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Alkali metal

The alkali metals consist of the chemical elements lithium (Li), sodium (Na), potassium (K),[note 1] rubidium (Rb), caesium (Cs),[note 2] and francium (Fr). Together with hydrogen they constitute group 1,[note 3] which lies in the s-block of the periodic table. All alkali metals have their outermost electron in an s-orbital: this shared electron configuration results in their having very similar characteristic properties.[note 4] Indeed, the alkali metals provide the best example of group trends in properties in the periodic table, with elements exhibiting well-characterised homologous behaviour.[5] This family of elements is also known as the lithium family after its leading element.

Alkali metals
Hydrogen Helium
Lithium Beryllium Boron Carbon Nitrogen Oxygen Fluorine Neon
Sodium Magnesium Aluminium Silicon Phosphorus Sulfur Chlorine Argon
Potassium Calcium Scandium Titanium Vanadium Chromium Manganese Iron Cobalt Nickel Copper Zinc Gallium Germanium Arsenic Selenium Bromine Krypton
Rubidium Strontium Yttrium Zirconium Niobium Molybdenum Technetium Ruthenium Rhodium Palladium Silver Cadmium Indium Tin Antimony Tellurium Iodine Xenon
Caesium Barium Lanthanum Cerium Praseodymium Neodymium Promethium Samarium Europium Gadolinium Terbium Dysprosium Holmium Erbium Thulium Ytterbium Lutetium Hafnium Tantalum Tungsten Rhenium Osmium Iridium Platinum Gold Mercury (element) Thallium Lead Bismuth Polonium Astatine Radon
Francium Radium Actinium Thorium Protactinium Uranium Neptunium Plutonium Americium Curium Berkelium Californium Einsteinium Fermium Mendelevium Nobelium Lawrencium Rutherfordium Dubnium Seaborgium Bohrium Hassium Meitnerium Darmstadtium Roentgenium Copernicium Nihonium Flerovium Moscovium Livermorium Tennessine Oganesson
IUPAC group number 1
Name by element lithium group
Trivial name alkali metals
CAS group number
(US, pattern A-B-A)
IA
old IUPAC number
(Europe, pattern A-B)
IA

↓ Period
2
Lithium (Li)
3
3
Sodium (Na)
11
4
Potassium (K)
19
5
Rubidium (Rb)
37
6
Caesium (Cs)
55
7 Francium (Fr)
87

Legend

primordial
element by radioactive decay
Atomic number color:
black=solid

The alkali metals are all shiny, soft, highly reactive metals at standard temperature and pressure and readily lose their outermost electron to form cations with charge +1. They can all be cut easily with a knife due to their softness, exposing a shiny surface that tarnishes rapidly in air due to oxidation by atmospheric moisture and oxygen (and in the case of lithium, nitrogen). Because of their high reactivity, they must be stored under oil to prevent reaction with air, and are found naturally only in salts and never as the free elements. Caesium, the fifth alkali metal, is the most reactive of all the metals. All the alkali metals react with water, with the heavier alkali metals reacting more vigorously than the lighter ones.

All of the discovered alkali metals occur in nature as their compounds: in order of abundance, sodium is the most abundant, followed by potassium, lithium, rubidium, caesium, and finally francium, which is very rare due to its extremely high radioactivity; francium occurs only in minute traces in nature as an intermediate step in some obscure side branches of the natural decay chains. Experiments have been conducted to attempt the synthesis of element 119, which is likely to be the next member of the group; none were successful. However, ununennium may not be an alkali metal due to relativistic effects, which are predicted to have a large influence on the chemical properties of superheavy elements; even if it does turn out to be an alkali metal, it is predicted to have some differences in physical and chemical properties from its lighter homologues.

Most alkali metals have many different applications. One of the best-known applications of the pure elements is the use of rubidium and caesium in atomic clocks, of which caesium atomic clocks form the basis of the second. A common application of the compounds of sodium is the sodium-vapour lamp, which emits light very efficiently. Table salt, or sodium chloride, has been used since antiquity. Lithium finds use as a psychiatric medication and as an anode in lithium batteries. Sodium, potassium and possibly lithium are essential elements, having major biological roles as electrolytes, and although the other alkali metals are not essential, they also have various effects on the body, both beneficial and harmful.

History edit

 
Petalite, the lithium mineral from which lithium was first isolated

Sodium compounds have been known since ancient times; salt (sodium chloride) has been an important commodity in human activities, as testified by the English word salary, referring to salarium, money paid to Roman soldiers for the purchase of salt.[6][better source needed] While potash has been used since ancient times, it was not understood for most of its history to be a fundamentally different substance from sodium mineral salts. Georg Ernst Stahl obtained experimental evidence which led him to suggest the fundamental difference of sodium and potassium salts in 1702,[7] and Henri-Louis Duhamel du Monceau was able to prove this difference in 1736.[8] The exact chemical composition of potassium and sodium compounds, and the status as chemical element of potassium and sodium, was not known then, and thus Antoine Lavoisier did not include either alkali in his list of chemical elements in 1789.[9][10]

Pure potassium was first isolated in 1807 in England by Humphry Davy, who derived it from caustic potash (KOH, potassium hydroxide) by the use of electrolysis of the molten salt with the newly invented voltaic pile. Previous attempts at electrolysis of the aqueous salt were unsuccessful due to potassium's extreme reactivity.[11]: 68  Potassium was the first metal that was isolated by electrolysis.[12] Later that same year, Davy reported extraction of sodium from the similar substance caustic soda (NaOH, lye) by a similar technique, demonstrating the elements, and thus the salts, to be different.[9][10][13][14]

 
Johann Wolfgang Döbereiner was among the first to notice similarities between what are now known as the alkali metals.

Petalite (LiAlSi4O10) was discovered in 1800 by the Brazilian chemist José Bonifácio de Andrada in a mine on the island of Utö, Sweden.[15][16][17] However, it was not until 1817 that Johan August Arfwedson, then working in the laboratory of the chemist Jöns Jacob Berzelius, detected the presence of a new element while analysing petalite ore.[18][19] This new element was noted by him to form compounds similar to those of sodium and potassium, though its carbonate and hydroxide were less soluble in water and more alkaline than the other alkali metals.[20] Berzelius gave the unknown material the name lithion/lithina, from the Greek word λιθoς (transliterated as lithos, meaning "stone"), to reflect its discovery in a solid mineral, as opposed to potassium, which had been discovered in plant ashes, and sodium, which was known partly for its high abundance in animal blood. He named the metal inside the material lithium.[21][16][19] Lithium, sodium, and potassium were part of the discovery of periodicity, as they are among a series of triads of elements in the same group that were noted by Johann Wolfgang Döbereiner in 1850 as having similar properties.[22]

 
Lepidolite, the rubidium mineral from which rubidium was first isolated

Rubidium and caesium were the first elements to be discovered using the spectroscope, invented in 1859 by Robert Bunsen and Gustav Kirchhoff.[23] The next year, they discovered caesium in the mineral water from Bad Dürkheim, Germany. Their discovery of rubidium came the following year in Heidelberg, Germany, finding it in the mineral lepidolite.[24] The names of rubidium and caesium come from the most prominent lines in their emission spectra: a bright red line for rubidium (from the Latin word rubidus, meaning dark red or bright red), and a sky-blue line for caesium (derived from the Latin word caesius, meaning sky-blue).[25][26]

Around 1865 John Newlands produced a series of papers where he listed the elements in order of increasing atomic weight and similar physical and chemical properties that recurred at intervals of eight; he likened such periodicity to the octaves of music, where notes an octave apart have similar musical functions.[27][28] His version put all the alkali metals then known (lithium to caesium), as well as copper, silver, and thallium (which show the +1 oxidation state characteristic of the alkali metals), together into a group. His table placed hydrogen with the halogens.[22]

 
Dmitri Mendeleev's periodic system proposed in 1871 showing hydrogen and the alkali metals as part of his group I, along with copper, silver, and gold

After 1869, Dmitri Mendeleev proposed his periodic table placing lithium at the top of a group with sodium, potassium, rubidium, caesium, and thallium.[29] Two years later, Mendeleev revised his table, placing hydrogen in group 1 above lithium, and also moving thallium to the boron group. In this 1871 version, copper, silver, and gold were placed twice, once as part of group IB, and once as part of a "group VIII" encompassing today's groups 8 to 11.[30][note 5] After the introduction of the 18-column table, the group IB elements were moved to their current position in the d-block, while alkali metals were left in group IA. Later the group's name was changed to group 1 in 1988.[4] The trivial name "alkali metals" comes from the fact that the hydroxides of the group 1 elements are all strong alkalis when dissolved in water.[5]

There were at least four erroneous and incomplete discoveries[31][32][33][34] before Marguerite Perey of the Curie Institute in Paris, France discovered francium in 1939 by purifying a sample of actinium-227, which had been reported to have a decay energy of 220 keV. However, Perey noticed decay particles with an energy level below 80 keV. Perey thought this decay activity might have been caused by a previously unidentified decay product, one that was separated during purification, but emerged again out of the pure actinium-227. Various tests eliminated the possibility of the unknown element being thorium, radium, lead, bismuth, or thallium. The new product exhibited chemical properties of an alkali metal (such as coprecipitating with caesium salts), which led Perey to believe that it was element 87, caused by the alpha decay of actinium-227.[35] Perey then attempted to determine the proportion of beta decay to alpha decay in actinium-227. Her first test put the alpha branching at 0.6%, a figure that she later revised to 1%.[36]

227
89
Ac
α (1.38%)21.77 y 223
87
Fr
β22 min 223
88
Ra
α11.4 d219
86
Rn

The next element below francium (eka-francium) in the periodic table would be ununennium (Uue), element 119.[37]: 1729–1730  The synthesis of ununennium was first attempted in 1985 by bombarding a target of einsteinium-254 with calcium-48 ions at the superHILAC accelerator at the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory in Berkeley, California. No atoms were identified, leading to a limiting yield of 300 nb.[38][39]

254
99
Es
+ 48
20
Ca
302
119
Uue
* → no atoms[note 6]

It is highly unlikely[38] that this reaction will be able to create any atoms of ununennium in the near future, given the extremely difficult task of making sufficient amounts of einsteinium-254, which is favoured for production of ultraheavy elements because of its large mass, relatively long half-life of 270 days, and availability in significant amounts of several micrograms,[40] to make a large enough target to increase the sensitivity of the experiment to the required level; einsteinium has not been found in nature and has only been produced in laboratories, and in quantities smaller than those needed for effective synthesis of superheavy elements. However, given that ununennium is only the first period 8 element on the extended periodic table, it may well be discovered in the near future through other reactions, and indeed an attempt to synthesise it is currently ongoing in Japan.[41] Currently, none of the period 8 elements has been discovered yet, and it is also possible, due to drip instabilities, that only the lower period 8 elements, up to around element 128, are physically possible.[42][43] No attempts at synthesis have been made for any heavier alkali metals: due to their extremely high atomic number, they would require new, more powerful methods and technology to make.[37]: 1737–1739 

Occurrence edit

In the Solar System edit

 
Estimated abundances of the chemical elements in the Solar system. Hydrogen and helium are most common, from the Big Bang. The next three elements (lithium, beryllium, and boron) are rare because they are poorly synthesised in the Big Bang and also in stars. The two general trends in the remaining stellar-produced elements are: (1) an alternation of abundance in elements as they have even or odd atomic numbers, and (2) a general decrease in abundance, as elements become heavier. Iron is especially common because it represents the minimum-energy nuclide that can be made by fusion of helium in supernovae.[44]

The Oddo–Harkins rule holds that elements with even atomic numbers are more common that those with odd atomic numbers, with the exception of hydrogen. This rule argues that elements with odd atomic numbers have one unpaired proton and are more likely to capture another, thus increasing their atomic number. In elements with even atomic numbers, protons are paired, with each member of the pair offsetting the spin of the other, enhancing stability.[45][46][47] All the alkali metals have odd atomic numbers and they are not as common as the elements with even atomic numbers adjacent to them (the noble gases and the alkaline earth metals) in the Solar System. The heavier alkali metals are also less abundant than the lighter ones as the alkali metals from rubidium onward can only be synthesised in supernovae and not in stellar nucleosynthesis. Lithium is also much less abundant than sodium and potassium as it is poorly synthesised in both Big Bang nucleosynthesis and in stars: the Big Bang could only produce trace quantities of lithium, beryllium and boron due to the absence of a stable nucleus with 5 or 8 nucleons, and stellar nucleosynthesis could only pass this bottleneck by the triple-alpha process, fusing three helium nuclei to form carbon, and skipping over those three elements.[44]

On Earth edit

 
Spodumene, an important lithium mineral

The Earth formed from the same cloud of matter that formed the Sun, but the planets acquired different compositions during the formation and evolution of the solar system. In turn, the natural history of the Earth caused parts of this planet to have differing concentrations of the elements. The mass of the Earth is approximately 5.98×1024 kg. It is composed mostly of iron (32.1%), oxygen (30.1%), silicon (15.1%), magnesium (13.9%), sulfur (2.9%), nickel (1.8%), calcium (1.5%), and aluminium (1.4%); with the remaining 1.2% consisting of trace amounts of other elements. Due to planetary differentiation, the core region is believed to be primarily composed of iron (88.8%), with smaller amounts of nickel (5.8%), sulfur (4.5%), and less than 1% trace elements.[48]

The alkali metals, due to their high reactivity, do not occur naturally in pure form in nature. They are lithophiles and therefore remain close to the Earth's surface because they combine readily with oxygen and so associate strongly with silica, forming relatively low-density minerals that do not sink down into the Earth's core. Potassium, rubidium and caesium are also incompatible elements due to their large ionic radii.[49]

Sodium and potassium are very abundant on Earth, both being among the ten most common elements in Earth's crust;[50][51] sodium makes up approximately 2.6% of the Earth's crust measured by weight, making it the sixth most abundant element overall[52] and the most abundant alkali metal. Potassium makes up approximately 1.5% of the Earth's crust and is the seventh most abundant element.[52] Sodium is found in many different minerals, of which the most common is ordinary salt (sodium chloride), which occurs in vast quantities dissolved in seawater. Other solid deposits include halite, amphibole, cryolite, nitratine, and zeolite.[52] Many of these solid deposits occur as a result of ancient seas evaporating, which still occurs now in places such as Utah's Great Salt Lake and the Dead Sea.[11]: 69  Despite their near-equal abundance in Earth's crust, sodium is far more common than potassium in the ocean, both because potassium's larger size makes its salts less soluble, and because potassium is bound by silicates in soil and what potassium leaches is absorbed far more readily by plant life than sodium.[11]: 69 

Despite its chemical similarity, lithium typically does not occur together with sodium or potassium due to its smaller size.[11]: 69  Due to its relatively low reactivity, it can be found in seawater in large amounts; it is estimated that lithium concentration in seawater is approximately 0.14 to 0.25 parts per million (ppm)[53][54] or 25 micromolar.[55] Its diagonal relationship with magnesium often allows it to replace magnesium in ferromagnesium minerals, where its crustal concentration is about 18 ppm, comparable to that of gallium and niobium. Commercially, the most important lithium mineral is spodumene, which occurs in large deposits worldwide.[11]: 69 

Rubidium is approximately as abundant as zinc and more abundant than copper. It occurs naturally in the minerals leucite, pollucite, carnallite, zinnwaldite, and lepidolite,[56] although none of these contain only rubidium and no other alkali metals.[11]: 70  Caesium is more abundant than some commonly known elements, such as antimony, cadmium, tin, and tungsten, but is much less abundant than rubidium.[57]

Francium-223, the only naturally occurring isotope of francium,[58][59] is the product of the alpha decay of actinium-227 and can be found in trace amounts in uranium minerals.[60] In a given sample of uranium, there is estimated to be only one francium atom for every 1018 uranium atoms.[61][62] It has been calculated that there are at most 30 grams of francium in the earth's crust at any time, due to its extremely short half-life of 22 minutes.[63][64]

Properties edit

Physical and chemical edit

The physical and chemical properties of the alkali metals can be readily explained by their having an ns1 valence electron configuration, which results in weak metallic bonding. Hence, all the alkali metals are soft and have low densities,[5] melting[5] and boiling points,[5] as well as heats of sublimation, vaporisation, and dissociation.[11]: 74  They all crystallise in the body-centered cubic crystal structure,[11]: 73  and have distinctive flame colours because their outer s electron is very easily excited.[11]: 75  Indeed, these flame test colours are the most common way of identifying them since all their salts with common ions are soluble.[11]: 75  The ns1 configuration also results in the alkali metals having very large atomic and ionic radii, as well as very high thermal and electrical conductivity.[11]: 75  Their chemistry is dominated by the loss of their lone valence electron in the outermost s-orbital to form the +1 oxidation state, due to the ease of ionising this electron and the very high second ionisation energy.[11]: 76  Most of the chemistry has been observed only for the first five members of the group. The chemistry of francium is not well established due to its extreme radioactivity;[5] thus, the presentation of its properties here is limited. What little is known about francium shows that it is very close in behaviour to caesium, as expected. The physical properties of francium are even sketchier because the bulk element has never been observed; hence any data that may be found in the literature are certainly speculative extrapolations.[65]

Properties of the alkali metals[11]: 75 [66]
Name Lithium Sodium Potassium Rubidium Caesium Francium
Atomic number 3 11 19 37 55 87
Standard atomic weight[note 7][58][59] 6.94(1)[note 8] 22.98976928(2) 39.0983(1) 85.4678(3) 132.9054519(2) [223][note 9]
Electron configuration [He] 2s1 [Ne] 3s1 [Ar] 4s1 [Kr] 5s1 [Xe] 6s1 [Rn] 7s1
Melting point (°C) 180.54 97.72 63.38 39.31 28.44 ?
Boiling point (°C) 1342 883 759 688 671 ?
Density (g·cm−3) 0.534 0.968 0.89 1.532 1.93 ?
Heat of fusion (kJ·mol−1) 3.00 2.60 2.321 2.19 2.09 ?
Heat of vaporisation (kJ·mol−1) 136 97.42 79.1 69 66.1 ?
Heat of formation of monatomic gas (kJ·mol−1) 162 108 89.6 82.0 78.2 ?
Electrical resistivity at 25 °C (nΩ·cm) 94.7 48.8 73.9 131 208 ?
Atomic radius (pm) 152 186 227 248 265 ?
Ionic radius of hexacoordinate M+ ion (pm) 76 102 138 152 167 ?
First ionisation energy (kJ·mol−1) 520.2 495.8 418.8 403.0 375.7 392.8[68]
Electron affinity (kJ·mol−1) 59.62 52.87 48.38 46.89 45.51 ?
Enthalpy of dissociation of M2 (kJ·mol−1) 106.5 73.6 57.3 45.6 44.77 ?
Pauling electronegativity 0.98 0.93 0.82 0.82 0.79 ?[note 10]
Allen electronegativity 0.91 0.87 0.73 0.71 0.66 0.67
Standard electrode potential (E°(M+→M0); V)[71] −3.04 −2.71 −2.93 −2.98 −3.03 ?
Flame test colour
Principal emission/absorption wavelength (nm)
Crimson
670.8
Yellow
589.2
Violet
766.5
Red-violet
780.0
Blue
455.5
?

