Non-fertilizer uses of phosphorus

19 June 2024, Version 2
This content is a preprint and has not undergone peer review at the time of posting.

Abstract

Phosphorus is a non-substitutable element required for the storage of genetic information, energy transfer and the structural integrity of biological systems. Agricultural use of phosphorus fertilizers and supplements aims to balance the biological phosphorus stoichiometry, for optimal growth and yield of crops and animals. Most of the commercial phosphorus industry aims to produce phosphates and polyphosphates for fertilizers. However, about 10% of the mineral resources are allocated for non-fertilizer uses via purification of phosphoric acid, or thermal processing of phosphate rock to elemental phosphorus to white phosphorus (P4), which serves as the parent compound for hundreds of phosphorus-containing derivatives with diverse chemistry and practical uses. True P4 derivatives are made only from P4 and include intermediates such as phosphorus pentoxide (P2O5), phosphorus trichloride (PCl3), phosphorus oxychloride (POCl3), phosphorus pentachloride (PCl5), phosphorus pentasulphide (P2S5), phosphines (containing PH3), red P (amorphous elemental P), hypophosphites (H2PO2-) and phosphides (P3-). This review explains the synthesis and applications of these non-fertilizer phosphorus compounds as flame retardants and plastic stabilizers, for metal sequestration and extraction, in catalyst ligands, as electrolytes in batteries, as crop protection agents and as anti-wear substances.

Keywords

phosphorus
white phosphorus
red phosphorus
P4 derivatives
phosphorus pentoxide
phosphorus trichloride
phosphorus oxychloride
phosphorus pentachloride
phosphorus pentasulphide
organophosphines
amorphous elemental P
hypophosphites
phosphides
organophosphorus
lithium iron phosphate
feed grade phosphates

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