O:
(b) Hydrazine and Hydroxylamine
Hydrazine (N₂H₄) is manufactured by the Raschig process:
Hydrazine is a weaker base than ammonia (pKb1 = 7.93). Major uses: rocket fuel, foam-blowing agent, boiler water treatment.
Problem: Compare N₂H₄ and N₂H₂(CH₃)₂ as rocket fuels.
Answer: Calculate combustion enthalpies:
N₂H₄: −535 kJ mol⁻¹ → specific enthalpy = −16.7 kJ g⁻¹
N₂H₂(CH₃)₂: −1798 kJ mol⁻¹ → specific enthalpy = −29.9 kJ g⁻¹
Dimethylhydrazine is the better fuel even when mass is significant.
(c) Phosphine, Arsane, and Stibane
Bond angles decrease down the group:
This decrease is attributed to reduced sp³ hybridization from NH₃ to SbH₃.
Commercial synthesis of PH₃ uses disproportionation:
Organophosphines (PR₃) and organoarsanes (AsR₃) are soft ligands used in metal coordination chemistry, stabilizing metals in low oxidation states.
15.11 Halides
(a) Nitrogen Halides
- NF₃: Only exergonic binary halogen compound of N. Pyramidal, not a Lewis base (F atoms withdraw electron density from lone pair)
- NCl₃: Highly endergonic, explosive yellow oil
- NBr₃: Explosive deep red oil
- NI₃: Explosive solid
NF₃ can be converted to NF₄⁺:
(b) Halides of the Heavy Elements
Trihalides range from gases (PF₃, b.p. −102°C) to solids (BiF₃, m.p. 649°C). Common preparation is direct reaction of element with halogen.
The trichlorides are useful for synthesis:
PF₃ resembles CO—weak σ donor but strong π acceptor. Complexes include [Ni(PF₃)₄], analogous to [Ni(CO)₄].
Pentahalides:
- PF₅, AsF₅: gases, trigonal bipyramidal in gas phase
- SbF₅: highly viscous liquid (cyclic tetramer due to F-bridging)
- PCl₅: solid exists as [PCl₄⁺][PCl₆⁻]
- SbF₅ + HF forms superacid: H₂F⁺ + SbF₆⁻
The alternation effect explains why AsCl₅ is very unstable (poor shielding of 3d electrons increases effective nuclear charge).
15.15 Oxoanions of Phosphorus, Arsenic, Antimony, and Bismuth
Phosphorus Oxoanions
| Ox. No. | Formula | Name | Comments |
|---|---|---|---|
| +1 | H₂PO₂⁻ | Hypophosphite | Facile reducing agent, contains P−H bonds |
| +3 | HPO₃²⁻ | Phosphite | Facile reducing agent, contains P−H bond |
| +4 | P₂O₆⁴⁻ | Hypophosphate | Basic |
| +5 | PO₄³⁻ | Phosphate | Strongly basic |
| +5 | P₂O₇⁴⁻ | Diphosphate | Basic; longer chain forms exist |
White phosphorus disproportionates in base:
H₂PO₂⁻ is used in "electrodeless plating" to reduce Ni²⁺:
15.16 Condensed Phosphates
Heating H₃PO₄ above 200°C causes condensation, forming P−O−P bridges:
Most commercially important: sodium tripolyphosphate (Na₅P₃O₁₀)—used in detergents, water treatment, food industry.
Applications include:
- NaH₂PO₄: dietary supplement in animal feeds
- Na₂HPO₄: emulsifier in processed cheese
- K₂HPO₄: anticoagulant in coffee creamer
- Ca(H₂PO₄)₂·H₂O: raising agent in bread, cake mixes
- CaHPO₄·2H₂O: dental polish in non-fluoride toothpaste
- Ca₃PO₄: flow improver in sugar and salt
Problem: Two stoichiometric points at 16.8 and 28.0 cm³. Determine chain length.
Answer: Terminal OH groups (weakly acidic): 2 per molecule = (28.0 − 16.8) = 11.2 cm³. Each OH needs 5.6 cm³. Strongly acidic OH: 16.8/5.6 = 3. A molecule with 2 terminal + 3 internal OH groups is a tripolyphosphate.
15.17 Phosphazenes
PN is structurally equivalent to SiO. Phosphazenes (R₂PN units) are analogous to siloxanes (R₂SiO units).
Cyclic phosphazene dichlorides are good starting materials:
At ~290°C the trimer changes to polyphosphazene. Cl atoms are readily displaced by Lewis bases:
Polyphosphazenes are useful biomedical materials:
- Bio-inert housing materials for implants
- Construction of heart valves and blood vessels
- Biodegradable supports for in vivo bone regeneration
- Drug-delivery systems (controlled release as polymer degrades)
Like silicone rubber, polyphosphazenes remain rubbery at low temperatures due to helical molecules and highly flexible PNP groups.