The alkali metals are more similar to each other than the elements in any other group are to each other.[5] Indeed, the similarity is so great that it is quite difficult to separate potassium, rubidium, and caesium, due to their similar ionic radii; lithium and sodium are more distinct. For instance, when moving down the table, all known alkali metals show increasing atomic radius,[72] decreasing electronegativity,[72] increasing reactivity,[5] and decreasing melting and boiling points[72] as well as heats of fusion and vaporisation.[11]: 75  In general, their densities increase when moving down the table, with the exception that potassium is less dense than sodium.[72] One of the very few properties of the alkali metals that does not display a very smooth trend is their reduction potentials: lithium's value is anomalous, being more negative than the others.[11]: 75  This is because the Li+ ion has a very high hydration energy in the gas phase: though the lithium ion disrupts the structure of water significantly, causing a higher change in entropy, this high hydration energy is enough to make the reduction potentials indicate it as being the most electropositive alkali metal, despite the difficulty of ionising it in the gas phase.[11]: 75 

The stable alkali metals are all silver-coloured metals except for caesium, which has a pale golden tint:[73] it is one of only three metals that are clearly coloured (the other two being copper and gold).[11]: 74  Additionally, the heavy alkaline earth metals calcium, strontium, and barium, as well as the divalent lanthanides europium and ytterbium, are pale yellow, though the colour is much less prominent than it is for caesium.[11]: 74  Their lustre tarnishes rapidly in air due to oxidation.[5]

Potassium reacts violently with water at room temperature
Caesium reacts explosively with water even at low temperatures

All the alkali metals are highly reactive and are never found in elemental forms in nature.[21] Because of this, they are usually stored in mineral oil or kerosene (paraffin oil).[74] They react aggressively with the halogens to form the alkali metal halides, which are white ionic crystalline compounds that are all soluble in water except lithium fluoride (LiF).[5] The alkali metals also react with water to form strongly alkaline hydroxides and thus should be handled with great care. The heavier alkali metals react more vigorously than the lighter ones; for example, when dropped into water, caesium produces a larger explosion than potassium if the same number of moles of each metal is used.[5][75][57] The alkali metals have the lowest first ionisation energies in their respective periods of the periodic table[65] because of their low effective nuclear charge[5] and the ability to attain a noble gas configuration by losing just one electron.[5] Not only do the alkali metals react with water, but also with proton donors like alcohols and phenols, gaseous ammonia, and alkynes, the last demonstrating the phenomenal degree of their reactivity. Their great power as reducing agents makes them very useful in liberating other metals from their oxides or halides.[11]: 76 

The second ionisation energy of all of the alkali metals is very high[5][65] as it is in a full shell that is also closer to the nucleus;[5] thus, they almost always lose a single electron, forming cations.[11]: 28  The alkalides are an exception: they are unstable compounds which contain alkali metals in a −1 oxidation state, which is very unusual as before the discovery of the alkalides, the alkali metals were not expected to be able to form anions and were thought to be able to appear in salts only as cations. The alkalide anions have filled s-subshells, which gives them enough stability to exist. All the stable alkali metals except lithium are known to be able to form alkalides,[76][77][78] and the alkalides have much theoretical interest due to their unusual stoichiometry and low ionisation potentials. Alkalides are chemically similar to the electrides, which are salts with trapped electrons acting as anions.[79] A particularly striking example of an alkalide is "inverse sodium hydride", H+Na (both ions being complexed), as opposed to the usual sodium hydride, Na+H:[80] it is unstable in isolation, due to its high energy resulting from the displacement of two electrons from hydrogen to sodium, although several derivatives are predicted to be metastable or stable.[80][81]

In aqueous solution, the alkali metal ions form aqua ions of the formula [M(H2O)n]+, where n is the solvation number. Their coordination numbers and shapes agree well with those expected from their ionic radii. In aqueous solution the water molecules directly attached to the metal ion are said to belong to the first coordination sphere, also known as the first, or primary, solvation shell. The bond between a water molecule and the metal ion is a dative covalent bond, with the oxygen atom donating both electrons to the bond. Each coordinated water molecule may be attached by hydrogen bonds to other water molecules. The latter are said to reside in the second coordination sphere. However, for the alkali metal cations, the second coordination sphere is not well-defined as the +1 charge on the cation is not high enough to polarise the water molecules in the primary solvation shell enough for them to form strong hydrogen bonds with those in the second coordination sphere, producing a more stable entity.[82][83]: 25  The solvation number for Li+ has been experimentally determined to be 4, forming the tetrahedral [Li(H2O)4]+: while solvation numbers of 3 to 6 have been found for lithium aqua ions, solvation numbers less than 4 may be the result of the formation of contact ion pairs, and the higher solvation numbers may be interpreted in terms of water molecules that approach [Li(H2O)4]+ through a face of the tetrahedron, though molecular dynamic simulations may indicate the existence of an octahedral hexaaqua ion. There are also probably six water molecules in the primary solvation sphere of the sodium ion, forming the octahedral [Na(H2O)6]+ ion.[66][83]: 126–127  While it was previously thought that the heavier alkali metals also formed octahedral hexaaqua ions, it has since been found that potassium and rubidium probably form the [K(H2O)8]+ and [Rb(H2O)8]+ ions, which have the square antiprismatic structure, and that caesium forms the 12-coordinate [Cs(H2O)12]+ ion.[84]

Lithium edit

The chemistry of lithium shows several differences from that of the rest of the group as the small Li+ cation polarises anions and gives its compounds a more covalent character.[5] Lithium and magnesium have a diagonal relationship due to their similar atomic radii,[5] so that they show some similarities. For example, lithium forms a stable nitride, a property common among all the alkaline earth metals (magnesium's group) but unique among the alkali metals.[85] In addition, among their respective groups, only lithium and magnesium form organometallic compounds with significant covalent character (e.g. LiMe and MgMe2).[86]

Lithium fluoride is the only alkali metal halide that is poorly soluble in water,[5] and lithium hydroxide is the only alkali metal hydroxide that is not deliquescent.[5] Conversely, lithium perchlorate and other lithium salts with large anions that cannot be polarised are much more stable than the analogous compounds of the other alkali metals, probably because Li+ has a high solvation energy.[11]: 76  This effect also means that most simple lithium salts are commonly encountered in hydrated form, because the anhydrous forms are extremely hygroscopic: this allows salts like lithium chloride and lithium bromide to be used in dehumidifiers and air-conditioners.[11]: 76 

Francium edit

Francium is also predicted to show some differences due to its high atomic weight, causing its electrons to travel at considerable fractions of the speed of light and thus making relativistic effects more prominent. In contrast to the trend of decreasing electronegativities and ionisation energies of the alkali metals, francium's electronegativity and ionisation energy are predicted to be higher than caesium's due to the relativistic stabilisation of the 7s electrons; also, its atomic radius is expected to be abnormally low. Thus, contrary to expectation, caesium is the most reactive of the alkali metals, not francium.[68][37]: 1729 [87] All known physical properties of francium also deviate from the clear trends going from lithium to caesium, such as the first ionisation energy, electron affinity, and anion polarisability, though due to the paucity of known data about francium many sources give extrapolated values, ignoring that relativistic effects make the trend from lithium to caesium become inapplicable at francium.[87] Some of the few properties of francium that have been predicted taking relativity into account are the electron affinity (47.2 kJ/mol)[88] and the enthalpy of dissociation of the Fr2 molecule (42.1 kJ/mol).[89] The CsFr molecule is polarised as Cs+Fr, showing that the 7s subshell of francium is much more strongly affected by relativistic effects than the 6s subshell of caesium.[87] Additionally, francium superoxide (FrO2) is expected to have significant covalent character, unlike the other alkali metal superoxides, because of bonding contributions from the 6p electrons of francium.[87]

Nuclear edit

Primordial isotopes of the alkali metals
Z
Alkali metal
Stable
Decays
unstable: italics
odd–odd isotopes coloured pink
3 lithium 2 7
Li
6
Li
 
11 sodium 1 23
Na
   
19 potassium 2 1 39
K
41
K
40
K
37 rubidium 1 1 85
Rb
87
Rb
 
55 caesium 1 133
Cs
   
87 francium No primordial isotopes
(223
Fr
is a radiogenic nuclide)
Radioactive: 40K, t1/2 1.25 × 109 years; 87Rb, t1/2 4.9 × 1010 years; 223Fr, t1/2 22.0 min.

All the alkali metals have odd atomic numbers; hence, their isotopes must be either odd–odd (both proton and neutron number are odd) or odd–even (proton number is odd, but neutron number is even). Odd–odd nuclei have even mass numbers, whereas odd–even nuclei have odd mass numbers. Odd–odd primordial nuclides are rare because most odd–odd nuclei are highly unstable with respect to beta decay, because the decay products are even–even, and are therefore more strongly bound, due to nuclear pairing effects.[90]

Due to the great rarity of odd–odd nuclei, almost all the primordial isotopes of the alkali metals are odd–even (the exceptions being the light stable isotope lithium-6 and the long-lived radioisotope potassium-40). For a given odd mass number, there can be only a single beta-stable nuclide, since there is not a difference in binding energy between even–odd and odd–even comparable to that between even–even and odd–odd, leaving other nuclides of the same mass number (isobars) free to beta decay toward the lowest-mass nuclide. An effect of the instability of an odd number of either type of nucleons is that odd-numbered elements, such as the alkali metals, tend to have fewer stable isotopes than even-numbered elements. Of the 26 monoisotopic elements that have only a single stable isotope, all but one have an odd atomic number and all but one also have an even number of neutrons. Beryllium is the single exception to both rules, due to its low atomic number.[90]

All of the alkali metals except lithium and caesium have at least one naturally occurring radioisotope: sodium-22 and sodium-24 are trace radioisotopes produced cosmogenically,[91] potassium-40 and rubidium-87 have very long half-lives and thus occur naturally,[92] and all isotopes of francium are radioactive.[92] Caesium was also thought to be radioactive in the early 20th century,[93][94] although it has no naturally occurring radioisotopes.[92] (Francium had not been discovered yet at that time.) The natural long-lived radioisotope of potassium, potassium-40, makes up about 0.012% of natural potassium,[95] and thus natural potassium is weakly radioactive. This natural radioactivity became a basis for a mistaken claim of the discovery for element 87 (the next alkali metal after caesium) in 1925.[31][32] Natural rubidium is similarly slightly radioactive, with 27.83% being the long-lived radioisotope rubidium-87.[11]: 74 

Caesium-137, with a half-life of 30.17 years, is one of the two principal medium-lived fission products, along with strontium-90, which are responsible for most of the radioactivity of spent nuclear fuel after several years of cooling, up to several hundred years after use. It constitutes most of the radioactivity still left from the Chernobyl accident. Caesium-137 undergoes high-energy beta decay and eventually becomes stable barium-137. It is a strong emitter of gamma radiation. Caesium-137 has a very low rate of neutron capture and cannot be feasibly disposed of in this way, but must be allowed to decay.[96] Caesium-137 has been used as a tracer in hydrologic studies, analogous to the use of tritium.[97] Small amounts of caesium-134 and caesium-137 were released into the environment during nearly all nuclear weapon tests and some nuclear accidents, most notably the Goiânia accident and the Chernobyl disaster. As of 2005, caesium-137 is the principal source of radiation in the zone of alienation around the Chernobyl nuclear power plant.[98] Its chemical properties as one of the alkali metals make it one of the most problematic of the short-to-medium-lifetime fission products because it easily moves and spreads in nature due to the high water solubility of its salts, and is taken up by the body, which mistakes it for its essential congeners sodium and potassium.[99]: 114 

Periodic trends edit

The alkali metals are more similar to each other than the elements in any other group are to each other.[5] For instance, when moving down the table, all known alkali metals show increasing atomic radius,[72] decreasing electronegativity,[72] increasing reactivity,[5] and decreasing melting and boiling points[72] as well as heats of fusion and vaporisation.[11]: 75  In general, their densities increase when moving down the table, with the exception that potassium is less dense than sodium.[72]

Atomic and ionic radii edit

 
Effective nuclear charge on an atomic electron

The atomic radii of the alkali metals increase going down the group.[72] Because of the shielding effect, when an atom has more than one electron shell, each electron feels electric repulsion from the other electrons as well as electric attraction from the nucleus.[100] In the alkali metals, the outermost electron only feels a net charge of +1, as some of the nuclear charge (which is equal to the atomic number) is cancelled by the inner electrons; the number of inner electrons of an alkali metal is always one less than the nuclear charge. Therefore, the only factor which affects the atomic radius of the alkali metals is the number of electron shells. Since this number increases down the group, the atomic radius must also increase down the group.[72]

The ionic radii of the alkali metals are much smaller than their atomic radii. This is because the outermost electron of the alkali metals is in a different electron shell than the inner electrons, and thus when it is removed the resulting atom has one fewer electron shell and is smaller. Additionally, the effective nuclear charge has increased, and thus the electrons are attracted more strongly towards the nucleus and the ionic radius decreases.[5]

First ionisation energy edit

 
Periodic trend for ionisation energy: each period begins at a minimum for the alkali metals, and ends at a maximum for the noble gases. Predicted values are used for elements beyond 104.

The first ionisation energy of an element or molecule is the energy required to move the most loosely held electron from one mole of gaseous atoms of the element or molecules to form one mole of gaseous ions with electric charge +1. The factors affecting the first ionisation energy are the nuclear charge, the amount of shielding by the inner electrons and the distance from the most loosely held electron from the nucleus, which is always an outer electron in main group elements. The first two factors change the effective nuclear charge the most loosely held electron feels. Since the outermost electron of alkali metals always feels the same effective nuclear charge (+1), the only factor which affects the first ionisation energy is the distance from the outermost electron to the nucleus. Since this distance increases down the group, the outermost electron feels less attraction from the nucleus and thus the first ionisation energy decreases.[72] This trend is broken in francium due to the relativistic stabilisation and contraction of the 7s orbital, bringing francium's valence electron closer to the nucleus than would be expected from non-relativistic calculations. This makes francium's outermost electron feel more attraction from the nucleus, increasing its first ionisation energy slightly beyond that of caesium.[37]: 1729 

The second ionisation energy of the alkali metals is much higher than the first as the second-most loosely held electron is part of a fully filled electron shell and is thus difficult to remove.[5]

Reactivity edit

The reactivities of the alkali metals increase going down the group. This is the result of a combination of two factors: the first ionisation energies and atomisation energies of the alkali metals. Because the first ionisation energy of the alkali metals decreases down the group, it is easier for the outermost electron to be removed from the atom and participate in chemical reactions, thus increasing reactivity down the group. The atomisation energy measures the strength of the metallic bond of an element, which falls down the group as the atoms increase in radius and thus the metallic bond must increase in length, making the delocalised electrons further away from the attraction of the nuclei of the heavier alkali metals. Adding the atomisation and first ionisation energies gives a quantity closely related to (but not equal to) the activation energy of the reaction of an alkali metal with another substance. This quantity decreases going down the group, and so does the activation energy; thus, chemical reactions can occur faster and the reactivity increases down the group.[101]

Electronegativity edit

 
The variation of Pauling electronegativity (y-axis) as one descends the main groups of the periodic table from the second to the sixth period

Electronegativity is a chemical property that describes the tendency of an atom or a functional group to attract electrons (or electron density) towards itself.[102] If the bond between sodium and chlorine in sodium chloride were covalent, the pair of shared electrons would be attracted to the chlorine because the effective nuclear charge on the outer electrons is +7 in chlorine but is only +1 in sodium. The electron pair is attracted so close to the chlorine atom that they are practically transferred to the chlorine atom (an ionic bond). However, if the sodium atom was replaced by a lithium atom, the electrons will not be attracted as close to the chlorine atom as before because the lithium atom is smaller, making the electron pair more strongly attracted to the closer effective nuclear charge from lithium. Hence, the larger alkali metal atoms (further down the group) will be less electronegative as the bonding pair is less strongly attracted towards them. As mentioned previously, francium is expected to be an exception.[72]

Because of the higher electronegativity of lithium, some of its compounds have a more covalent character. For example, lithium iodide (LiI) will dissolve in organic solvents, a property of most covalent compounds.[72] Lithium fluoride (LiF) is the only alkali halide that is not soluble in water,[5] and lithium hydroxide (LiOH) is the only alkali metal hydroxide that is not deliquescent.[5]

Melting and boiling points edit

The melting point of a substance is the point where it changes state from solid to liquid while the boiling point of a substance (in liquid state) is the point where the vapour pressure of the liquid equals the environmental pressure surrounding the liquid[103][104] and all the liquid changes state to gas. As a metal is heated to its melting point, the metallic bonds keeping the atoms in place weaken so that the atoms can move around, and the metallic bonds eventually break completely at the metal's boiling point.[72][105] Therefore, the falling melting and boiling points of the alkali metals indicate that the strength of the metallic bonds of the alkali metals decreases down the group.[72] This is because metal atoms are held together by the electromagnetic attraction from the positive ions to the delocalised electrons.[72][105] As the atoms increase in size going down the group (because their atomic radius increases), the nuclei of the ions move further away from the delocalised electrons and hence the metallic bond becomes weaker so that the metal can more easily melt and boil, thus lowering the melting and boiling points.[72] The increased nuclear charge is not a relevant factor due to the shielding effect.[72]

Density edit

The alkali metals all have the same crystal structure (body-centred cubic)[11] and thus the only relevant factors are the number of atoms that can fit into a certain volume and the mass of one of the atoms, since density is defined as mass per unit volume. The first factor depends on the volume of the atom and thus the atomic radius, which increases going down the group; thus, the volume of an alkali metal atom increases going down the group. The mass of an alkali metal atom also increases going down the group. Thus, the trend for the densities of the alkali metals depends on their atomic weights and atomic radii; if figures for these two factors are known, the ratios between the densities of the alkali metals can then be calculated. The resultant trend is that the densities of the alkali metals increase down the table, with an exception at potassium. Due to having the lowest atomic weight and the largest atomic radius of all the elements in their periods, the alkali metals are the least dense metals in the periodic table.[72] Lithium, sodium, and potassium are the only three metals in the periodic table that are less dense than water:[5] in fact, lithium is the least dense known solid at room temperature.[11]: 75 

Compounds edit

The alkali metals form complete series of compounds with all usually encountered anions, which well illustrate group trends. These compounds can be described as involving the alkali metals losing electrons to acceptor species and forming monopositive ions.[11]: 79  This description is most accurate for alkali halides and becomes less and less accurate as cationic and anionic charge increase, and as the anion becomes larger and more polarisable. For instance, ionic bonding gives way to metallic bonding along the series NaCl, Na2O, Na2S, Na3P, Na3As, Na3Sb, Na3Bi, Na.[11]: 81 

Hydroxides edit

External videos
  Reactions of the alkali metals with water, conducted by The Open University
 
A reaction of 3 pounds (≈ 1.4 kg) of sodium with water

All the alkali metals react vigorously or explosively with cold water, producing an aqueous solution of a strongly basic alkali metal hydroxide and releasing hydrogen gas.[101] This reaction becomes more vigorous going down the group: lithium reacts steadily with effervescence, but sodium and potassium can ignite, and rubidium and caesium sink in water and generate hydrogen gas so rapidly that shock waves form in the water that may shatter glass containers.[5] When an alkali metal is dropped into water, it produces an explosion, of which there are two separate stages. The metal reacts with the water first, breaking the hydrogen bonds in the water and producing hydrogen gas; this takes place faster for the more reactive heavier alkali metals. Second, the heat generated by the first part of the reaction often ignites the hydrogen gas, causing it to burn explosively into the surrounding air. This secondary hydrogen gas explosion produces the visible flame above the bowl of water, lake or other body of water, not the initial reaction of the metal with water (which tends to happen mostly under water).[75] The alkali metal hydroxides are the most basic known hydroxides.[11]: 87 

Recent research has suggested that the explosive behavior of alkali metals in water is driven by a Coulomb explosion rather than solely by rapid generation of hydrogen itself.[106] All alkali metals melt as a part of the reaction with water. Water molecules ionise the bare metallic surface of the liquid metal, leaving a positively charged metal surface and negatively charged water ions. The attraction between the charged metal and water ions will rapidly increase the surface area, causing an exponential increase of ionisation. When the repulsive forces within the liquid metal surface exceeds the forces of the surface tension, it vigorously explodes.[106]

The hydroxides themselves are the most basic hydroxides known, reacting with acids to give salts and with alcohols to give oligomeric alkoxides. They easily react with carbon dioxide to form carbonates or bicarbonates, or with hydrogen sulfide to form sulfides or bisulfides, and may be used to separate thiols from petroleum. They react with amphoteric oxides: for example, the oxides of aluminium, zinc, tin, and lead react with the alkali metal hydroxides to give aluminates, zincates, stannates, and plumbates. Silicon dioxide is acidic, and thus the alkali metal hydroxides can also attack silicate glass.[11]: 87 

