Under what circumstances does Calcium Fluoride react/decompose/disintegr...



Answer:
Most natural crystalline forms of Calcium fluoride (such as the minerals fluorite and fluorspar are relatively non-reactive. Calcium fluoride, ground to a fine power, however, becomes hygroscopic (will absorb water from the air).

Calcium fluoride will react with concentrated Sulfuric acid to yield Hydrofluoric acid (HF) and Calcium sulfate (CaSO4).

CaF2 + H2SO4 --> 2 HF + CaSO4
Extreme heat or acids.
The most common (and used in industry) way to decompose calcium fluoride (fluorite in its natural form), is by adding sulphuric acid at 50 dgrees celsius,
Calcium fluorode will be transfomed into calcium sulphate and fluorhydric acid by the reaction
H2SO4 + CaF2 = CaSO4 + 2 FH

Calcium fluoride, is very stable even at high temperatures, so, it will not dissociate into anything below 640 centigrades...a waste of energy and time..expensive too..
As a matter of curiosity, calcium fluoride., emmits a violet fluorescence in the darkness when heated at 120 centigrades ..just a curiosity...

The answers post by the user, for information only, FunQA.com does not guarantee the right.



More Questions and Answers:
  • Does anyone know a test for carbon monoxide gas that my chem group can do in our school lab?
  • Write the result in scientific notation.?
  • To form an ion, a sodium atom?
  • Where can i get the international standards for drinking water?
  • One german technical sentence...?
  • For those who teach chemistry?
  • Explain the working of a washing machime?
  • Cleaning items with isopropanol versus acetone?
  • When you cover the mouth of the test tube with a balloon and heat it, why does it inflate?