The PPN⁺ cation ([Ph₃P═N═PPh₃]⁺) is useful for forming salts of large anions, soluble in polar aprotic solvents.
15.18 Organometallic Compounds of Arsenic, Antimony, and Bismuth
Oxidation states +3 and +5 are encountered. Examples: As(CH₃)₃ (+3) and As(C₆H₅)₅ (+5).
(a) Oxidation State +3
Preparation methods include Grignard reagents or organolithium compounds:
The M−C bond strength decreases for a given R group: As > Sb > Bi. All compounds act as Lewis bases; basicity decreases As > Sb > Bi.
The bidentate ligand diars (C₆H₄(As(CH₃)₂)₂) is useful. Many complexes of soft metals like Rh(I), Ir(I), Pd(II), Pt(II) have been prepared.
Synthesis of diars starts from (CH₃)₂AsI:
Polyarsane compounds (RAs)ₙ can be prepared. Polymethylarsane exists as cyclic pentamer or ladder-like structure. MᐩM bond strength: As > Sb > Bi.
Arylometals include arsabenzene (C₅H₅As, stable to 200°C), stibabenzene (isolated but polymerizes), and bismabenzene (very unstable). These exhibit aromatic character.
(b) Oxidation State +5
Trialkylarsanes act as nucleophiles:
Phenyllithium on tetraphenylarsonium gives pentaphenylarsenic:
AsPh₅ is trigonal bipyramidal (VSEPR), but SbPh₅ is square pyramidal!
15.7 Nitrides and Azides
Azides
Azides (N₃⁻) are synthesized by oxidation of sodium amide:
The azide ion is isoelectronic with N₂O and CO₂, and is linear. It is a good ligand but heavy-metal complexes (Pb(N₃)₂, Hg(N₃)₂) are shock-sensitive detonators:
NaN₃ is used in airbags: ~50 g liberates ~26 dm³ N₂ at room temperature.
Polynitrogen cation N₅⁺ has been synthesized—a powerful oxidizing agent that ignites organic material:
15.9 Arsenides, Antimonides, and Bismuthides
GaAs (gallium arsenide) is used for integrated circuits, LEDs, and laser diodes. It has higher electron mobility than Si and produces less electronic noise. Used in mobile phones, satellite communications, radar systems.
The worst arsenic pollution is in Bangladesh and West Bengal—hundreds of thousands diagnosed with arsenicosis from contaminated tube wells. Arsenic levels correlate with iron levels in groundwater; As is released on dissolution of iron oxides. WHO guideline: 10 ppb. Bangladesh standard: 50 ppb.
Arsenicosis develops over 20 years: keratoses → skin cancers; liver/kidney deterioration. Arsenic probably acts by binding sulfhydryl groups in proteins.
Organoarsenic compounds have applications based on toxicity:
- Arsenoamide: veterinary treatment for heartworm
- Arsanilic acid: antimicrobial in animal feed
- OBPA: antimicrobial in plastics
- MSMA: herbicide for cotton and turf
- Paris green: historical insecticide
The Marsh test detects arsenic by converting As₂O₃ to AsH₃, which produces black arsenic powder when ignited.
Exercises
List the Group 15 elements and indicate those that are: (a) diatomic gases, (b) nonmetals, (c) metalloids, (d) true metals. Indicate elements displaying the inert-pair effect.
Show with an equation why aqueous solutions of NH₄NO₃ are acidic.
Answer: NH₄⁺(aq) + H₂O(l) ⇌ H₃O⁺(aq) + NH₃(aq)
Carbon monoxide is a good ligand and is toxic. Why is the isoelectronic N₂ molecule not toxic?
Answer: N₂ has a much larger HOMO-LUMO gap and is essentially chemically inert under biological conditions, so it cannot bind to hemoglobin like CO does.
Use the VSEPR model to predict the probable shapes of (a) PCl₄⁺, (b) PCl₄⁻, (c) AsCl₅.
Answers: (a) Tetrahedral (4 bonding pairs), (b) See-saw or disphenoidal (4 bonding + 1 lone pair), (c) Trigonal bipyramidal (5 bonding pairs)
Give balanced equations for: (a) oxidation of P₄ with excess oxygen, (b) reaction of product with excess water, (c) reaction with CaCl₂ solution.
Answers:
(a) P₄ + 5 O₂ → P₄O₁₀
(b) P₄O₁₀ + 6 H₂O → 4 H₃PO₄
(c) 2 H₃PO₄ + 3 CaCl₂ → Ca₃(PO₄)₂ + 6 HCl (calcium phosphate)