Intermetallic compounds edit

 
Liquid NaK alloy at room temperature

The alkali metals form many intermetallic compounds with each other and the elements from groups 2 to 13 in the periodic table of varying stoichiometries,[11]: 81  such as the sodium amalgams with mercury, including Na5Hg8 and Na3Hg.[107] Some of these have ionic characteristics: taking the alloys with gold, the most electronegative of metals, as an example, NaAu and KAu are metallic, but RbAu and CsAu are semiconductors.[11]: 81  NaK is an alloy of sodium and potassium that is very useful because it is liquid at room temperature, although precautions must be taken due to its extreme reactivity towards water and air. The eutectic mixture melts at −12.6 °C.[108] An alloy of 41% caesium, 47% sodium, and 12% potassium has the lowest known melting point of any metal or alloy, −78 °C.[23]

Compounds with the group 13 elements edit

The intermetallic compounds of the alkali metals with the heavier group 13 elements (aluminium, gallium, indium, and thallium), such as NaTl, are poor conductors or semiconductors, unlike the normal alloys with the preceding elements, implying that the alkali metal involved has lost an electron to the Zintl anions involved.[109] Nevertheless, while the elements in group 14 and beyond tend to form discrete anionic clusters, group 13 elements tend to form polymeric ions with the alkali metal cations located between the giant ionic lattice. For example, NaTl consists of a polymeric anion (—Tl—)n with a covalent diamond cubic structure with Na+ ions located between the anionic lattice. The larger alkali metals cannot fit similarly into an anionic lattice and tend to force the heavier group 13 elements to form anionic clusters.[110]

Boron is a special case, being the only nonmetal in group 13. The alkali metal borides tend to be boron-rich, involving appreciable boron–boron bonding involving deltahedral structures,[11]: 147–8  and are thermally unstable due to the alkali metals having a very high vapour pressure at elevated temperatures. This makes direct synthesis problematic because the alkali metals do not react with boron below 700 °C, and thus this must be accomplished in sealed containers with the alkali metal in excess. Furthermore, exceptionally in this group, reactivity with boron decreases down the group: lithium reacts completely at 700 °C, but sodium at 900 °C and potassium not until 1200 °C, and the reaction is instantaneous for lithium but takes hours for potassium. Rubidium and caesium borides have not even been characterised. Various phases are known, such as LiB10, NaB6, NaB15, and KB6.[111][112] Under high pressure the boron–boron bonding in the lithium borides changes from following Wade's rules to forming Zintl anions like the rest of group 13.[113]

Compounds with the group 14 elements edit

 
 
Side (left) and top (right) views of the graphite intercalation compound KC8

Lithium and sodium react with carbon to form acetylides, Li2C2 and Na2C2, which can also be obtained by reaction of the metal with acetylene. Potassium, rubidium, and caesium react with graphite; their atoms are intercalated between the hexagonal graphite layers, forming graphite intercalation compounds of formulae MC60 (dark grey, almost black), MC48 (dark grey, almost black), MC36 (blue), MC24 (steel blue), and MC8 (bronze) (M = K, Rb, or Cs). These compounds are over 200 times more electrically conductive than pure graphite, suggesting that the valence electron of the alkali metal is transferred to the graphite layers (e.g. M+C8).[66] Upon heating of KC8, the elimination of potassium atoms results in the conversion in sequence to KC24, KC36, KC48 and finally KC60. KC8 is a very strong reducing agent and is pyrophoric and explodes on contact with water.[114][115] While the larger alkali metals (K, Rb, and Cs) initially form MC8, the smaller ones initially form MC6, and indeed they require reaction of the metals with graphite at high temperatures around 500 °C to form.[116] Apart from this, the alkali metals are such strong reducing agents that they can even reduce buckminsterfullerene to produce solid fullerides MnC60; sodium, potassium, rubidium, and caesium can form fullerides where n = 2, 3, 4, or 6, and rubidium and caesium additionally can achieve n = 1.[11]: 285 

When the alkali metals react with the heavier elements in the carbon group (silicon, germanium, tin, and lead), ionic substances with cage-like structures are formed, such as the silicides M4Si4 (M = K, Rb, or Cs), which contains M+ and tetrahedral Si4−4 ions.[66] The chemistry of alkali metal germanides, involving the germanide ion Ge4− and other cluster (Zintl) ions such as Ge2−4, Ge4−9, Ge2−9, and [(Ge9)2]6−, is largely analogous to that of the corresponding silicides.[11]: 393  Alkali metal stannides are mostly ionic, sometimes with the stannide ion (Sn4−),[110] and sometimes with more complex Zintl ions such as Sn4−9, which appears in tetrapotassium nonastannide (K4Sn9).[117] The monatomic plumbide ion (Pb4−) is unknown, and indeed its formation is predicted to be energetically unfavourable; alkali metal plumbides have complex Zintl ions, such as Pb4−9. These alkali metal germanides, stannides, and plumbides may be produced by reducing germanium, tin, and lead with sodium metal in liquid ammonia.[11]: 394 

Nitrides and pnictides edit

 
Unit cell ball-and-stick model of lithium nitride.[118] On the basis of size a tetrahedral structure would be expected, but that would be geometrically impossible: thus lithium nitride takes on this unique crystal structure.[11]: 76 

Lithium, the lightest of the alkali metals, is the only alkali metal which reacts with nitrogen at standard conditions, and its nitride is the only stable alkali metal nitride. Nitrogen is an unreactive gas because breaking the strong triple bond in the dinitrogen molecule (N2) requires a lot of energy. The formation of an alkali metal nitride would consume the ionisation energy of the alkali metal (forming M+ ions), the energy required to break the triple bond in N2 and the formation of N3− ions, and all the energy released from the formation of an alkali metal nitride is from the lattice energy of the alkali metal nitride. The lattice energy is maximised with small, highly charged ions; the alkali metals do not form highly charged ions, only forming ions with a charge of +1, so only lithium, the smallest alkali metal, can release enough lattice energy to make the reaction with nitrogen exothermic, forming lithium nitride. The reactions of the other alkali metals with nitrogen would not release enough lattice energy and would thus be endothermic, so they do not form nitrides at standard conditions.[85] Sodium nitride (Na3N) and potassium nitride (K3N), while existing, are extremely unstable, being prone to decomposing back into their constituent elements, and cannot be produced by reacting the elements with each other at standard conditions.[119][120] Steric hindrance forbids the existence of rubidium or caesium nitride.[11]: 417  However, sodium and potassium form colourless azide salts involving the linear N3 anion; due to the large size of the alkali metal cations, they are thermally stable enough to be able to melt before decomposing.[11]: 417 

All the alkali metals react readily with phosphorus and arsenic to form phosphides and arsenides with the formula M3Pn (where M represents an alkali metal and Pn represents a pnictogen – phosphorus, arsenic, antimony, or bismuth). This is due to the greater size of the P3− and As3− ions, so that less lattice energy needs to be released for the salts to form.[66] These are not the only phosphides and arsenides of the alkali metals: for example, potassium has nine different known phosphides, with formulae K3P, K4P3, K5P4, KP, K4P6, K3P7, K3P11, KP10.3, and KP15.[121] While most metals form arsenides, only the alkali and alkaline earth metals form mostly ionic arsenides. The structure of Na3As is complex with unusually short Na–Na distances of 328–330 pm which are shorter than in sodium metal, and this indicates that even with these electropositive metals the bonding cannot be straightforwardly ionic.[11] Other alkali metal arsenides not conforming to the formula M3As are known, such as LiAs, which has a metallic lustre and electrical conductivity indicating the presence of some metallic bonding.[11] The antimonides are unstable and reactive as the Sb3− ion is a strong reducing agent; reaction of them with acids form the toxic and unstable gas stibine (SbH3).[122] Indeed, they have some metallic properties, and the alkali metal antimonides of stoichiometry MSb involve antimony atoms bonded in a spiral Zintl structure.[123] Bismuthides are not even wholly ionic; they are intermetallic compounds containing partially metallic and partially ionic bonds.[124]

Oxides and chalcogenides edit

 
Rb9O2 cluster, composed of two regular octahedra connected to each other by one face
 
Cs11O3 cluster, composed of three regular octahedra where each octahedron is connected to both of the others by one face each. All three octahedra have one edge in common.

All the alkali metals react vigorously with oxygen at standard conditions. They form various types of oxides, such as simple oxides (containing the O2− ion), peroxides (containing the O2−2 ion, where there is a single bond between the two oxygen atoms), superoxides (containing the O2 ion), and many others. Lithium burns in air to form lithium oxide, but sodium reacts with oxygen to form a mixture of sodium oxide and sodium peroxide. Potassium forms a mixture of potassium peroxide and potassium superoxide, while rubidium and caesium form the superoxide exclusively. Their reactivity increases going down the group: while lithium, sodium and potassium merely burn in air, rubidium and caesium are pyrophoric (spontaneously catch fire in air).[85]

The smaller alkali metals tend to polarise the larger anions (the peroxide and superoxide) due to their small size. This attracts the electrons in the more complex anions towards one of its constituent oxygen atoms, forming an oxide ion and an oxygen atom. This causes lithium to form the oxide exclusively on reaction with oxygen at room temperature. This effect becomes drastically weaker for the larger sodium and potassium, allowing them to form the less stable peroxides. Rubidium and caesium, at the bottom of the group, are so large that even the least stable superoxides can form. Because the superoxide releases the most energy when formed, the superoxide is preferentially formed for the larger alkali metals where the more complex anions are not polarised. The oxides and peroxides for these alkali metals do exist, but do not form upon direct reaction of the metal with oxygen at standard conditions.[85] In addition, the small size of the Li+ and O2− ions contributes to their forming a stable ionic lattice structure. Under controlled conditions, however, all the alkali metals, with the exception of francium, are known to form their oxides, peroxides, and superoxides. The alkali metal peroxides and superoxides are powerful oxidising agents. Sodium peroxide and potassium superoxide react with carbon dioxide to form the alkali metal carbonate and oxygen gas, which allows them to be used in submarine air purifiers; the presence of water vapour, naturally present in breath, makes the removal of carbon dioxide by potassium superoxide even more efficient.[66][125] All the stable alkali metals except lithium can form red ozonides (MO3) through low-temperature reaction of the powdered anhydrous hydroxide with ozone: the ozonides may be then extracted using liquid ammonia. They slowly decompose at standard conditions to the superoxides and oxygen, and hydrolyse immediately to the hydroxides when in contact with water.[11]: 85  Potassium, rubidium, and caesium also form sesquioxides M2O3, which may be better considered peroxide disuperoxides, [(M+)4(O2−2)(O2)2].[11]: 85 

Rubidium and caesium can form a great variety of suboxides with the metals in formal oxidation states below +1.[11]: 85  Rubidium can form Rb6O and Rb9O2 (copper-coloured) upon oxidation in air, while caesium forms an immense variety of oxides, such as the ozonide CsO3[126][127] and several brightly coloured suboxides,[128] such as Cs7O (bronze), Cs4O (red-violet), Cs11O3 (violet), Cs3O (dark green),[129] CsO, Cs3O2,[130] as well as Cs7O2.[131][132] The last of these may be heated under vacuum to generate Cs2O.[57]

The alkali metals can also react analogously with the heavier chalcogens (sulfur, selenium, tellurium, and polonium), and all the alkali metal chalcogenides are known (with the exception of francium's). Reaction with an excess of the chalcogen can similarly result in lower chalcogenides, with chalcogen ions containing chains of the chalcogen atoms in question. For example, sodium can react with sulfur to form the sulfide (Na2S) and various polysulfides with the formula Na2Sx (x from 2 to 6), containing the S2−
x
ions.[66] Due to the basicity of the Se2− and Te2− ions, the alkali metal selenides and tellurides are alkaline in solution; when reacted directly with selenium and tellurium, alkali metal polyselenides and polytellurides are formed along with the selenides and tellurides with the Se2−
x
and Te2−
x
ions.[133] They may be obtained directly from the elements in liquid ammonia or when air is not present, and are colourless, water-soluble compounds that air oxidises quickly back to selenium or tellurium.[11]: 766  The alkali metal polonides are all ionic compounds containing the Po2− ion; they are very chemically stable and can be produced by direct reaction of the elements at around 300–400 °C.[11]: 766 [134][135]

Halides, hydrides, and pseudohalides edit

The alkali metals are among the most electropositive elements on the periodic table and thus tend to bond ionically to the most electronegative elements on the periodic table, the halogens (fluorine, chlorine, bromine, iodine, and astatine), forming salts known as the alkali metal halides. The reaction is very vigorous and can sometimes result in explosions.[11]: 76  All twenty stable alkali metal halides are known; the unstable ones are not known, with the exception of sodium astatide, because of the great instability and rarity of astatine and francium. The most well-known of the twenty is certainly sodium chloride, otherwise known as common salt. All of the stable alkali metal halides have the formula MX where M is an alkali metal and X is a halogen. They are all white ionic crystalline solids that have high melting points.[5][85] All the alkali metal halides are soluble in water except for lithium fluoride (LiF), which is insoluble in water due to its very high lattice enthalpy. The high lattice enthalpy of lithium fluoride is due to the small sizes of the Li+ and F ions, causing the electrostatic interactions between them to be strong:[5] a similar effect occurs for magnesium fluoride, consistent with the diagonal relationship between lithium and magnesium.[11]: 76 

The alkali metals also react similarly with hydrogen to form ionic alkali metal hydrides, where the hydride anion acts as a pseudohalide: these are often used as reducing agents, producing hydrides, complex metal hydrides, or hydrogen gas.[11]: 83 [66] Other pseudohalides are also known, notably the cyanides. These are isostructural to the respective halides except for lithium cyanide, indicating that the cyanide ions may rotate freely.[11]: 322  Ternary alkali metal halide oxides, such as Na3ClO, K3BrO (yellow), Na4Br2O, Na4I2O, and K4Br2O, are also known.[11]: 83  The polyhalides are rather unstable, although those of rubidium and caesium are greatly stabilised by the feeble polarising power of these extremely large cations.[11]: 835 

Coordination complexes edit

 
18-crown-6 coordinating a potassium ion
 
Structure of 2.2.2-Cryptand encapsulating a potassium cation (purple). At crystalline state, obtained with an X-ray diffraction.[136]

Alkali metal cations do not usually form coordination complexes with simple Lewis bases due to their low charge of just +1 and their relatively large size; thus the Li+ ion forms most complexes and the heavier alkali metal ions form less and less (though exceptions occur for weak complexes).[11]: 90  Lithium in particular has a very rich coordination chemistry in which it exhibits coordination numbers from 1 to 12, although octahedral hexacoordination is its preferred mode.[11]: 90–1  In aqueous solution, the alkali metal ions exist as octahedral hexahydrate complexes [M(H2O)6]+, with the exception of the lithium ion, which due to its small size forms tetrahedral tetrahydrate complexes [Li(H2O)4]+; the alkali metals form these complexes because their ions are attracted by electrostatic forces of attraction to the polar water molecules. Because of this, anhydrous salts containing alkali metal cations are often used as desiccants.[66] Alkali metals also readily form complexes with crown ethers (e.g. 12-crown-4 for Li+, 15-crown-5 for Na+, 18-crown-6 for K+, and 21-crown-7 for Rb+) and cryptands due to electrostatic attraction.[66]

Ammonia solutions edit

The alkali metals dissolve slowly in liquid ammonia, forming ammoniacal solutions of solvated metal cation M+ and solvated electron e, which react to form hydrogen gas and the alkali metal amide (MNH2, where M represents an alkali metal): this was first noted by Humphry Davy in 1809 and rediscovered by W. Weyl in 1864. The process may be speeded up by a catalyst. Similar solutions are formed by the heavy divalent alkaline earth metals calcium, strontium, barium, as well as the divalent lanthanides, europium and ytterbium. The amide salt is quite insoluble and readily precipitates out of solution, leaving intensely coloured ammonia solutions of the alkali metals. In 1907, Charles A. Kraus identified the colour as being due to the presence of solvated electrons, which contribute to the high electrical conductivity of these solutions. At low concentrations (below 3 M), the solution is dark blue and has ten times the conductivity of aqueous sodium chloride; at higher concentrations (above 3 M), the solution is copper-coloured and has approximately the conductivity of liquid metals like mercury.[11][66][137] In addition to the alkali metal amide salt and solvated electrons, such ammonia solutions also contain the alkali metal cation (M+), the neutral alkali metal atom (M), diatomic alkali metal molecules (M2) and alkali metal anions (M). These are unstable and eventually become the more thermodynamically stable alkali metal amide and hydrogen gas. Solvated electrons are powerful reducing agents and are often used in chemical synthesis.[66]

Organometallic edit

Organolithium edit

 
Structure of the octahedral n-butyllithium hexamer, (C4H9Li)6.[138] The aggregates are held together by delocalised covalent bonds between lithium and the terminal carbon of the butyl chain.[139] There is no direct lithium–lithium bonding in any organolithium compound.[123]: 264 
 
Solid phenyllithium forms monoclinic crystals that can be described as consisting of dimeric Li2(C6H5)2 subunits. The lithium atoms and the ipso carbons of the phenyl rings form a planar four-membered ring. The plane of the phenyl groups is perpendicular to the plane of this Li2C2 ring. Additional strong intermolecular bonding occurs between these phenyllithium dimers and the π electrons of the phenyl groups in the adjacent dimers, resulting in an infinite polymeric ladder structure.[140]

Being the smallest alkali metal, lithium forms the widest variety of and most stable organometallic compounds, which are bonded covalently. Organolithium compounds are electrically non-conducting volatile solids or liquids that melt at low temperatures, and tend to form oligomers with the structure (RLi)x where R is the organic group. As the electropositive nature of lithium puts most of the charge density of the bond on the carbon atom, effectively creating a carbanion, organolithium compounds are extremely powerful bases and nucleophiles. For use as bases, butyllithiums are often used and are commercially available. An example of an organolithium compound is methyllithium ((CH3Li)x), which exists in tetrameric (x = 4, tetrahedral) and hexameric (x = 6, octahedral) forms.[66][141] Organolithium compounds, especially n-butyllithium, are useful reagents in organic synthesis, as might be expected given lithium's diagonal relationship with magnesium, which plays an important role in the Grignard reaction.[11]: 102  For example, alkyllithiums and aryllithiums may be used to synthesise aldehydes and ketones by reaction with metal carbonyls. The reaction with nickel tetracarbonyl, for example, proceeds through an unstable acyl nickel carbonyl complex which then undergoes electrophilic substitution to give the desired aldehyde (using H+ as the electrophile) or ketone (using an alkyl halide) product.[11]: 105 

 
 
 

Alkyllithiums and aryllithiums may also react with N,N-disubstituted amides to give aldehydes and ketones, and symmetrical ketones by reacting with carbon monoxide. They thermally decompose to eliminate a β-hydrogen, producing alkenes and lithium hydride: another route is the reaction of ethers with alkyl- and aryllithiums that act as strong bases.[11]: 105  In non-polar solvents, aryllithiums react as the carbanions they effectively are, turning carbon dioxide to aromatic carboxylic acids (ArCO2H) and aryl ketones to tertiary carbinols (Ar'2C(Ar)OH). Finally, they may be used to synthesise other organometallic compounds through metal-halogen exchange.[11]: 106 

Heavier alkali metals edit

Unlike the organolithium compounds, the organometallic compounds of the heavier alkali metals are predominantly ionic. The application of organosodium compounds in chemistry is limited in part due to competition from organolithium compounds, which are commercially available and exhibit more convenient reactivity. The principal organosodium compound of commercial importance is sodium cyclopentadienide. Sodium tetraphenylborate can also be classified as an organosodium compound since in the solid state sodium is bound to the aryl groups. Organometallic compounds of the higher alkali metals are even more reactive than organosodium compounds and of limited utility. A notable reagent is Schlosser's base, a mixture of n-butyllithium and potassium tert-butoxide. This reagent reacts with propene to form the compound allylpotassium (KCH2CHCH2). cis-2-Butene and trans-2-butene equilibrate when in contact with alkali metals. Whereas isomerisation is fast with lithium and sodium, it is slow with the heavier alkali metals. The heavier alkali metals also favour the sterically congested conformation.[142] Several crystal structures of organopotassium compounds have been reported, establishing that they, like the sodium compounds, are polymeric.[143] Organosodium, organopotassium, organorubidium and organocaesium compounds are all mostly ionic and are insoluble (or nearly so) in nonpolar solvents.[66]

Alkyl and aryl derivatives of sodium and potassium tend to react with air. They cause the cleavage of ethers, generating alkoxides. Unlike alkyllithium compounds, alkylsodiums and alkylpotassiums cannot be made by reacting the metals with alkyl halides because Wurtz coupling occurs:[123]: 265 

RM + R'X → R–R' + MX

As such, they have to be made by reacting alkylmercury compounds with sodium or potassium metal in inert hydrocarbon solvents. While methylsodium forms tetramers like methyllithium, methylpotassium is more ionic and has the nickel arsenide structure with discrete methyl anions and potassium cations.[123]: 265 

The alkali metals and their hydrides react with acidic hydrocarbons, for example cyclopentadienes and terminal alkynes, to give salts. Liquid ammonia, ether, or hydrocarbon solvents are used, the most common of which being tetrahydrofuran. The most important of these compounds is sodium cyclopentadienide, NaC5H5, an important precursor to many transition metal cyclopentadienyl derivatives.[123]: 265  Similarly, the alkali metals react with cyclooctatetraene in tetrahydrofuran to give alkali metal cyclooctatetraenides; for example, dipotassium cyclooctatetraenide (K2C8H8) is an important precursor to many metal cyclooctatetraenyl derivatives, such as uranocene.[123]: 266  The large and very weakly polarising alkali metal cations can stabilise large, aromatic, polarisable radical anions, such as the dark-green sodium naphthalenide, Na+[C10H8•], a strong reducing agent.[123]: 266 

Representative reactions of alkali metals edit

Reaction with oxygen edit

Upon reacting with oxygen, alkali metals form oxides, peroxides, superoxides and suboxides. However, the first three are more common. The table below[144] shows the types of compounds formed in reaction with oxygen. The compound in brackets represents the minor product of combustion.

