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Angewandte Chemie International Edition , doi: 10.1002/anie.200704510 Nr. 12/2008 Eco-Friendly PyrotechnicsFireworks pollute—nitrogen-rich compounds now pave the way for ecological alternativesContact: Thomas M. Klapötke, Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität München (Germany) Registered journalists may download the original article here: “Green” Pyrotechnics: A Chemists´ Challenge You know it is chemistry when it stinks and goes boom—and
entrances us. “No other application in the field of chemistry has such a
positive association for the general population as fireworks,” says
Thomas Klapötke (University of Munich, Germany). “However, pyrotechnical
applications are significant polluters of the environment.” In the
journal Angewandte Chemie, Klapötke and his co-author Georg
Steinhauser (TU Vienna, Austria) give an overview of how nitrogen-rich
compounds and other new strategies could help to limit the danger to the
environment.
In addition to fireworks, the field of pyrotechnics
includes applications like airbags, signal flares, propellants and
charges for civil and military purposes, and the production of
nanoporous metal foams for catalysis, hydrogen storage, and insulation.
Pyrotechnical materials contain an oxidizer and a reducing
agent; depending on the application, binding material, propellant
charges, coloring agents and smoke- and sound-producing agents can be
added. When a firework or other pyrotechnic is set off, it releases a
whole cocktail of poisons damaging to humans and the environment: heavy
metals like lead, barium and chromium, chlorates, dioxins, smoke and
particulates, carbon monoxide, and nitrogen and sulfur oxides. “For a
long time, the consequences of this were not considered,” says Klapötke,
“in the mean time scientists have been working on more environmentally
friendly alternatives.” As usual, the main stumbling block is price
pressure because the new products must compete with the established
ones. Klapötke says, “Lawmakers and other promoters must intercede to
address this.”
“Modern developments in pyrotechnics are aimed at the use of
nitrogen-rich compounds,” according to Klapötke. In contrast to
conventional energetic substances, these do not draw their energy from
the oxidation of the carbon backbone, but from their high heats of
formation, which are released upon their decomposition. Interesting
candidates include derivatives of tetrazoles, five-membered rings made
of four nitrogen and one carbon atom, as well as tetrazines,
six-membered rings made of four nitrogen and two carbon atoms.
Aminotetrazole salts with the nontoxic metals lithium, sodium,
potassium, rubidium and cesium result in red, orange, violet, purple,
and pink colored flames. The trouble is with the color green. Intensive
research is being carried out in search of barium-free green-burning
salts based on copper compounds.
The class of nitrogen-rich pyrotechnics does not offer only
environmentally friendly combustion products; they often offer better
color quality and intensity than conventional mixtures. Nitrogen-rich
propellants demonstrate improved performance and burn smoke free.
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