No. Chlorine is nowhere near as powerful an oxidizer as oxygen. The free-radical reaction is catalyzed by UV light, which breaks the chlorine
molecule's bond, producing monatomic chlorine. This species, then, has sufficient power to attack the carbon-hydrogen bond.
Think of a room full of natural gas and oxygen. Now, methane is, in fact, a very stable compound. But oxygen is actually one of the few reagents that
will attack it. Consider lighting a match in such a room. All that was needed was initiation energy.
Since we live in an oxygen-containing atmosphere, we often underestimate just how powerful a reagent oxygen really is.
Chlorine, bromine vapor, and maybe iodine vapor can do this reaction, but only with free radical initiation. To get sulfur vapor to do it, you need
great heat, like that of a coke oven, at which point you might as well just start with the carbon.
The free radical addition reaction wouldn't actually be so bad in a home lab environment, as you could condense out the CCl4 pretty readily, by
controlling the reaction vessel temp. All you have to do is make sure you are above the boiling point of chloroform (and DCM), but below that of CCl4,
to use the state change to drive the reaction forward. Eventually, you would have nothing but HCl gas and liquid CCl4. Hmm.
Maybe start out with chloroform vapor mixed with Cl2, exposed to a UV light? I'm thinking about how an apparatus might be set up...
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