Alkali metal Oxide Peroxide Superoxide
Li Li2O (Li2O2)
Na (Na2O) Na2O2
K KO2
Rb RbO2
Cs CsO2

The alkali metal peroxides are ionic compounds that are unstable in water. The peroxide anion is weakly bound to the cation, and it is hydrolysed, forming stronger covalent bonds.

Na2O2 + 2H2O → 2NaOH + H2O2

The other oxygen compounds are also unstable in water.

2KO2 + 2H2O → 2KOH + H2O2 + O2[145]
Li2O + H2O → 2LiOH

Reaction with sulfur edit

With sulfur, they form sulfides and polysulfides.[146]

2Na + 1/8S8 → Na2S + 1/8S8 → Na2S2...Na2S7

Because alkali metal sulfides are essentially salts of a weak acid and a strong base, they form basic solutions.

S2- + H2O → HS + HO
HS + H2O → H2S + HO

Reaction with nitrogen edit

Lithium is the only metal that combines directly with nitrogen at room temperature.

3Li + 1/2N2 → Li3N

Li3N can react with water to liberate ammonia.

Li3N + 3H2O → 3LiOH + NH3

Reaction with hydrogen edit

With hydrogen, alkali metals form saline hydrides that hydrolyse in water.

 
 

Reaction with carbon edit

Lithium is the only metal that reacts directly with carbon to give dilithium acetylide. Na and K can react with acetylene to give acetylides.[147]

 

 

 

Reaction with water edit

On reaction with water, they generate hydroxide ions and hydrogen gas. This reaction is vigorous and highly exothermic and the hydrogen resulted may ignite in air or even explode in the case of Rb and Cs.[144]

Na + H2O → NaOH + 1/2H2

Reaction with other salts edit

The alkali metals are very good reducing agents. They can reduce metal cations that are less electropositive. Titanium is produced industrially by the reduction of titanium tetrachloride with Na at 400 °C (van Arkel–de Boer process).

TiCl4 + 4Na → 4NaCl + Ti

Reaction with organohalide compounds edit

Alkali metals react with halogen derivatives to generate hydrocarbon via the Wurtz reaction.

2CH3-Cl + 2Na → H3C-CH3 + 2NaCl

Alkali metals in liquid ammonia edit

Alkali metals dissolve in liquid ammonia or other donor solvents like aliphatic amines or hexamethylphosphoramide to give blue solutions. These solutions are believed to contain free electrons.[144]

Na + xNH3 → Na+ + e(NH3)x

Due to the presence of solvated electrons, these solutions are very powerful reducing agents used in organic synthesis.

 
Reduction reactions using sodium in liquid ammonia

Reaction 1) is known as Birch reduction. Other reductions[144] that can be carried by these solutions are:

S8 + 2e → S82-
Fe(CO)5 + 2e → Fe(CO)42- + CO

Extensions edit

 
Empirical (Na–Cs, Mg–Ra) and predicted (Fr–Uhp, Ubn–Uhh) atomic radius of the alkali and alkaline earth metals from the third to the ninth period, measured in angstroms[37]: 1730 [148]

Although francium is the heaviest alkali metal that has been discovered, there has been some theoretical work predicting the physical and chemical characteristics of hypothetical heavier alkali metals. Being the first period 8 element, the undiscovered element ununennium (element 119) is predicted to be the next alkali metal after francium and behave much like their lighter congeners; however, it is also predicted to differ from the lighter alkali metals in some properties.[37]: 1729–1730  Its chemistry is predicted to be closer to that of potassium[42] or rubidium[37]: 1729–1730  instead of caesium or francium. This is unusual as periodic trends, ignoring relativistic effects would predict ununennium to be even more reactive than caesium and francium. This lowered reactivity is due to the relativistic stabilisation of ununennium's valence electron, increasing ununennium's first ionisation energy and decreasing the metallic and ionic radii;[42] this effect is already seen for francium.[37]: 1729–1730  This assumes that ununennium will behave chemically as an alkali metal, which, although likely, may not be true due to relativistic effects.[149] The relativistic stabilisation of the 8s orbital also increases ununennium's electron affinity far beyond that of caesium and francium; indeed, ununennium is expected to have an electron affinity higher than all the alkali metals lighter than it. Relativistic effects also cause a very large drop in the polarisability of ununennium.[37]: 1729–1730  On the other hand, ununennium is predicted to continue the trend of melting points decreasing going down the group, being expected to have a melting point between 0 °C and 30 °C.[37]: 1724 

 
Empirical (Na–Fr) and predicted (Uue) electron affinity of the alkali metals from the third to the eighth period, measured in electron volts[37]: 1730 [148]

The stabilisation of ununennium's valence electron and thus the contraction of the 8s orbital cause its atomic radius to be lowered to 240 pm,[37]: 1729–1730  very close to that of rubidium (247 pm),[5] so that the chemistry of ununennium in the +1 oxidation state should be more similar to the chemistry of rubidium than to that of francium. On the other hand, the ionic radius of the Uue+ ion is predicted to be larger than that of Rb+, because the 7p orbitals are destabilised and are thus larger than the p-orbitals of the lower shells. Ununennium may also show the +3[37]: 1729–1730  and +5 oxidation states,[150] which are not seen in any other alkali metal,[11]: 28  in addition to the +1 oxidation state that is characteristic of the other alkali metals and is also the main oxidation state of all the known alkali metals: this is because of the destabilisation and expansion of the 7p3/2 spinor, causing its outermost electrons to have a lower ionisation energy than what would otherwise be expected.[11]: 28 [37]: 1729–1730  Indeed, many ununennium compounds are expected to have a large covalent character, due to the involvement of the 7p3/2 electrons in the bonding.[87]

 
Empirical (Na–Fr, Mg–Ra) and predicted (Uue–Uhp, Ubn–Uhh) ionisation energy of the alkali and alkaline earth metals from the third to the ninth period, measured in electron volts[37]: 1730 [148]

Not as much work has been done predicting the properties of the alkali metals beyond ununennium. Although a simple extrapolation of the periodic table (by the Aufbau principle) would put element 169, unhexennium, under ununennium, Dirac-Fock calculations predict that the next element after ununennium with alkali-metal-like properties may be element 165, unhexpentium, which is predicted to have the electron configuration [Og] 5g18 6f14 7d10 8s2 8p1/22 9s1.[37]: 1729–1730 [148] This element would be intermediate in properties between an alkali metal and a group 11 element, and while its physical and atomic properties would be closer to the former, its chemistry may be closer to that of the latter. Further calculations show that unhexpentium would follow the trend of increasing ionisation energy beyond caesium, having an ionisation energy comparable to that of sodium, and that it should also continue the trend of decreasing atomic radii beyond caesium, having an atomic radius comparable to that of potassium.[37]: 1729–1730  However, the 7d electrons of unhexpentium may also be able to participate in chemical reactions along with the 9s electron, possibly allowing oxidation states beyond +1, whence the likely transition metal behaviour of unhexpentium.[37]: 1732–1733 [151] Due to the alkali and alkaline earth metals both being s-block elements, these predictions for the trends and properties of ununennium and unhexpentium also mostly hold quite similarly for the corresponding alkaline earth metals unbinilium (Ubn) and unhexhexium (Uhh).[37]: 1729–1733  Unsepttrium, element 173, may be an even better heavier homologue of ununennium; with a predicted electron configuration of [Usb] 6g1, it returns to the alkali-metal-like situation of having one easily removed electron far above a closed p-shell in energy, and is expected to be even more reactive than caesium.[152][153]

The probable properties of further alkali metals beyond unsepttrium have not been explored yet as of 2019, and they may or may not be able to exist.[148] In periods 8 and above of the periodic table, relativistic and shell-structure effects become so strong that extrapolations from lighter congeners become completely inaccurate. In addition, the relativistic and shell-structure effects (which stabilise the s-orbitals and destabilise and expand the d-, f-, and g-orbitals of higher shells) have opposite effects, causing even larger difference between relativistic and non-relativistic calculations of the properties of elements with such high atomic numbers.[37]: 1732–1733  Interest in the chemical properties of ununennium, unhexpentium, and unsepttrium stems from the fact that they are located close to the expected locations of islands of stability, centered at elements 122 (306Ubb) and 164 (482Uhq).[154][155][156]

Pseudo-alkali metals edit

Many other substances are similar to the alkali metals in their tendency to form monopositive cations. Analogously to the pseudohalogens, they have sometimes been called "pseudo-alkali metals". These substances include some elements and many more polyatomic ions; the polyatomic ions are especially similar to the alkali metals in their large size and weak polarising power.[157]

Hydrogen edit

The element hydrogen, with one electron per neutral atom, is usually placed at the top of Group 1 of the periodic table because of its electron configuration. But hydrogen is not normally considered to be an alkali metal.[158] Metallic hydrogen, which only exists at very high pressures, is known for its electrical and magnetic properties, not its chemical properties.[159] Under typical conditions, pure hydrogen exists as a diatomic gas consisting of two atoms per molecule (H2);[160] however, the alkali metals form diatomic molecules (such as dilithium, Li2) only at high temperatures, when they are in the gaseous state.[161]

Hydrogen, like the alkali metals, has one valence electron[123] and reacts easily with the halogens,[123] but the similarities mostly end there because of the small size of a bare proton H+ compared to the alkali metal cations.[123] Its placement above lithium is primarily due to its electron configuration.[158] It is sometimes placed above fluorine due to their similar chemical properties, though the resemblance is likewise not absolute.[162]

The first ionisation energy of hydrogen (1312.0 kJ/mol) is much higher than that of the alkali metals.[163][164] As only one additional electron is required to fill in the outermost shell of the hydrogen atom, hydrogen often behaves like a halogen, forming the negative hydride ion, and is very occasionally considered to be a halogen on that basis. (The alkali metals can also form negative ions, known as alkalides, but these are little more than laboratory curiosities, being unstable.)[80][81] An argument against this placement is that formation of hydride from hydrogen is endothermic, unlike the exothermic formation of halides from halogens. The radius of the H anion also does not fit the trend of increasing size going down the halogens: indeed, H is very diffuse because its single proton cannot easily control both electrons.[123]: 15–6  It was expected for some time that liquid hydrogen would show metallic properties;[162] while this has been shown to not be the case, under extremely high pressures, such as those found at the cores of Jupiter and Saturn, hydrogen does become metallic and behaves like an alkali metal; in this phase, it is known as metallic hydrogen.[165] The electrical resistivity of liquid metallic hydrogen at 3000 K is approximately equal to that of liquid rubidium and caesium at 2000 K at the respective pressures when they undergo a nonmetal-to-metal transition.[166]

The 1s1 electron configuration of hydrogen, while analogous to that of the alkali metals (ns1), is unique because there is no 1p subshell. Hence it can lose an electron to form the hydron H+, or gain one to form the hydride ion H.[11]: 43  In the former case it resembles superficially the alkali metals; in the latter case, the halogens, but the differences due to the lack of a 1p subshell are important enough that neither group fits the properties of hydrogen well.[11]: 43  Group 14 is also a good fit in terms of thermodynamic properties such as ionisation energy and electron affinity, but hydrogen cannot be tetravalent. Thus none of the three placements are entirely satisfactory, although group 1 is the most common placement (if one is chosen) because of the electron configuration and the fact that the hydron is by far the most important of all monatomic hydrogen species, being the foundation of acid-base chemistry.[162] As an example of hydrogen's unorthodox properties stemming from its unusual electron configuration and small size, the hydrogen ion is very small (radius around 150 fm compared to the 50–220 pm size of most other atoms and ions) and so is nonexistent in condensed systems other than in association with other atoms or molecules. Indeed, transferring of protons between chemicals is the basis of acid-base chemistry.[11]: 43  Also unique is hydrogen's ability to form hydrogen bonds, which are an effect of charge-transfer, electrostatic, and electron correlative contributing phenomena.[162] While analogous lithium bonds are also known, they are mostly electrostatic.[162] Nevertheless, hydrogen can take on the same structural role as the alkali metals in some molecular crystals, and has a close relationship with the lightest alkali metals (especially lithium).[167]

Ammonium and derivatives edit

 
Similarly to the alkali metals, ammonia reacts with hydrochloric acid to form the salt ammonium chloride.

The ammonium ion (NH+4) has very similar properties to the heavier alkali metals, acting as an alkali metal intermediate between potassium and rubidium,[157][168] and is often considered a close relative.[169][170][171] For example, most alkali metal salts are soluble in water, a property which ammonium salts share.[172] Ammonium is expected to behave stably as a metal (NH+4 ions in a sea of delocalised electrons) at very high pressures (though less than the typical pressure where transitions from insulating to metallic behaviour occur around, 100 GPa), and could possibly occur inside the ice giants Uranus and Neptune, which may have significant impacts on their interior magnetic fields.[170][171] It has been estimated that the transition from a mixture of ammonia and dihydrogen molecules to metallic ammonium may occur at pressures just below 25 GPa.[170] Under standard conditions, ammonium can form a metallic amalgam with mercury.[173]

Other "pseudo-alkali metals" include the alkylammonium cations, in which some of the hydrogen atoms in the ammonium cation are replaced by alkyl or aryl groups. In particular, the quaternary ammonium cations (NR+4) are very useful since they are permanently charged, and they are often used as an alternative to the expensive Cs+ to stabilise very large and very easily polarisable anions such as HI2.[11]: 812–9  Tetraalkylammonium hydroxides, like alkali metal hydroxides, are very strong bases that react with atmospheric carbon dioxide to form carbonates.[123]: 256  Furthermore, the nitrogen atom may be replaced by a phosphorus, arsenic, or antimony atom (the heavier nonmetallic pnictogens), creating a phosphonium (PH+4) or arsonium (AsH+4) cation that can itself be substituted similarly; while stibonium (SbH+4) itself is not known, some of its organic derivatives are characterised.[157]

Cobaltocene and derivatives edit

Cobaltocene, Co(C5H5)2, is a metallocene, the cobalt analogue of ferrocene. It is a dark purple solid. Cobaltocene has 19 valence electrons, one more than usually found in organotransition metal complexes, such as its very stable relative, ferrocene, in accordance with the 18-electron rule. This additional electron occupies an orbital that is antibonding with respect to the Co–C bonds. Consequently, many chemical reactions of Co(C5H5)2 are characterized by its tendency to lose this "extra" electron, yielding a very stable 18-electron cation known as cobaltocenium. Many cobaltocenium salts coprecipitate with caesium salts, and cobaltocenium hydroxide is a strong base that absorbs atmospheric carbon dioxide to form cobaltocenium carbonate.[123]: 256  Like the alkali metals, cobaltocene is a strong reducing agent, and decamethylcobaltocene is stronger still due to the combined inductive effect of the ten methyl groups.[174] Cobalt may be substituted by its heavier congener rhodium to give rhodocene, an even stronger reducing agent.[175] Iridocene (involving iridium) would presumably be still more potent, but is not very well-studied due to its instability.[176]

Thallium edit

 
Very pure thallium pieces in a glass ampoule, stored under argon gas

Thallium is the heaviest stable element in group 13 of the periodic table. At the bottom of the periodic table, the inert-pair effect is quite strong, because of the relativistic stabilisation of the 6s orbital and the decreasing bond energy as the atoms increase in size so that the amount of energy released in forming two more bonds is not worth the high ionisation energies of the 6s electrons.[11]: 226–7  It displays the +1 oxidation state[11]: 28  that all the known alkali metals display,[11]: 28  and thallium compounds with thallium in its +1 oxidation state closely resemble the corresponding potassium or silver compounds stoichiometrically due to the similar ionic radii of the Tl+ (164 pm), K+ (152 pm) and Ag+ (129 pm) ions.[177][178] It was sometimes considered an alkali metal in continental Europe (but not in England) in the years immediately following its discovery,[178]: 126  and was placed just after caesium as the sixth alkali metal in Dmitri Mendeleev's 1869 periodic table and Julius Lothar Meyer's 1868 periodic table.[22] Mendeleev's 1871 periodic table and Meyer's 1870 periodic table put thallium in its current position in the boron group and left the space below caesium blank.[22] However, thallium also displays the oxidation state +3,[11]: 28  which no known alkali metal displays[11]: 28  (although ununennium, the undiscovered seventh alkali metal, is predicted to possibly display the +3 oxidation state).[37]: 1729–1730  The sixth alkali metal is now considered to be francium.[179] While Tl+ is stabilised by the inert-pair effect, this inert pair of 6s electrons is still able to participate chemically, so that these electrons are stereochemically active in aqueous solution. Additionally, the thallium halides (except TlF) are quite insoluble in water, and TlI has an unusual structure because of the presence of the stereochemically active inert pair in thallium.[180]

Copper, silver, and gold edit

 
Copper
 
Silver
 
Gold

The group 11 metals (or coinage metals), copper, silver, and gold, are typically categorised as transition metals given they can form ions with incomplete d-shells. Physically, they have the relatively low melting points and high electronegativity values associated with post-transition metals. "The filled d subshell and free s electron of Cu, Ag, and Au contribute to their high electrical and thermal conductivity. Transition metals to the left of group 11 experience interactions between s electrons and the partially filled d subshell that lower electron mobility."[181] Chemically, the group 11 metals behave like main-group metals in their +1 valence states, and are hence somewhat related to the alkali metals: this is one reason for their previously being labelled as "group IB", paralleling the alkali metals' "group IA". They are occasionally classified as post-transition metals.[182] Their spectra are analogous to those of the alkali metals.[30] Their monopositive ions are paramagnetic and contribute no colour to their salts, like those of the alkali metals.[183]

In Mendeleev's 1871 periodic table, copper, silver, and gold are listed twice, once under group VIII (with the iron triad and platinum group metals), and once under group IB. Group IB was nonetheless parenthesised to note that it was tentative. Mendeleev's main criterion for group assignment was the maximum oxidation state of an element: on that basis, the group 11 elements could not be classified in group IB, due to the existence of copper(II) and gold(III) compounds being known at that time.[30] However, eliminating group IB would make group I the only main group (group VIII was labelled a transition group) to lack an A–B bifurcation.[30] Soon afterward, a majority of chemists chose to classify these elements in group IB and remove them from group VIII for the resulting symmetry: this was the predominant classification until the rise of the modern medium-long 18-column periodic table, which separated the alkali metals and group 11 metals.[30]

The coinage metals were traditionally regarded as a subdivision of the alkali metal group, due to them sharing the characteristic s1 electron configuration of the alkali metals (group 1: p6s1; group 11: d10s1). However, the similarities are largely confined to the stoichiometries of the +1 compounds of both groups, and not their chemical properties.[11]: 1177  This stems from the filled d subshell providing a much weaker shielding effect on the outermost s electron than the filled p subshell, so that the coinage metals have much higher first ionisation energies and smaller ionic radii than do the corresponding alkali metals.[11]: 1177  Furthermore, they have higher melting points, hardnesses, and densities, and lower reactivities and solubilities in liquid ammonia, as well as having more covalent character in their compounds.[11]: 1177  Finally, the alkali metals are at the top of the electrochemical series, whereas the coinage metals are almost at the very bottom.[11]: 1177  The coinage metals' filled d shell is much more easily disrupted than the alkali metals' filled p shell, so that the second and third ionisation energies are lower, enabling higher oxidation states than +1 and a richer coordination chemistry, thus giving the group 11 metals clear transition metal character.[11]: 1177  Particularly noteworthy is gold forming ionic compounds with rubidium and caesium, in which it forms the auride ion (Au) which also occurs in solvated form in liquid ammonia solution: here gold behaves as a pseudohalogen because its 5d106s1 configuration has one electron less than the quasi-closed shell 5d106s2 configuration of mercury.[11]: 1177 

Production and isolation edit

 
 
Salt flats are rich in lithium, such as these in Salar del Hombre Muerto, Argentina (left) and Uyuni, Bolivia (right). The lithium-rich brine is concentrated by pumping it into solar evaporation ponds (visible in Argentina image).

