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Thermal decomposition, or thermolysis, is a chemical decomposition of a substance caused by heat. The decomposition temperature of a substance is the at which the substance chemically decomposes. The reaction is usually endothermic as heat is required to break in the compound undergoing decomposition. If decomposition is sufficiently exothermic, a positive feedback loop is created producing and possibly an or other chemical reaction.


Decomposition temperature definition
A simple substance (like ) may exist in equilibrium with its thermal decomposition products, effectively halting the decomposition. The equilibrium fraction of decomposed molecules increases with the temperature. Since thermal decomposition is a kinetic process, the observed temperature of its beginning in most instances will be a function of the experimental conditions and sensitivity of the experimental setup. For a rigorous depiction of the process, the use of thermokinetic modeling is recommended.

main definition: Thermal decomposition is the breakdown of a compound into two or more different substances using heat, and it is an endothermic reaction


Examples
  • Calcium carbonate (limestone or chalk) decomposes into and when heated. The chemical reaction is as follows:
:CaCO3 → CaO + CO2
The reaction is used to make , which is an industrially important product.
Another example of thermal decomposition is 2Pb(NO3)2 → 2PbO + O2 + 4NO2.
  • Some , especially of weakly electropositive metals decompose when heated to high enough temperature. A classical example is the decomposition of to give and mercury metal. The reaction was used by to prepare samples of gaseous oxygen for the first time.
  • When is heated to well over , a small percentage of it will decompose into OH, monatomic oxygen, monatomic hydrogen, O2, and H2.
  • The compound with the highest known decomposition temperature is at ≈.


Decomposition of nitrates, nitrites and ammonium compounds
  • Ammonium dichromate on heating yields nitrogen, water and chromium(III) oxide.
  • on strong heating yields dinitrogen oxide ("") and water.
  • on heating yields nitrogen gas and water.
  • -"Ba(N 3)"on heating yields barium metal and nitrogen gas.
  • on heating at violently decomposes to nitrogen and metallic sodium.
  • on heating yields and oxygen gas.
  • Organic compounds such as tertiary amines undergo Hofmann elimination when heated and yield secondary amines and alkenes.


Ease of decomposition
When metals are near the bottom of the reactivity series, their compounds generally decompose easily at high temperatures. This is because stronger form between towards the top of the reactivity series, and strong bonds are difficult to break. For example, is near the bottom of the reactivity series, and (CuSO4), begins to decompose at about , increasing rapidly at higher temperatures to about . In contrast is near the top of the reactivity series, and potassium sulfate (K2SO4) does not decompose at its melting point of about , nor even at its boiling point.


Practical applications
Many scenarios in the real world are affected by thermal degradation. One of the things affected is fingerprints. When anyone touches something, there is residue left from the fingers. If fingers are sweaty, or contain more oils, the residue contains many chemicals. De Paoli and her colleagues conducted a study testing thermal degradation on certain components found in fingerprints. For heat exposure, the amino acid and urea samples started degradation at and for lactic acid, the decomposition process started around . These components are necessary for further testing, so in the forensics discipline, decomposition of fingerprints is significant.


See also
  • Thermal degradation of polymers
  • Ellingham diagram
  • Thermochemical cycle
  • Thermal depolymerization
  • Chemical thermodynamics
  • - thermal decomposition of organic material

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