The production of pure alkali metals is somewhat complicated due to their extreme reactivity with commonly used substances, such as water.[5][66] From their silicate ores, all the stable alkali metals may be obtained the same way: sulfuric acid is first used to dissolve the desired alkali metal ion and aluminium(III) ions from the ore (leaching), whereupon basic precipitation removes aluminium ions from the mixture by precipitating it as the hydroxide. The remaining insoluble alkali metal carbonate is then precipitated selectively; the salt is then dissolved in hydrochloric acid to produce the chloride. The result is then left to evaporate and the alkali metal can then be isolated.[66] Lithium and sodium are typically isolated through electrolysis from their liquid chlorides, with calcium chloride typically added to lower the melting point of the mixture. The heavier alkali metals, however, are more typically isolated in a different way, where a reducing agent (typically sodium for potassium and magnesium or calcium for the heaviest alkali metals) is used to reduce the alkali metal chloride. The liquid or gaseous product (the alkali metal) then undergoes fractional distillation for purification.[66] Most routes to the pure alkali metals require the use of electrolysis due to their high reactivity; one of the few which does not is the pyrolysis of the corresponding alkali metal azide, which yields the metal for sodium, potassium, rubidium, and caesium and the nitride for lithium.[123]: 77 

Lithium salts have to be extracted from the water of mineral springs, brine pools, and brine deposits. The metal is produced electrolytically from a mixture of fused lithium chloride and potassium chloride.[184]

Sodium occurs mostly in seawater and dried seabed,[5] but is now produced through electrolysis of sodium chloride by lowering the melting point of the substance to below 700 °C through the use of a Downs cell.[185][186] Extremely pure sodium can be produced through the thermal decomposition of sodium azide.[187] Potassium occurs in many minerals, such as sylvite (potassium chloride).[5] Previously, potassium was generally made from the electrolysis of potassium chloride or potassium hydroxide,[188] found extensively in places such as Canada, Russia, Belarus, Germany, Israel, United States, and Jordan, in a method similar to how sodium was produced in the late 1800s and early 1900s.[189] It can also be produced from seawater.[5] However, these methods are problematic because the potassium metal tends to dissolve in its molten chloride and vaporises significantly at the operating temperatures, potentially forming the explosive superoxide. As a result, pure potassium metal is now produced by reducing molten potassium chloride with sodium metal at 850 °C.[11]: 74 

Na (g) + KCl (l) ⇌ NaCl (l) + K (g)

Although sodium is less reactive than potassium, this process works because at such high temperatures potassium is more volatile than sodium and can easily be distilled off, so that the equilibrium shifts towards the right to produce more potassium gas and proceeds almost to completion.[11]: 74 

Metals like sodium are obtained by electrolysis of molten salts. Rb & Cs obtained mainly as by products of Li processing. To make pure caesium, ores of caesium and rubidium are crushed and heated to 650 °C with sodium metal, generating an alloy that can then be separated via a fractional distillation technique. Because metallic caesium is too reactive to handle, it is normally offered as caesium azide (CsN3). Caesium hydroxide is formed when caesium interacts aggressively with water and ice (CsOH).[190]

Rubidium is the 16th most prevalent element in the earth's crust; however, it is quite rare. Some minerals found in North America, South Africa, Russia, and Canada contain rubidium. Some potassium minerals (lepidolites, biotites, feldspar, carnallite) contain it, together with caesium. Pollucite, carnallite, leucite, and lepidolite are all minerals that contain rubidium. As a by-product of lithium extraction, it is commercially obtained from lepidolite. Rubidium is also found in potassium rocks and brines, which is a commercial supply. The majority of rubidium is now obtained as a byproduct of refining lithium. Rubidium is used in vacuum tubes as a getter, a material that combines with and removes trace gases from vacuum tubes.[191][192]

 
This sample of uraninite contains about 100,000 atoms (3.3×10−20 g) of francium-223 at any given time.[61]

For several years in the 1950s and 1960s, a by-product of the potassium production called Alkarb was a main source for rubidium. Alkarb contained 21% rubidium while the rest was potassium and a small fraction of caesium.[193] Today the largest producers of caesium, for example the Tanco Mine in Manitoba, Canada, produce rubidium as by-product from pollucite.[194] Today, a common method for separating rubidium from potassium and caesium is the fractional crystallisation of a rubidium and caesium alum (Cs, Rb)Al(SO4)2·12H2O, which yields pure rubidium alum after approximately 30 recrystallisations.[194][195] The limited applications and the lack of a mineral rich in rubidium limit the production of rubidium compounds to 2 to 4 tonnes per year.[194] Caesium, however, is not produced from the above reaction. Instead, the mining of pollucite ore is the main method of obtaining pure caesium, extracted from the ore mainly by three methods: acid digestion, alkaline decomposition, and direct reduction.[194][196] Both metals are produced as by-products of lithium production: after 1958, when interest in lithium's thermonuclear properties increased sharply, the production of rubidium and caesium also increased correspondingly.[11]: 71  Pure rubidium and caesium metals are produced by reducing their chlorides with calcium metal at 750 °C and low pressure.[11]: 74 

As a result of its extreme rarity in nature,[63] most francium is synthesised in the nuclear reaction 197Au + 18O210Fr + 5 n, yielding francium-209, francium-210, and francium-211.[197] The greatest quantity of francium ever assembled to date is about 300,000 neutral atoms,[198] which were synthesised using the nuclear reaction given above.[198] When the only natural isotope francium-223 is specifically required, it is produced as the alpha daughter of actinium-227, itself produced synthetically from the neutron irradiation of natural radium-226, one of the daughters of natural uranium-238.[199]

Applications edit

 
FOCS 1, a caesium atomic clock in Switzerland

Lithium, sodium, and potassium have many applications, while rubidium and caesium are very useful in academic contexts but do not have many applications yet.[11]: 68  Lithium is often used in lithium-ion batteries, and lithium oxide can help process silica. Lithium stearate is a thickener and can be used to make lubricating greases; it is produced from lithium hydroxide, which is also used to absorb carbon dioxide in space capsules and submarines.[11]: 70  Lithium chloride is used as a brazing alloy for aluminium parts.[200] Metallic lithium is used in alloys with magnesium and aluminium to give very tough and light alloys.[11]: 70 

Sodium compounds have many applications, the most well-known being sodium chloride as table salt. Sodium salts of fatty acids are used as soap.[201] Pure sodium metal also has many applications, including use in sodium-vapour lamps, which produce very efficient light compared to other types of lighting,[202][203] and can help smooth the surface of other metals.[204][205] Being a strong reducing agent, it is often used to reduce many other metals, such as titanium and zirconium, from their chlorides. Furthermore, it is very useful as a heat-exchange liquid in fast breeder nuclear reactors due to its low melting point, viscosity, and cross-section towards neutron absorption.[11]: 74 

Potassium compounds are often used as fertilisers[11]: 73 [206] as potassium is an important element for plant nutrition. Potassium hydroxide is a very strong base, and is used to control the pH of various substances.[207][208] Potassium nitrate and potassium permanganate are often used as powerful oxidising agents.[11]: 73  Potassium superoxide is used in breathing masks, as it reacts with carbon dioxide to give potassium carbonate and oxygen gas. Pure potassium metal is not often used, but its alloys with sodium may substitute for pure sodium in fast breeder nuclear reactors.[11]: 74 

Rubidium and caesium are often used in atomic clocks.[209] Caesium atomic clocks are extraordinarily accurate; if a clock had been made at the time of the dinosaurs, it would be off by less than four seconds (after 80 million years).[57] For that reason, caesium atoms are used as the definition of the second.[210] Rubidium ions are often used in purple fireworks,[211] and caesium is often used in drilling fluids in the petroleum industry.[57][212]

Francium has no commercial applications,[61][62][213] but because of francium's relatively simple atomic structure, among other things, it has been used in spectroscopy experiments, leading to more information regarding energy levels and the coupling constants between subatomic particles.[214] Studies on the light emitted by laser-trapped francium-210 ions have provided accurate data on transitions between atomic energy levels, similar to those predicted by quantum theory.[215]

Biological role and precautions edit

Metals edit

Pure alkali metals are dangerously reactive with air and water and must be kept away from heat, fire, oxidising agents, acids, most organic compounds, halocarbons, plastics, and moisture. They also react with carbon dioxide and carbon tetrachloride, so that normal fire extinguishers are counterproductive when used on alkali metal fires.[216] Some Class D dry powder extinguishers designed for metal fires are effective, depriving the fire of oxygen and cooling the alkali metal.[217]

Experiments are usually conducted using only small quantities of a few grams in a fume hood. Small quantities of lithium may be disposed of by reaction with cool water, but the heavier alkali metals should be dissolved in the less reactive isopropanol.[216][218] The alkali metals must be stored under mineral oil or an inert atmosphere. The inert atmosphere used may be argon or nitrogen gas, except for lithium, which reacts with nitrogen.[216] Rubidium and caesium must be kept away from air, even under oil, because even a small amount of air diffused into the oil may trigger formation of the dangerously explosive peroxide; for the same reason, potassium should not be stored under oil in an oxygen-containing atmosphere for longer than 6 months.[219][220]

Ions edit

 
Lithium carbonate

The bioinorganic chemistry of the alkali metal ions has been extensively reviewed.[221] Solid state crystal structures have been determined for many complexes of alkali metal ions in small peptides, nucleic acid constituents, carbohydrates and ionophore complexes.[222]

Lithium naturally only occurs in traces in biological systems and has no known biological role, but does have effects on the body when ingested.[223] Lithium carbonate is used as a mood stabiliser in psychiatry to treat bipolar disorder (manic-depression) in daily doses of about 0.5 to 2 grams, although there are side-effects.[223] Excessive ingestion of lithium causes drowsiness, slurred speech and vomiting, among other symptoms,[223] and poisons the central nervous system,[223] which is dangerous as the required dosage of lithium to treat bipolar disorder is only slightly lower than the toxic dosage.[223][224] Its biochemistry, the way it is handled by the human body and studies using rats and goats suggest that it is an essential trace element, although the natural biological function of lithium in humans has yet to be identified.[225][226]

Sodium and potassium occur in all known biological systems, generally functioning as electrolytes inside and outside cells.[227][228] Sodium is an essential nutrient that regulates blood volume, blood pressure, osmotic equilibrium and pH; the minimum physiological requirement for sodium is 500 milligrams per day.[229] Sodium chloride (also known as common salt) is the principal source of sodium in the diet, and is used as seasoning and preservative, such as for pickling and jerky; most of it comes from processed foods.[230] The Dietary Reference Intake for sodium is 1.5 grams per day,[231] but most people in the United States consume more than 2.3 grams per day,[232] the minimum amount that promotes hypertension;[233] this in turn causes 7.6 million premature deaths worldwide.[234]

Potassium is the major cation (positive ion) inside animal cells,[227] while sodium is the major cation outside animal cells.[227][228] The concentration differences of these charged particles causes a difference in electric potential between the inside and outside of cells, known as the membrane potential. The balance between potassium and sodium is maintained by ion transporter proteins in the cell membrane.[235] The cell membrane potential created by potassium and sodium ions allows the cell to generate an action potential—a "spike" of electrical discharge. The ability of cells to produce electrical discharge is critical for body functions such as neurotransmission, muscle contraction, and heart function.[235] Disruption of this balance may thus be fatal: for example, ingestion of large amounts of potassium compounds can lead to hyperkalemia strongly influencing the cardiovascular system.[236][237] Potassium chloride is used in the United States for lethal injection executions.[236]

 
A wheel type radiotherapy device which has a long collimator to focus the radiation into a narrow beam. The caesium-137 chloride radioactive source is the blue square, and gamma rays are represented by the beam emerging from the aperture. This was the radiation source involved in the Goiânia accident, containing about 93 grams of caesium-137 chloride.

Due to their similar atomic radii, rubidium and caesium in the body mimic potassium and are taken up similarly. Rubidium has no known biological role, but may help stimulate metabolism,[238][239][240] and, similarly to caesium,[238][241] replace potassium in the body causing potassium deficiency.[238][240] Partial substitution is quite possible and rather non-toxic: a 70 kg person contains on average 0.36 g of rubidium, and an increase in this value by 50 to 100 times did not show negative effects in test persons.[242] Rats can survive up to 50% substitution of potassium by rubidium.[240][243] Rubidium (and to a much lesser extent caesium) can function as temporary cures for hypokalemia; while rubidium can adequately physiologically substitute potassium in some systems, caesium is never able to do so.[239] There is only very limited evidence in the form of deficiency symptoms for rubidium being possibly essential in goats; even if this is true, the trace amounts usually present in food are more than enough.[244][245]

Caesium compounds are rarely encountered by most people, but most caesium compounds are mildly toxic. Like rubidium, caesium tends to substitute potassium in the body, but is significantly larger and is therefore a poorer substitute.[241] Excess caesium can lead to hypokalemia, arrythmia, and acute cardiac arrest,[246] but such amounts would not ordinarily be encountered in natural sources.[247] As such, caesium is not a major chemical environmental pollutant.[247] The median lethal dose (LD50) value for caesium chloride in mice is 2.3 g per kilogram, which is comparable to the LD50 values of potassium chloride and sodium chloride.[248] Caesium chloride has been promoted as an alternative cancer therapy,[249] but has been linked to the deaths of over 50 patients, on whom it was used as part of a scientifically unvalidated cancer treatment.[250]

Radioisotopes of caesium require special precautions: the improper handling of caesium-137 gamma ray sources can lead to release of this radioisotope and radiation injuries. Perhaps the best-known case is the Goiânia accident of 1987, in which an improperly-disposed-of radiation therapy system from an abandoned clinic in the city of Goiânia, Brazil, was scavenged from a junkyard, and the glowing caesium salt sold to curious, uneducated buyers. This led to four deaths and serious injuries from radiation exposure. Together with caesium-134, iodine-131, and strontium-90, caesium-137 was among the isotopes distributed by the Chernobyl disaster which constitute the greatest risk to health.[98] Radioisotopes of francium would presumably be dangerous as well due to their high decay energy and short half-life, but none have been produced in large enough amounts to pose any serious risk.[199]

Notes edit

  1. ^ The symbols Na and K for sodium and potassium are derived from their Latin names, natrium and kalium; these are still the origins of the names for the elements in some languages, such as German and Russian.
  2. ^ Caesium is the spelling recommended by the International Union of Pure and Applied Chemistry (IUPAC).[1] The American Chemical Society (ACS) has used the spelling cesium since 1921,[2][3] following Webster's Third New International Dictionary.
  3. ^ In both the old IUPAC and the CAS systems for group numbering, this group is known as group IA (pronounced as "group one A", as the "I" is a Roman numeral).[4]
  4. ^ While hydrogen also has this electron configuration, it is not considered an alkali metal as it has very different behaviour owing to the lack of valence p-orbitals in period 1 elements.
  5. ^ In the 1869 version of Mendeleev's periodic table, copper and silver were placed in their own group, aligned with hydrogen and mercury, while gold was tentatively placed under uranium and the undiscovered eka-aluminium in the boron group.
  6. ^ The asterisk denotes an excited state.
  7. ^ The number given in parentheses refers to the measurement uncertainty. This uncertainty applies to the least significant figure(s) of the number prior to the parenthesised value (ie. counting from rightmost digit to left). For instance, 1.00794(7) stands for 1.00794±0.00007, while 1.00794(72) stands for 1.00794±0.00072.[67]
  8. ^ The value listed is the conventional value suitable for trade and commerce; the actual value may range from 6.938 to 6.997 depending on the isotopic composition of the sample.[59]
  9. ^ The element does not have any stable nuclides, and a value in brackets indicates the mass number of the longest-lived isotope of the element.[58][59]
  10. ^ Linus Pauling estimated the electronegativity of francium at 0.7 on the Pauling scale, the same as caesium;[69] the value for caesium has since been refined to 0.79, although there are no experimental data to allow a refinement of the value for francium.[70] Francium has a slightly higher ionisation energy than caesium,[68] 392.811(4) kJ/mol as opposed to 375.7041(2) kJ/mol for caesium, as would be expected from relativistic effects, and this would imply that caesium is the less electronegative of the two.

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alkali, metal, confused, with, alkaline, earth, metal, alkali, metals, consist, chemical, elements, lithium, sodium, potassium, note, rubidium, caesium, note, francium, together, with, hydrogen, they, constitute, group, note, which, lies, block, periodic, tabl. Not to be confused with Alkaline earth metal The alkali metals consist of the chemical elements lithium Li sodium Na potassium K note 1 rubidium Rb caesium Cs note 2 and francium Fr Together with hydrogen they constitute group 1 note 3 which lies in the s block of the periodic table All alkali metals have their outermost electron in an s orbital this shared electron configuration results in their having very similar characteristic properties note 4 Indeed the alkali metals provide the best example of group trends in properties in the periodic table with elements exhibiting well characterised homologous behaviour 5 This family of elements is also known as the lithium family after its leading element Alkali metalsHydrogen HeliumLithium Beryllium Boron Carbon Nitrogen Oxygen Fluorine NeonSodium Magnesium Aluminium Silicon Phosphorus Sulfur Chlorine ArgonPotassium Calcium Scandium Titanium Vanadium Chromium Manganese Iron Cobalt Nickel Copper Zinc Gallium Germanium Arsenic Selenium Bromine KryptonRubidium Strontium Yttrium Zirconium Niobium Molybdenum Technetium Ruthenium Rhodium Palladium Silver Cadmium Indium Tin Antimony Tellurium Iodine XenonCaesium Barium Lanthanum Cerium Praseodymium Neodymium Promethium Samarium Europium Gadolinium Terbium Dysprosium Holmium Erbium Thulium Ytterbium Lutetium Hafnium Tantalum Tungsten Rhenium Osmium Iridium Platinum Gold Mercury element Thallium Lead Bismuth Polonium Astatine RadonFrancium Radium Actinium Thorium Protactinium Uranium Neptunium Plutonium Americium Curium Berkelium Californium Einsteinium Fermium Mendelevium Nobelium Lawrencium Rutherfordium Dubnium Seaborgium Bohrium Hassium Meitnerium Darmstadtium Roentgenium Copernicium Nihonium Flerovium Moscovium Livermorium Tennessine Oganessonnoble gases alkaline earth metalsIUPAC group number 1Name by element lithium groupTrivial name alkali metalsCAS group number US pattern A B A IAold IUPAC number Europe pattern A B IA Period2 Lithium Li 33 Sodium Na 114 Potassium K 195 Rubidium Rb 376 Caesium Cs 557 Francium Fr 87Legend primordialelement by radioactive decayAtomic number color black solidThe alkali metals are all shiny soft highly reactive metals at standard temperature and pressure and readily lose their outermost electron to form cations with charge 1 They can all be cut easily with a knife due to their softness exposing a shiny surface that tarnishes rapidly in air due to oxidation by atmospheric moisture and oxygen and in the case of lithium nitrogen Because of their high reactivity they must be stored under oil to prevent reaction with air and are found naturally only in salts and never as the free elements Caesium the fifth alkali metal is the most reactive of all the metals All the alkali metals react with water with the heavier alkali metals reacting more vigorously than the lighter ones All of the discovered alkali metals occur in nature as their compounds in order of abundance sodium is the most abundant followed by potassium lithium rubidium caesium and finally francium which is very rare due to its extremely high radioactivity francium occurs only in minute traces in nature as an intermediate step in some obscure side branches of the natural decay chains Experiments have been conducted to attempt the synthesis of element 119 which is likely to be the next member of the group none were successful However ununennium may not be an alkali metal due to relativistic effects which are predicted to have a large influence on the chemical properties of superheavy elements even if it does turn out to be an alkali metal it is predicted to have some differences in physical and chemical properties from its lighter homologues Most alkali metals have many different applications One of the best known applications of the pure elements is the use of rubidium and caesium in atomic clocks of which caesium atomic clocks form the basis of the second A common application of the compounds of sodium is the sodium vapour lamp which emits light very efficiently Table salt or sodium chloride has been used since antiquity Lithium finds use as a psychiatric medication and as an anode in lithium batteries Sodium potassium and possibly lithium are essential elements having major biological roles as electrolytes and although the other alkali metals are not essential they also have various effects on the body both beneficial and harmful Contents 1 History 2 Occurrence 2 1 In the Solar System 2 2 On Earth 3 Properties 3 1 Physical and chemical 3 1 1 Lithium 3 1 2 Francium 3 2 Nuclear 4 Periodic trends 4 1 Atomic and ionic radii 4 2 First ionisation energy 4 3 Reactivity 4 4 Electronegativity 4 5 Melting and boiling points 4 6 Density 5 Compounds 5 1 Hydroxides 5 2 Intermetallic compounds 5 3 Compounds with the group 13 elements 5 4 Compounds with the group 14 elements 5 5 Nitrides and pnictides 5 6 Oxides and chalcogenides 5 7 Halides hydrides and pseudohalides 5 8 Coordination complexes 5 9 Ammonia solutions 5 10 Organometallic 5 10 1 Organolithium 5 10 2 Heavier alkali metals 6 Representative reactions of alkali metals 6 1 Reaction with oxygen 6 2 Reaction with sulfur 6 3 Reaction with nitrogen 6 4 Reaction with hydrogen 6 5 Reaction with carbon 6 6 Reaction with water 6 7 Reaction with other salts 6 8 Reaction with organohalide compounds 6 9 Alkali metals in liquid ammonia 7 Extensions 8 Pseudo alkali metals 8 1 Hydrogen 8 2 Ammonium and derivatives 8 3 Cobaltocene and derivatives 8 4 Thallium 8 5 Copper silver and gold 9 Production and isolation 10 Applications 11 Biological role and precautions 11 1 Metals 11 2 Ions 12 Notes 13 ReferencesHistory edit nbsp Petalite the lithium mineral from which lithium was first isolatedSodium compounds have been known since ancient times salt sodium chloride has been an important commodity in human activities as testified by the English word salary referring to salarium money paid to Roman soldiers for the purchase of salt 6 better source needed While potash has been used since ancient times it was not understood for most of its history to be a fundamentally different substance from sodium mineral salts Georg Ernst Stahl obtained experimental evidence which led him to suggest the fundamental difference of sodium and potassium salts in 1702 7 and Henri Louis Duhamel du Monceau was able to prove this difference in 1736 8 The exact chemical composition of potassium and sodium compounds and the status as chemical element of potassium and sodium was not known then and thus Antoine Lavoisier did not include either alkali in his list of chemical elements in 1789 9 10 Pure potassium was first isolated in 1807 in England by Humphry Davy who derived it from caustic potash KOH potassium hydroxide by the use of electrolysis of the molten salt with the newly invented voltaic pile Previous attempts at electrolysis of the aqueous salt were unsuccessful due to potassium s extreme reactivity 11 68 Potassium was the first metal that was isolated by electrolysis 12 Later that same year Davy reported extraction of sodium from the similar substance caustic soda NaOH lye by a similar technique demonstrating the elements and thus the salts to be different 9 10 13 14 nbsp Johann Wolfgang Dobereiner was among the first to notice similarities between what are now known as the alkali metals Petalite LiAlSi4O10 was discovered in 1800 by the Brazilian chemist Jose Bonifacio de Andrada in a mine on the island of Uto Sweden 15 16 17 However it was not until 1817 that Johan August Arfwedson then working in the laboratory of the chemist Jons Jacob Berzelius detected the presence of a new element while analysing petalite ore 18 19 This new element was noted by him to form compounds similar to those of sodium and potassium though its carbonate and hydroxide were less soluble in water and more alkaline than the other alkali metals 20 Berzelius gave the unknown material the name lithion lithina from the Greek word li8os transliterated as lithos meaning stone to reflect its discovery in a solid mineral as opposed to potassium which had been discovered in plant ashes and sodium which was known partly for its high abundance in animal blood He named the metal inside the material lithium 21 16 19 Lithium sodium and potassium were part of the discovery of periodicity as they are among a series of triads of elements in the same group that were noted by Johann Wolfgang Dobereiner in 1850 as having similar properties 22 nbsp Lepidolite the rubidium mineral from which rubidium was first isolatedRubidium and caesium were the first elements to be discovered using the spectroscope invented in 1859 by Robert Bunsen and Gustav Kirchhoff 23 The next year they discovered caesium in the mineral water from Bad Durkheim Germany Their discovery of rubidium came the following year in Heidelberg Germany finding it in the mineral lepidolite 24 The names of rubidium and caesium come from the most prominent lines in their emission spectra a bright red line for rubidium from the Latin word rubidus meaning dark red or bright red and a sky blue line for caesium derived from the Latin word caesius meaning sky blue 25 26 Around 1865 John Newlands produced a series of papers where he listed the elements in order of increasing atomic weight and similar physical and chemical properties that recurred at intervals of eight he likened such periodicity to the octaves of music where notes an octave apart have similar musical functions 27 28 His version put all the alkali metals then known lithium to caesium as well as copper silver and thallium which show the 1 oxidation state characteristic of the alkali metals together into a group His table placed hydrogen with the halogens 22 nbsp Dmitri Mendeleev s periodic system proposed in 1871 showing hydrogen and the alkali metals as part of his group I along with copper silver and goldAfter 1869 Dmitri Mendeleev proposed his periodic table placing lithium at the top of a group with sodium potassium rubidium caesium and thallium 29 Two years later Mendeleev revised his table placing hydrogen in group 1 above lithium and also moving thallium to the boron group In this 1871 version copper silver and gold were placed twice once as part of group IB and once as part of a group VIII encompassing today s groups 8 to 11 30 note 5 After the introduction of the 18 column table the group IB elements were moved to their current position in the d block while alkali metals were left in group IA Later the group s name was changed to group 1 in 1988 4 The trivial name alkali metals comes from the fact that the hydroxides of the group 1 elements are all strong alkalis when dissolved in water 5 There were at least four erroneous and incomplete discoveries 31 32 33 34 before Marguerite Perey of the Curie Institute in Paris France discovered francium in 1939 by purifying a sample of actinium 227 which had been reported to have a decay energy of 220 keV However Perey noticed decay particles with an energy level below 80 keV Perey thought this decay activity might have been caused by a previously unidentified decay product one that was separated during purification but emerged again out of the pure actinium 227 Various tests eliminated the possibility of the unknown element being thorium radium lead bismuth or thallium The new product exhibited chemical properties of an alkali metal such as coprecipitating with caesium salts which led Perey to believe that it was element 87 caused by the alpha decay of actinium 227 35 Perey then attempted to determine the proportion of beta decay to alpha decay in actinium 227 Her first test put the alpha branching at 0 6 a figure that she later revised to 1 36 22789 Ac a 1 38 21 77 y 22387 Fr b 22 min 22388 Ra a 11 4 d 21986 RnThe next element below francium eka francium in the periodic table would be ununennium Uue element 119 37 1729 1730 The synthesis of ununennium was first attempted in 1985 by bombarding a target of einsteinium 254 with calcium 48 ions at the superHILAC accelerator at the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory in Berkeley California No atoms were identified leading to a limiting yield of 300 nb 38 39 25499 Es 4820 Ca 302119 Uue no atoms note 6 It is highly unlikely 38 that this reaction will be able to create any atoms of ununennium in the near future given the extremely difficult task of making sufficient amounts of einsteinium 254 which is favoured for production of ultraheavy elements because of its large mass relatively long half life of 270 days and availability in significant amounts of several micrograms 40 to make a large enough target to increase the sensitivity of the experiment to the required level einsteinium has not been found in nature and has only been produced in laboratories and in quantities smaller than those needed for effective synthesis of superheavy elements However given that ununennium is only the first period 8 element on the extended periodic table it may well be discovered in the near future through other reactions and indeed an attempt to synthesise it is currently ongoing in Japan 41 Currently none of the period 8 elements has been discovered yet and it is also possible due to drip instabilities that only the lower period 8 elements up to around element 128 are physically possible 42 43 No attempts at synthesis have been made for any heavier alkali metals due to their extremely high atomic number they would require new more powerful methods and technology to make 37 1737 1739 Occurrence editIn the Solar System edit nbsp Estimated abundances of the chemical elements in the Solar system Hydrogen and helium are most common from the Big Bang The next three elements lithium beryllium and boron are rare because they are poorly synthesised in the Big Bang and also in stars The two general trends in the remaining stellar produced elements are 1 an alternation of abundance in elements as they have even or odd atomic numbers and 2 a general decrease in abundance as elements become heavier Iron is especially common because it represents the minimum energy nuclide that can be made by fusion of helium in supernovae 44 The Oddo Harkins rule holds that elements with even atomic numbers are more common that those with odd atomic numbers with the exception of hydrogen This rule argues that elements with odd atomic numbers have one unpaired proton and are more likely to capture another thus increasing their atomic number In elements with even atomic numbers protons are paired with each member of the pair offsetting the spin of the other enhancing stability 45 46 47 All the alkali metals have odd atomic numbers and they are not as common as the elements with even atomic numbers adjacent to them the noble gases and the alkaline earth metals in the Solar System The heavier alkali metals are also less abundant than the lighter ones as the alkali metals from rubidium onward can only be synthesised in supernovae and not in stellar nucleosynthesis Lithium is also much less abundant than sodium and potassium as it is poorly synthesised in both Big Bang nucleosynthesis and in stars the Big Bang could only produce trace quantities of lithium beryllium and boron due to the absence of a stable nucleus with 5 or 8 nucleons and stellar nucleosynthesis could only pass this bottleneck by the triple alpha process fusing three helium nuclei to form carbon and skipping over those three elements 44 On Earth edit nbsp Spodumene an important lithium mineralThe Earth formed from the same cloud of matter that formed the Sun but the planets acquired different compositions during the formation and evolution of the solar system In turn the natural history of the Earth caused parts of this planet to have differing concentrations of the elements The mass of the Earth is approximately 5 98 1024 kg It is composed mostly of iron 32 1 oxygen 30 1 silicon 15 1 magnesium 13 9 sulfur 2 9 nickel 1 8 calcium 1 5 and aluminium 1 4 with the remaining 1 2 consisting of trace amounts of other elements Due to planetary differentiation the core region is believed to be primarily composed of iron 88 8 with smaller amounts of nickel 5 8 sulfur 4 5 and less than 1 trace elements 48 The alkali metals due to their high reactivity do not occur naturally in pure form in nature They are lithophiles and therefore remain close to the Earth s surface because they combine readily with oxygen and so associate strongly with silica forming relatively low density minerals that do not sink down into the Earth s core Potassium rubidium and caesium are also incompatible elements due to their large ionic radii 49 Sodium and potassium are very abundant on Earth both being among the ten most common elements in Earth s crust 50 51 sodium makes up approximately 2 6 of the Earth s crust measured by weight making it the sixth most abundant element overall 52 and the most abundant alkali metal Potassium makes up approximately 1 5 of the Earth s crust and is the seventh most abundant element 52 Sodium is found in many different minerals of which the most common is ordinary salt sodium chloride which occurs in vast quantities dissolved in seawater Other solid deposits include halite amphibole cryolite nitratine and zeolite 52 Many of these solid deposits occur as a result of ancient seas evaporating which still occurs now in places such as Utah s Great Salt Lake and the Dead Sea 11 69 Despite their near equal abundance in Earth s crust sodium is far more common than potassium in the ocean both because potassium s larger size makes its salts less soluble and because potassium is bound by silicates in soil and what potassium leaches is absorbed far more readily by plant life than sodium 11 69 Despite its chemical similarity lithium typically does not occur together with sodium or potassium due to its smaller size 11 69 Due to its relatively low reactivity it can be found in seawater in large amounts it is estimated that lithium concentration in seawater is approximately 0 14 to 0 25 parts per million ppm 53 54 or 25 micromolar 55 Its diagonal relationship with magnesium often allows it to replace magnesium in ferromagnesium minerals where its crustal concentration is about 18 ppm comparable to that of gallium and niobium Commercially the most important lithium mineral is spodumene which occurs in large deposits worldwide 11 69 Rubidium is approximately as abundant as zinc and more abundant than copper It occurs naturally in the minerals leucite pollucite carnallite zinnwaldite and lepidolite 56 although none of these contain only rubidium and no other alkali metals 11 70 Caesium is more abundant than some commonly known elements such as antimony cadmium tin and tungsten but is much less abundant than rubidium 57 Francium 223 the only naturally occurring isotope of francium 58 59 is the product of the alpha decay of actinium 227 and can be found in trace amounts in uranium minerals 60 In a given sample of uranium there is estimated to be only one francium atom for every 1018 uranium atoms 61 62 It has been calculated that there are at most 30 grams of francium in the earth s crust at any time due to its extremely short half life of 22 minutes 63 64 Properties editPhysical and chemical edit The physical and chemical properties of the alkali metals can be readily explained by their having an ns1 valence electron configuration which results in weak metallic bonding Hence all the alkali metals are soft and have low densities 5 melting 5 and boiling points 5 as well as heats of sublimation vaporisation and dissociation 11 74 They all crystallise in the body centered cubic crystal structure 11 73 and have distinctive flame colours because their outer s electron is very easily excited 11 75 Indeed these flame test colours are the most common way of identifying them since all their salts with common ions are soluble 11 75 The ns1 configuration also results in the alkali metals having very large atomic and ionic radii as well as very high thermal and electrical conductivity 11 75 Their chemistry is dominated by the loss of their lone valence electron in the outermost s orbital to form the 1 oxidation state due to the ease of ionising this electron and the very high second ionisation energy 11 76 Most of the chemistry has been observed only for the first five members of the group The chemistry of francium is not well established due to its extreme radioactivity 5 thus the presentation of its properties here is limited What little is known about francium shows that it is very close in behaviour to caesium as expected The physical properties of francium are even sketchier because the bulk element has never been observed hence any data that may be found in the literature are certainly speculative extrapolations 65 Properties of the alkali metals 11 75 66 Name Lithium Sodium Potassium Rubidium Caesium FranciumAtomic number 3 11 19 37 55 87Standard atomic weight note 7 58 59 6 94 1 note 8 22 98976928 2 39 0983 1 85 4678 3 132 9054519 2 223 note 9 Electron configuration He 2s1 Ne 3s1 Ar 4s1 Kr 5s1 Xe 6s1 Rn 7s1Melting point C 180 54 97 72 63 38 39 31 28 44 Boiling point C 1342 883 759 688 671 Density g cm 3 0 534 0 968 0 89 1 532 1 93 Heat of fusion kJ mol 1 3 00 2 60 2 321 2 19 2 09 Heat of vaporisation kJ mol 1 136 97 42 79 1 69 66 1 Heat of formation of monatomic gas kJ mol 1 162 108 89 6 82 0 78 2 Electrical resistivity at 25 C nW cm 94 7 48 8 73 9 131 208 Atomic radius pm 152 186 227 248 265 Ionic radius of hexacoordinate M ion pm 76 102 138 152 167 First ionisation energy kJ mol 1 520 2 495 8 418 8 403 0 375 7 392 8 68 Electron affinity kJ mol 1 59 62 52 87 48 38 46 89 45 51 Enthalpy of dissociation of M2 kJ mol 1 106 5 73 6 57 3 45 6 44 77 Pauling electronegativity 0 98 0 93 0 82 0 82 0 79 note 10 Allen electronegativity 0 91 0 87 0 73 0 71 0 66 0 67Standard electrode potential E M M0 V 71 3 04 2 71 2 93 2 98 3 03 Flame test colourPrincipal emission absorption wavelength nm Crimson670 8 Yellow589 2 Violet766 5 Red violet780 0 Blue455 5 The alkali metals are more similar to each other than the elements in any other group are to each other 5 Indeed the similarity is so great that it is quite difficult to separate potassium rubidium and caesium due to their similar ionic radii lithium and sodium are more distinct For instance when moving down the table all known alkali metals show increasing atomic radius 72 decreasing electronegativity 72 increasing reactivity 5 and decreasing melting and boiling points 72 as well as heats of fusion and vaporisation 11 75 In general their densities increase when moving down the table with the exception that potassium is less dense than sodium 72 One of the very few properties of the alkali metals that does not display a very smooth trend is their reduction potentials lithium s value is anomalous being more negative than the others 11 75 This is because the Li ion has a very high hydration energy in the gas phase though the lithium ion disrupts the structure of water significantly causing a higher change in entropy this high hydration energy is enough to make the reduction potentials indicate it as being the most electropositive alkali metal despite the difficulty of ionising it in the gas phase 11 75 The stable alkali metals are all silver coloured metals except for caesium which has a pale golden tint 73 it is one of only three metals that are clearly coloured the other two being copper and gold 11 74 Additionally the heavy alkaline earth metals calcium strontium and barium as well as the divalent lanthanides europium and ytterbium are pale yellow though the colour is much less prominent than it is for caesium 11 74 Their lustre tarnishes rapidly in air due to oxidation 5 source source source source source source Potassium reacts violently with water at room temperature source source source source source source Caesium reacts explosively with water even at low temperaturesAll the alkali metals are highly reactive and are never found in elemental forms in nature 21 Because of this they are usually stored in mineral oil or kerosene paraffin oil 74 They react aggressively with the halogens to form the alkali metal halides which are white ionic crystalline compounds that are all soluble in water except lithium fluoride LiF 5 The alkali metals also react with water to form strongly alkaline hydroxides and thus should be handled with great care The heavier alkali metals react more vigorously than the lighter ones for example when dropped into water caesium produces a larger explosion than potassium if the same number of moles of each metal is used 5 75 57 The alkali metals have the lowest first ionisation energies in their respective periods of the periodic table 65 because of their low effective nuclear charge 5 and the ability to attain a noble gas configuration by losing just one electron 5 Not only do the alkali metals react with water but also with proton donors like alcohols and phenols gaseous ammonia and alkynes the last demonstrating the phenomenal degree of their reactivity Their great power as reducing agents makes them very useful in liberating other metals from their oxides or halides 11 76 The second ionisation energy of all of the alkali metals is very high 5 65 as it is in a full shell that is also closer to the nucleus 5 thus they almost always lose a single electron forming cations 11 28 The alkalides are an exception they are unstable compounds which contain alkali metals in a 1 oxidation state which is very unusual as before the discovery of the alkalides the alkali metals were not expected to be able to form anions and were thought to be able to appear in salts only as cations The alkalide anions have filled s subshells which gives them enough stability to exist All the stable alkali metals except lithium are known to be able to form alkalides 76 77 78 and the alkalides have much theoretical interest due to their unusual stoichiometry and low ionisation potentials Alkalides are chemically similar to the electrides which are salts with trapped electrons acting as anions 79 A particularly striking example of an alkalide is inverse sodium hydride H Na both ions being complexed as opposed to the usual sodium hydride Na H 80 it is unstable in isolation due to its high energy resulting from the displacement of two electrons from hydrogen to sodium although several derivatives are predicted to be metastable or stable 80 81 In aqueous solution the alkali metal ions form aqua ions of the formula M H2O n where n is the solvation number Their coordination numbers and shapes agree well with those expected from their ionic radii In aqueous solution the water molecules directly attached to the metal ion are said to belong to the first coordination sphere also known as the first or primary solvation shell The bond between a water molecule and the metal ion is a dative covalent bond with the oxygen atom donating both electrons to the bond Each coordinated water molecule may be attached by hydrogen bonds to other water molecules The latter are said to reside in the second coordination sphere However for the alkali metal cations the second coordination sphere is not well defined as the 1 charge on the cation is not high enough to polarise the water molecules in the primary solvation shell enough for them to form strong hydrogen bonds with those in the second coordination sphere producing a more stable entity 82 83 25 The solvation number for Li has been experimentally determined to be 4 forming the tetrahedral Li H2O 4 while solvation numbers of 3 to 6 have been found for lithium aqua ions solvation numbers less than 4 may be the result of the formation of contact ion pairs and the higher solvation numbers may be interpreted in terms of water molecules that approach Li H2O 4 through a face of the tetrahedron though molecular dynamic simulations may indicate the existence of an octahedral hexaaqua ion There are also probably six water molecules in the primary solvation sphere of the sodium ion forming the octahedral Na H2O 6 ion 66 83 126 127 While it was previously thought that the heavier alkali metals also formed octahedral hexaaqua ions it has since been found that potassium and rubidium probably form the K H2O 8 and Rb H2O 8 ions which have the square antiprismatic structure and that caesium forms the 12 coordinate Cs H2O 12 ion 84 Lithium edit The chemistry of lithium shows several differences from that of the rest of the group as the small Li cation polarises anions and gives its compounds a more covalent character 5 Lithium and magnesium have a diagonal relationship due to their similar atomic radii 5 so that they show some similarities For example lithium forms a stable nitride a property common among all the alkaline earth metals magnesium s group but unique among the alkali metals 85 In addition among their respective groups only lithium and magnesium form organometallic compounds with significant covalent character e g LiMe and MgMe2 86 Lithium fluoride is the only alkali metal halide that is poorly soluble in water 5 and lithium hydroxide is the only alkali metal hydroxide that is not deliquescent 5 Conversely lithium perchlorate and other lithium salts with large anions that cannot be polarised are much more stable than the analogous compounds of the other alkali metals probably because Li has a high solvation energy 11 76 This effect also means that most simple lithium salts are commonly encountered in hydrated form because the anhydrous forms are extremely hygroscopic this allows salts like lithium chloride and lithium bromide to be used in dehumidifiers and air conditioners 11 76 Francium edit Francium is also predicted to show some differences due to its high atomic weight causing its electrons to travel at considerable fractions of the speed of light and thus making relativistic effects more prominent In contrast to the trend of decreasing electronegativities and ionisation energies of the alkali metals francium s electronegativity and ionisation energy are predicted to be higher than caesium s due to the relativistic stabilisation of the 7s electrons also its atomic radius is expected to be abnormally low Thus contrary to expectation caesium is the most reactive of the alkali metals not francium 68 37 1729 87 All known physical properties of francium also deviate from the clear trends going from lithium to caesium such as the first ionisation energy electron affinity and anion polarisability though due to the paucity of known data about francium many sources give extrapolated values ignoring that relativistic effects make the trend from lithium to caesium become inapplicable at francium 87 Some of the few properties of francium that have been predicted taking relativity into account are the electron affinity 47 2 kJ mol 88 and the enthalpy of dissociation of the Fr2 molecule 42 1 kJ mol 89 The CsFr molecule is polarised as Cs Fr showing that the 7s subshell of francium is much more strongly affected by relativistic effects than the 6s subshell of caesium 87 Additionally francium superoxide FrO2 is expected to have significant covalent character unlike the other alkali metal superoxides because of bonding contributions from the 6p electrons of francium 87 Nuclear edit Primordial isotopes of the alkali metals Z Alkali metal Stable Decays unstable italicsodd odd isotopes coloured pink3 lithium 2 7 Li 6 Li 11 sodium 1 23 Na 19 potassium 2 1 39 K 41 K 40 K37 rubidium 1 1 85 Rb 87 Rb 55 caesium 1 133 Cs 87 francium No primordial isotopes 223 Fr is a radiogenic nuclide Radioactive 40K t1 2 1 25 109 years 87Rb t1 2 4 9 1010 years 223Fr t1 2 22 0 min All the alkali metals have odd atomic numbers hence their isotopes must be either odd odd both proton and neutron number are odd or odd even proton number is odd but neutron number is even Odd odd nuclei have even mass numbers whereas odd even nuclei have odd mass numbers Odd odd primordial nuclides are rare because most odd odd nuclei are highly unstable with respect to beta decay because the decay products are even even and are therefore more strongly bound due to nuclear pairing effects 90 Due to the great rarity of odd odd nuclei almost all the primordial isotopes of the alkali metals are odd even the exceptions being the light stable isotope lithium 6 and the long lived radioisotope potassium 40 For a given odd mass number there can be only a single beta stable nuclide since there is not a difference in binding energy between even odd and odd even comparable to that between even even and odd odd leaving other nuclides of the same mass number isobars free to beta decay toward the lowest mass nuclide An effect of the instability of an odd number of either type of nucleons is that odd numbered elements such as the alkali metals tend to have fewer stable isotopes than even numbered elements Of the 26 monoisotopic elements that have only a single stable isotope all but one have an odd atomic number and all but one also have an even number of neutrons Beryllium is the single exception to both rules due to its low atomic number 90 All of the alkali metals except lithium and caesium have at least one naturally occurring radioisotope sodium 22 and sodium 24 are trace radioisotopes produced cosmogenically 91 potassium 40 and rubidium 87 have very long half lives and thus occur naturally 92 and all isotopes of francium are radioactive 92 Caesium was also thought to be radioactive in the early 20th century 93 94 although it has no naturally occurring radioisotopes 92 Francium had not been discovered yet at that time The natural long lived radioisotope of potassium potassium 40 makes up about 0 012 of natural potassium 95 and thus natural potassium is weakly radioactive This natural radioactivity became a basis for a mistaken claim of the discovery for element 87 the next alkali metal after caesium in 1925 31 32 Natural rubidium is similarly slightly radioactive with 27 83 being the long lived radioisotope rubidium 87 11 74 Caesium 137 with a half life of 30 17 years is one of the two principal medium lived fission products along with strontium 90 which are responsible for most of the radioactivity of spent nuclear fuel after several years of cooling up to several hundred years after use It constitutes most of the radioactivity still left from the Chernobyl accident Caesium 137 undergoes high energy beta decay and eventually becomes stable barium 137 It is a strong emitter of gamma radiation Caesium 137 has a very low rate of neutron capture and cannot be feasibly disposed of in this way but must be allowed to decay 96 Caesium 137 has been used as a tracer in hydrologic studies analogous to the use of tritium 97 Small amounts of caesium 134 and caesium 137 were released into the environment during nearly all nuclear weapon tests and some nuclear accidents most notably the Goiania accident and the Chernobyl disaster As of 2005 caesium 137 is the principal source of radiation in the zone of alienation around the Chernobyl nuclear power plant 98 Its chemical properties as one of the alkali metals make it one of the most problematic of the short to medium lifetime fission products because it easily moves and spreads in nature due to the high water solubility of its salts and is taken up by the body which mistakes it for its essential congeners sodium and potassium 99 114 Periodic trends editThe alkali metals are more similar to each other than the elements in any other group are to each other 5 For instance when moving down the table all known alkali metals show increasing atomic radius 72 decreasing electronegativity 72 increasing reactivity 5 and decreasing melting and boiling points 72 as well as heats of fusion and vaporisation 11 75 In general their densities increase when moving down the table with the exception that potassium is less dense than sodium 72 Atomic and ionic radii edit nbsp Effective nuclear charge on an atomic electronThe atomic radii of the alkali metals increase going down the group 72 Because of the shielding effect when an atom has more than one electron shell each electron feels electric repulsion from the other electrons as well as electric attraction from the nucleus 100 In the alkali metals the outermost electron only feels a net charge of 1 as some of the nuclear charge which is equal to the atomic number is cancelled by the inner electrons the number of inner electrons of an alkali metal is always one less than the nuclear charge Therefore the only factor which affects the atomic radius of the alkali metals is the number of electron shells Since this number increases down the group the atomic radius must also increase down the group 72 The ionic radii of the alkali metals are much smaller than their atomic radii This is because the outermost electron of the alkali metals is in a different electron shell than the inner electrons and thus when it is removed the resulting atom has one fewer electron shell and is smaller Additionally the effective nuclear charge has increased and thus the electrons are attracted more strongly towards the nucleus and the ionic radius decreases 5 First ionisation energy edit nbsp Periodic trend for ionisation energy each period begins at a minimum for the alkali metals and ends at a maximum for the noble gases Predicted values are used for elements beyond 104 The first ionisation energy of an element or molecule is the energy required to move the most loosely held electron from one mole of gaseous atoms of the element or molecules to form one mole of gaseous ions with electric charge 1 The factors affecting the first ionisation energy are the nuclear charge the amount of shielding by the inner electrons and the distance from the most loosely held electron from the nucleus which is always an outer electron in main group elements The first two factors change the effective nuclear charge the most loosely held electron feels Since the outermost electron of alkali metals always feels the same effective nuclear charge 1 the only factor which affects the first ionisation energy is the distance from the outermost electron to the nucleus Since this distance increases down the group the outermost electron feels less attraction from the nucleus and thus the first ionisation energy decreases 72 This trend is broken in francium due to the relativistic stabilisation and contraction of the 7s orbital bringing francium s valence electron closer to the nucleus than would be expected from non relativistic calculations This makes francium s outermost electron feel more attraction from the nucleus increasing its first ionisation energy slightly beyond that of caesium 37 1729 The second ionisation energy of the alkali metals is much higher than the first as the second most loosely held electron is part of a fully filled electron shell and is thus difficult to remove 5 Reactivity edit The reactivities of the alkali metals increase going down the group This is the result of a combination of two factors the first ionisation energies and atomisation energies of the alkali metals Because the first ionisation energy of the alkali metals decreases down the group it is easier for the outermost electron to be removed from the atom and participate in chemical reactions thus increasing reactivity down the group The atomisation energy measures the strength of the metallic bond of an element which falls down the group as the atoms increase in radius and thus the metallic bond must increase in length making the delocalised electrons further away from the attraction of the nuclei of the heavier alkali metals Adding the atomisation and first ionisation energies gives a quantity closely related to but not equal to the activation energy of the reaction of an alkali metal with another substance This quantity decreases going down the group and so does the activation energy thus chemical reactions can occur faster and the reactivity increases down the group 101 Electronegativity edit nbsp The variation of Pauling electronegativity y axis as one descends the main groups of the periodic table from the second to the sixth periodElectronegativity is a chemical property that describes the tendency of an atom or a functional group to attract electrons or electron density towards itself 102 If the bond between sodium and chlorine in sodium chloride were covalent the pair of shared electrons would be attracted to the chlorine because the effective nuclear charge on the outer electrons is 7 in chlorine but is only 1 in sodium The electron pair is attracted so close to the chlorine atom that they are practically transferred to the chlorine atom an ionic bond However if the sodium atom was replaced by a lithium atom the electrons will not be attracted as close to the chlorine atom as before because the lithium atom is smaller making the electron pair more strongly attracted to the closer effective nuclear charge from lithium Hence the larger alkali metal atoms further down the group will be less electronegative as the bonding pair is less strongly attracted towards them As mentioned previously francium is expected to be an exception 72 Because of the higher electronegativity of lithium some of its compounds have a more covalent character For example lithium iodide LiI will dissolve in organic solvents a property of most covalent compounds 72 Lithium fluoride LiF is the only alkali halide that is not soluble in water 5 and lithium hydroxide LiOH is the only alkali metal hydroxide that is not deliquescent 5 Melting and boiling points edit The melting point of a substance is the point where it changes state from solid to liquid while the boiling point of a substance in liquid state is the point where the vapour pressure of the liquid equals the environmental pressure surrounding the liquid 103 104 and all the liquid changes state to gas As a metal is heated to its melting point the metallic bonds keeping the atoms in place weaken so that the atoms can move around and the metallic bonds eventually break completely at the metal s boiling point 72 105 Therefore the falling melting and boiling points of the alkali metals indicate that the strength of the metallic bonds of the alkali metals decreases down the group 72 This is because metal atoms are held together by the electromagnetic attraction from the positive ions to the delocalised electrons 72 105 As the atoms increase in size going down the group because their atomic radius increases the nuclei of the ions move further away from the delocalised electrons and hence the metallic bond becomes weaker so that the metal can more easily melt and boil thus lowering the melting and boiling points 72 The increased nuclear charge is not a relevant factor due to the shielding effect 72 Density edit The alkali metals all have the same crystal structure body centred cubic 11 and thus the only relevant factors are the number of atoms that can fit into a certain volume and the mass of one of the atoms since density is defined as mass per unit volume The first factor depends on the volume of the atom and thus the atomic radius which increases going down the group thus the volume of an alkali metal atom increases going down the group The mass of an alkali metal atom also increases going down the group Thus the trend for the densities of the alkali metals depends on their atomic weights and atomic radii if figures for these two factors are known the ratios between the densities of the alkali metals can then be calculated The resultant trend is that the densities of the alkali metals increase down the table with an exception at potassium Due to having the lowest atomic weight and the largest atomic radius of all the elements in their periods the alkali metals are the least dense metals in the periodic table 72 Lithium sodium and potassium are the only three metals in the periodic table that are less dense than water 5 in fact lithium is the least dense known solid at room temperature 11 75 Compounds editThe alkali metals form complete series of compounds with all usually encountered anions which well illustrate group trends These compounds can be described as involving the alkali metals losing electrons to acceptor species and forming monopositive ions 11 79 This description is most accurate for alkali halides and becomes less and less accurate as cationic and anionic charge increase and as the anion becomes larger and more polarisable For instance ionic bonding gives way to metallic bonding along the series NaCl Na2O Na2S Na3P Na3As Na3Sb Na3Bi Na 11 81 Hydroxides edit External videos nbsp Reactions of the alkali metals with water conducted by The Open University nbsp A reaction of 3 pounds 1 4 kg of sodium with waterAll the alkali metals react vigorously or explosively with cold water producing an aqueous solution of a strongly basic alkali metal hydroxide and releasing hydrogen gas 101 This reaction becomes more vigorous going down the group lithium reacts steadily with effervescence but sodium and potassium can ignite and rubidium and caesium sink in water and generate hydrogen gas so rapidly that shock waves form in the water that may shatter glass containers 5 When an alkali metal is dropped into water it produces an explosion of which there are two separate stages The metal reacts with the water first breaking the hydrogen bonds in the water and producing hydrogen gas this takes place faster for the more reactive heavier alkali metals Second the heat generated by the first part of the reaction often ignites the hydrogen gas causing it to burn explosively into the surrounding air This secondary hydrogen gas explosion produces the visible flame above the bowl of water lake or other body of water not the initial reaction of the metal with water which tends to happen mostly under water 75 The alkali metal hydroxides are the most basic known hydroxides 11 87 Recent research has suggested that the explosive behavior of alkali metals in water is driven by a Coulomb explosion rather than solely by rapid generation of hydrogen itself 106 All alkali metals melt as a part of the reaction with water Water molecules ionise the bare metallic surface of the liquid metal leaving a positively charged metal surface and negatively charged water ions The attraction between the charged metal and water ions will rapidly increase the surface area causing an exponential increase of ionisation When the repulsive forces within the liquid metal surface exceeds the forces of the surface tension it vigorously explodes 106 The hydroxides themselves are the most basic hydroxides known reacting with acids to give salts and with alcohols to give oligomeric alkoxides They easily react with carbon dioxide to form carbonates or bicarbonates or with hydrogen sulfide to form sulfides or bisulfides and may be used to separate thiols from petroleum They react with amphoteric oxides for example the oxides of aluminium zinc tin and lead react with the alkali metal hydroxides to give aluminates zincates stannates and plumbates Silicon dioxide is acidic and thus the alkali metal hydroxides can also attack silicate glass 11 87 Intermetallic compounds edit nbsp Liquid NaK alloy at room temperatureThe alkali metals form many intermetallic compounds with each other and the elements from groups 2 to 13 in the periodic table of varying stoichiometries 11 81 such as the sodium amalgams with mercury including Na5Hg8 and Na3Hg 107 Some of these have ionic characteristics taking the alloys with gold the most electronegative of metals as an example NaAu and KAu are metallic but RbAu and CsAu are semiconductors 11 81 NaK is an alloy of sodium and potassium that is very useful because it is liquid at room temperature although precautions must be taken due to its extreme reactivity towards water and air The eutectic mixture melts at 12 6 C 108 An alloy of 41 caesium 47 sodium and 12 potassium has the lowest known melting point of any metal or alloy 78 C 23 Compounds with the group 13 elements edit The intermetallic compounds of the alkali metals with the heavier group 13 elements aluminium gallium indium and thallium such as NaTl are poor conductors or semiconductors unlike the normal alloys with the preceding elements implying that the alkali metal involved has lost an electron to the Zintl anions involved 109 Nevertheless while the elements in group 14 and beyond tend to form discrete anionic clusters group 13 elements tend to form polymeric ions with the alkali metal cations located between the giant ionic lattice For example NaTl consists of a polymeric anion Tl n with a covalent diamond cubic structure with Na ions located between the anionic lattice The larger alkali metals cannot fit similarly into an anionic lattice and tend to force the heavier group 13 elements to form anionic clusters 110 Boron is a special case being the only nonmetal in group 13 The alkali metal borides tend to be boron rich involving appreciable boron boron bonding involving deltahedral structures 11 147 8 and are thermally unstable due to the alkali metals having a very high vapour pressure at elevated temperatures This makes direct synthesis problematic because the alkali metals do not react with boron below 700 C and thus this must be accomplished in sealed containers with the alkali metal in excess Furthermore exceptionally in this group reactivity with boron decreases down the group lithium reacts completely at 700 C but sodium at 900 C and potassium not until 1200 C and the reaction is instantaneous for lithium but takes hours for potassium Rubidium and caesium borides have not even been characterised Various phases are known such as LiB10 NaB6 NaB15 and KB6 111 112 Under high pressure the boron boron bonding in the lithium borides changes from following Wade s rules to forming Zintl anions like the rest of group 13 113 Compounds with the group 14 elements edit nbsp nbsp Side left and top right views of the graphite intercalation compound KC8 Lithium and sodium react with carbon to form acetylides Li2C2 and Na2C2 which can also be obtained by reaction of the metal with acetylene Potassium rubidium and caesium react with graphite their atoms are intercalated between the hexagonal graphite layers forming graphite intercalation compounds of formulae MC60 dark grey almost black MC48 dark grey almost black MC36 blue MC24 steel blue and MC8 bronze M K Rb or Cs These compounds are over 200 times more electrically conductive than pure graphite suggesting that the valence electron of the alkali metal is transferred to the graphite layers e g M C 8 66 Upon heating of KC8 the elimination of potassium atoms results in the conversion in sequence to KC24 KC36 KC48 and finally KC60 KC8 is a very strong reducing agent and is pyrophoric and explodes on contact with water 114 115 While the larger alkali metals K Rb and Cs initially form MC8 the smaller ones initially form MC6 and indeed they require reaction of the metals with graphite at high temperatures around 500 C to form 116 Apart from this the alkali metals are such strong reducing agents that they can even reduce buckminsterfullerene to produce solid fullerides MnC60 sodium potassium rubidium and caesium can form fullerides where n 2 3 4 or 6 and rubidium and caesium additionally can achieve n 1 11 285 When the alkali metals react with the heavier elements in the carbon group silicon germanium tin and lead ionic substances with cage like structures are formed such as the silicides M4Si4 M K Rb or Cs which contains M and tetrahedral Si4 4 ions 66 The chemistry of alkali metal germanides involving the germanide ion Ge4 and other cluster Zintl ions such as Ge2 4 Ge4 9 Ge2 9 and Ge9 2 6 is largely analogous to that of the corresponding silicides 11 393 Alkali metal stannides are mostly ionic sometimes with the stannide ion Sn4 110 and sometimes with more complex Zintl ions such as Sn4 9 which appears in tetrapotassium nonastannide K4Sn9 117 The monatomic plumbide ion Pb4 is unknown and indeed its formation is predicted to be energetically unfavourable alkali metal plumbides have complex Zintl ions such as Pb4 9 These alkali metal germanides stannides and plumbides may be produced by reducing germanium tin and lead with sodium metal in liquid ammonia 11 394 Nitrides and pnictides edit nbsp Unit cell ball and stick model of lithium nitride 118 On the basis of size a tetrahedral structure would be expected but that would be geometrically impossible thus lithium nitride takes on this unique crystal structure 11 76 Lithium the lightest of the alkali metals is the only alkali metal which reacts with nitrogen at standard conditions and its nitride is the only stable alkali metal nitride Nitrogen is an unreactive gas because breaking the strong triple bond in the dinitrogen molecule N2 requires a lot of energy The formation of an alkali metal nitride would consume the ionisation energy of the alkali metal forming M ions the energy required to break the triple bond in N2 and the formation of N3 ions and all the energy released from the formation of an alkali metal nitride is from the lattice energy of the alkali metal nitride The lattice energy is maximised with small highly charged ions the alkali metals do not form highly charged ions only forming ions with a charge of 1 so only lithium the smallest alkali metal can release enough lattice energy to make the reaction with nitrogen exothermic forming lithium nitride The reactions of the other alkali metals with nitrogen would not release enough lattice energy and would thus be endothermic so they do not form nitrides at standard conditions 85 Sodium nitride Na3N and potassium nitride K3N while existing are extremely unstable being prone to decomposing back into their constituent elements and cannot be produced by reacting the elements with each other at standard conditions 119 120 Steric hindrance forbids the existence of rubidium or caesium nitride 11 417 However sodium and potassium form colourless azide salts involving the linear N 3 anion due to the large size of the alkali metal cations they are thermally stable enough to be able to melt before decomposing 11 417 All the alkali metals react readily with phosphorus and arsenic to form phosphides and arsenides with the formula M3Pn where M represents an alkali metal and Pn represents a pnictogen phosphorus arsenic antimony or bismuth This is due to the greater size of the P3 and As3 ions so that less lattice energy needs to be released for the salts to form 66 These are not the only phosphides and arsenides of the alkali metals for example potassium has nine different known phosphides with formulae K3P K4P3 K5P4 KP K4P6 K3P7 K3P11 KP10 3 and KP15 121 While most metals form arsenides only the alkali and alkaline earth metals form mostly ionic arsenides The structure of Na3As is complex with unusually short Na Na distances of 328 330 pm which are shorter than in sodium metal and this indicates that even with these electropositive metals the bonding cannot be straightforwardly ionic 11 Other alkali metal arsenides not conforming to the formula M3As are known such as LiAs which has a metallic lustre and electrical conductivity indicating the presence of some metallic bonding 11 The antimonides are unstable and reactive as the Sb3 ion is a strong reducing agent reaction of them with acids form the toxic and unstable gas stibine SbH3 122 Indeed they have some metallic properties and the alkali metal antimonides of stoichiometry MSb involve antimony atoms bonded in a spiral Zintl structure 123 Bismuthides are not even wholly ionic they are intermetallic compounds containing partially metallic and partially ionic bonds 124 Oxides and chalcogenides edit See also Alkali metal oxide nbsp Rb9O2 cluster composed of two regular octahedra connected to each other by one face nbsp Cs11O3 cluster composed of three regular octahedra where each octahedron is connected to both of the others by one face each All three octahedra have one edge in common All the alkali metals react vigorously with oxygen at standard conditions They form various types of oxides such as simple oxides containing the O2 ion peroxides containing the O2 2 ion where there is a single bond between the two oxygen atoms superoxides containing the O 2 ion and many others Lithium burns in air to form lithium oxide but sodium reacts with oxygen to form a mixture of sodium oxide and sodium peroxide Potassium forms a mixture of potassium peroxide and potassium superoxide while rubidium and caesium form the superoxide exclusively Their reactivity increases going down the group while lithium sodium and potassium merely burn in air rubidium and caesium are pyrophoric spontaneously catch fire in air 85 The smaller alkali metals tend to polarise the larger anions the peroxide and superoxide due to their small size This attracts the electrons in the more complex anions towards one of its constituent oxygen atoms forming an oxide ion and an oxygen atom This causes lithium to form the oxide exclusively on reaction with oxygen at room temperature This effect becomes drastically weaker for the larger sodium and potassium allowing them to form the less stable peroxides Rubidium and caesium at the bottom of the group are so large that even the least stable superoxides can form Because the superoxide releases the most energy when formed the superoxide is preferentially formed for the larger alkali metals where the more complex anions are not polarised The oxides and peroxides for these alkali metals do exist but do not form upon direct reaction of the metal with oxygen at standard conditions 85 In addition the small size of the Li and O2 ions contributes to their forming a stable ionic lattice structure Under controlled conditions however all the alkali metals with the exception of francium are known to form their oxides peroxides and superoxides The alkali metal peroxides and superoxides are powerful oxidising agents Sodium peroxide and potassium superoxide react with carbon dioxide to form the alkali metal carbonate and oxygen gas which allows them to be used in submarine air purifiers the presence of water vapour naturally present in breath makes the removal of carbon dioxide by potassium superoxide even more efficient 66 125 All the stable alkali metals except lithium can form red ozonides MO3 through low temperature reaction of the powdered anhydrous hydroxide with ozone the ozonides may be then extracted using liquid ammonia They slowly decompose at standard conditions to the superoxides and oxygen and hydrolyse immediately to the hydroxides when in contact with water 11 85 Potassium rubidium and caesium also form sesquioxides M2O3 which may be better considered peroxide disuperoxides M 4 O2 2 O 2 2 11 85 Rubidium and caesium can form a great variety of suboxides with the metals in formal oxidation states below 1 11 85 Rubidium can form Rb6O and Rb9O2 copper coloured upon oxidation in air while caesium forms an immense variety of oxides such as the ozonide CsO3 126 127 and several brightly coloured suboxides 128 such as Cs7O bronze Cs4O red violet Cs11O3 violet Cs3O dark green 129 CsO Cs3O2 130 as well as Cs7O2 131 132 The last of these may be heated under vacuum to generate Cs2O 57 The alkali metals can also react analogously with the heavier chalcogens sulfur selenium tellurium and polonium and all the alkali metal chalcogenides are known with the exception of francium s Reaction with an excess of the chalcogen can similarly result in lower chalcogenides with chalcogen ions containing chains of the chalcogen atoms in question For example sodium can react with sulfur to form the sulfide Na2S and various polysulfides with the formula Na2Sx x from 2 to 6 containing the S2 x ions 66 Due to the basicity of the Se2 and Te2 ions the alkali metal selenides and tellurides are alkaline in solution when reacted directly with selenium and tellurium alkali metal polyselenides and polytellurides are formed along with the selenides and tellurides with the Se2 x and Te2 x ions 133 They may be obtained directly from the elements in liquid ammonia or when air is not present and are colourless water soluble compounds that air oxidises quickly back to selenium or tellurium 11 766 The alkali metal polonides are all ionic compounds containing the Po2 ion they are very chemically stable and can be produced by direct reaction of the elements at around 300 400 C 11 766 134 135 Halides hydrides and pseudohalides edit Main article Alkali metal halide The alkali metals are among the most electropositive elements on the periodic table and thus tend to bond ionically to the most electronegative elements on the periodic table the halogens fluorine chlorine bromine iodine and astatine forming salts known as the alkali metal halides The reaction is very vigorous and can sometimes result in explosions 11 76 All twenty stable alkali metal halides are known the unstable ones are not known with the exception of sodium astatide because of the great instability and rarity of astatine and francium The most well known of the twenty is certainly sodium chloride otherwise known as common salt All of the stable alkali metal halides have the formula MX where M is an alkali metal and X is a halogen They are all white ionic crystalline solids that have high melting points 5 85 All the alkali metal halides are soluble in water except for lithium fluoride LiF which is insoluble in water due to its very high lattice enthalpy The high lattice enthalpy of lithium fluoride is due to the small sizes of the Li and F ions causing the electrostatic interactions between them to be strong 5 a similar effect occurs for magnesium fluoride consistent with the diagonal relationship between lithium and magnesium 11 76 The alkali metals also react similarly with hydrogen to form ionic alkali metal hydrides where the hydride anion acts as a pseudohalide these are often used as reducing agents producing hydrides complex metal hydrides or hydrogen gas 11 83 66 Other pseudohalides are also known notably the cyanides These are isostructural to the respective halides except for lithium cyanide indicating that the cyanide ions may rotate freely 11 322 Ternary alkali metal halide oxides such as Na3ClO K3BrO yellow Na4Br2O Na4I2O and K4Br2O are also known 11 83 The polyhalides are rather unstable although those of rubidium and caesium are greatly stabilised by the feeble polarising power of these extremely large cations 11 835 Coordination complexes edit nbsp 18 crown 6 coordinating a potassium ion nbsp Structure of 2 2 2 Cryptand encapsulating a potassium cation purple At crystalline state obtained with an X ray diffraction 136 Alkali metal cations do not usually form coordination complexes with simple Lewis bases due to their low charge of just 1 and their relatively large size thus the Li ion forms most complexes and the heavier alkali metal ions form less and less though exceptions occur for weak complexes 11 90 Lithium in particular has a very rich coordination chemistry in which it exhibits coordination numbers from 1 to 12 although octahedral hexacoordination is its preferred mode 11 90 1 In aqueous solution the alkali metal ions exist as octahedral hexahydrate complexes M H2O 6 with the exception of the lithium ion which due to its small size forms tetrahedral tetrahydrate complexes Li H2O 4 the alkali metals form these complexes because their ions are attracted by electrostatic forces of attraction to the polar water molecules Because of this anhydrous salts containing alkali metal cations are often used as desiccants 66 Alkali metals also readily form complexes with crown ethers e g 12 crown 4 for Li 15 crown 5 for Na 18 crown 6 for K and 21 crown 7 for Rb and cryptands due to electrostatic attraction 66 Ammonia solutions edit The alkali metals dissolve slowly in liquid ammonia forming ammoniacal solutions of solvated metal cation M and solvated electron e which react to form hydrogen gas and the alkali metal amide MNH2 where M represents an alkali metal this was first noted by Humphry Davy in 1809 and rediscovered by W Weyl in 1864 The process may be speeded up by a catalyst Similar solutions are formed by the heavy divalent alkaline earth metals calcium strontium barium as well as the divalent lanthanides europium and ytterbium The amide salt is quite insoluble and readily precipitates out of solution leaving intensely coloured ammonia solutions of the alkali metals In 1907 Charles A Kraus identified the colour as being due to the presence of solvated electrons which contribute to the high electrical conductivity of these solutions At low concentrations below 3 M the solution is dark blue and has ten times the conductivity of aqueous sodium chloride at higher concentrations above 3 M the solution is copper coloured and has approximately the conductivity of liquid metals like mercury 11 66 137 In addition to the alkali metal amide salt and solvated electrons such ammonia solutions also contain the alkali metal cation M the neutral alkali metal atom M diatomic alkali metal molecules M2 and alkali metal anions M These are unstable and eventually become the more thermodynamically stable alkali metal amide and hydrogen gas Solvated electrons are powerful reducing agents and are often used in chemical synthesis 66 Organometallic edit Organolithium edit Main article Organolithium reagent nbsp Structure of the octahedral n butyllithium hexamer C4H9Li 6 138 The aggregates are held together by delocalised covalent bonds between lithium and the terminal carbon of the butyl chain 139 There is no direct lithium lithium bonding in any organolithium compound 123 264 nbsp Solid phenyllithium forms monoclinic crystals that can be described as consisting of dimeric Li2 C6H5 2 subunits The lithium atoms and the ipso carbons of the phenyl rings form a planar four membered ring The plane of the phenyl groups is perpendicular to the plane of this Li2C2 ring Additional strong intermolecular bonding occurs between these phenyllithium dimers and the p electrons of the phenyl groups in the adjacent dimers resulting in an infinite polymeric ladder structure 140 Being the smallest alkali metal lithium forms the widest variety of and most stable organometallic compounds which are bonded covalently Organolithium compounds are electrically non conducting volatile solids or liquids that melt at low temperatures and tend to form oligomers with the structure RLi x where R is the organic group As the electropositive nature of lithium puts most of the charge density of the bond on the carbon atom effectively creating a carbanion organolithium compounds are extremely powerful bases and nucleophiles For use as bases butyllithiums are often used and are commercially available An example of an organolithium compound is methyllithium CH3Li x which exists in tetrameric x 4 tetrahedral and hexameric x 6 octahedral forms 66 141 Organolithium compounds especially n butyllithium are useful reagents in organic synthesis as might be expected given lithium s diagonal relationship with magnesium which plays an important role in the Grignard reaction 11 102 For example alkyllithiums and aryllithiums may be used to synthesise aldehydes and ketones by reaction with metal carbonyls The reaction with nickel tetracarbonyl for example proceeds through an unstable acyl nickel carbonyl complex which then undergoes electrophilic substitution to give the desired aldehyde using H as the electrophile or ketone using an alkyl halide product 11 105 LiR Ni CO 4 Li RCONi CO 3 displaystyle ce LiR Ni CO 4 longrightarrow Li RCONi CO 3 nbsp Li RCONi CO 3 solvent H Li RCHO solvent Ni CO 3 displaystyle ce Li RCONi CO 3 gt ce H ce solvent Li RCHO solvent Ni CO 3 nbsp Li RCONi CO 3 solvent R Br Li RR CO solvent Ni CO 3 displaystyle ce Li RCONi CO 3 gt ce R Br ce solvent Li RR CO solvent Ni CO 3 nbsp Alkyllithiums and aryllithiums may also react with N N disubstituted amides to give aldehydes and ketones and symmetrical ketones by reacting with carbon monoxide They thermally decompose to eliminate a b hydrogen producing alkenes and lithium hydride another route is the reaction of ethers with alkyl and aryllithiums that act as strong bases 11 105 In non polar solvents aryllithiums react as the carbanions they effectively are turning carbon dioxide to aromatic carboxylic acids ArCO2H and aryl ketones to tertiary carbinols Ar 2C Ar OH Finally they may be used to synthesise other organometallic compounds through metal halogen exchange 11 106 Heavier alkali metals edit Unlike the organolithium compounds the organometallic compounds of the heavier alkali metals are predominantly ionic The application of organosodium compounds in chemistry is limited in part due to competition from organolithium compounds which are commercially available and exhibit more convenient reactivity The principal organosodium compound of commercial importance is sodium cyclopentadienide Sodium tetraphenylborate can also be classified as an organosodium compound since in the solid state sodium is bound to the aryl groups Organometallic compounds of the higher alkali metals are even more reactive than organosodium compounds and of limited utility A notable reagent is Schlosser s base a mixture of n butyllithium and potassium tert butoxide This reagent reacts with propene to form the compound allylpotassium KCH2CHCH2 cis 2 Butene and trans 2 butene equilibrate when in contact with alkali metals Whereas isomerisation is fast with lithium and sodium it is slow with the heavier alkali metals The heavier alkali metals also favour the sterically congested conformation 142 Several crystal structures of organopotassium compounds have been reported establishing that they like the sodium compounds are polymeric 143 Organosodium organopotassium organorubidium and organocaesium compounds are all mostly ionic and are insoluble or nearly so in nonpolar solvents 66 Alkyl and aryl derivatives of sodium and potassium tend to react with air They cause the cleavage of ethers generating alkoxides Unlike alkyllithium compounds alkylsodiums and alkylpotassiums cannot be made by reacting the metals with alkyl halides because Wurtz coupling occurs 123 265 RM R X R R MXAs such they have to be made by reacting alkylmercury compounds with sodium or potassium metal in inert hydrocarbon solvents While methylsodium forms tetramers like methyllithium methylpotassium is more ionic and has the nickel arsenide structure with discrete methyl anions and potassium cations 123 265 The alkali metals and their hydrides react with acidic hydrocarbons for example cyclopentadienes and terminal alkynes to give salts Liquid ammonia ether or hydrocarbon solvents are used the most common of which being tetrahydrofuran The most important of these compounds is sodium cyclopentadienide NaC5H5 an important precursor to many transition metal cyclopentadienyl derivatives 123 265 Similarly the alkali metals react with cyclooctatetraene in tetrahydrofuran to give alkali metal cyclooctatetraenides for example dipotassium cyclooctatetraenide K2C8H8 is an important precursor to many metal cyclooctatetraenyl derivatives such as uranocene 123 266 The large and very weakly polarising alkali metal cations can stabilise large aromatic polarisable radical anions such as the dark green sodium naphthalenide Na C10H8 a strong reducing agent 123 266 Representative reactions of alkali metals editReaction with oxygen edit Upon reacting with oxygen alkali metals form oxides peroxides superoxides and suboxides However the first three are more common The table below 144 shows the types of compounds formed in reaction with oxygen The compound in brackets represents the minor product of combustion Alkali metal Oxide Peroxide SuperoxideLi Li2O Li2O2 Na Na2O Na2O2K KO2Rb RbO2Cs CsO2The alkali metal peroxides are ionic compounds that are unstable in water The peroxide anion is weakly bound to the cation and it is hydrolysed forming stronger covalent bonds Na2O2 2H2O 2NaOH H2O2The other oxygen compounds are also unstable in water 2KO2 2H2O 2KOH H2O2 O2 145 Li2O H2O 2LiOHReaction with sulfur edit With sulfur they form sulfides and polysulfides 146 2Na 1 8S8 Na2S 1 8S8 Na2S2 Na2S7Because alkali metal sulfides are essentially salts of a weak acid and a strong base they form basic solutions S2 H2O HS HO HS H2O H2S HO Reaction with nitrogen edit Lithium is the only metal that combines directly with nitrogen at room temperature 3Li 1 2N2 Li3NLi3N can react with water to liberate ammonia Li3N 3H2O 3LiOH NH3Reaction with hydrogen edit With hydrogen alkali metals form saline hydrides that hydrolyse in water 2 Na H 2 D 2 NaH displaystyle ce 2 Na H2 gt ce Delta 2 NaH nbsp 2 NaH 2 H 2 O 2 NaOH H 2 displaystyle ce 2NaH 2H2O longrightarrow 2NaOH H2 uparrow nbsp Reaction with carbon edit Lithium is the only metal that reacts directly with carbon to give dilithium acetylide Na and K can react with acetylene to give acetylides 147 2 Li 2 C Li 2 C 2 displaystyle ce 2Li 2C longrightarrow Li2C2 nbsp 2 Na 2 C 2 H 2 150 o C 2 NaC 2 H H 2 displaystyle ce 2Na 2C2H2 gt ce 150 o C 2NaC2H H2 nbsp 2 Na 2 NaC 2 H 220 o C 2 Na 2 C 2 H 2 displaystyle ce 2Na 2NaC2H gt ce 220 o C 2Na2C2 H2 nbsp Reaction with water edit On reaction with water they generate hydroxide ions and hydrogen gas This reaction is vigorous and highly exothermic and the hydrogen resulted may ignite in air or even explode in the case of Rb and Cs 144 Na H2O NaOH 1 2H2Reaction with other salts edit The alkali metals are very good reducing agents They can reduce metal cations that are less electropositive Titanium is produced industrially by the reduction of titanium tetrachloride with Na at 400 C van Arkel de Boer process TiCl4 4Na 4NaCl TiReaction with organohalide compounds edit Alkali metals react with halogen derivatives to generate hydrocarbon via the Wurtz reaction 2CH3 Cl 2Na H3C CH3 2NaClAlkali metals in liquid ammonia edit Alkali metals dissolve in liquid ammonia or other donor solvents like aliphatic amines or hexamethylphosphoramide to give blue solutions These solutions are believed to contain free electrons 144 Na xNH3 Na e NH3 x Due to the presence of solvated electrons these solutions are very powerful reducing agents used in organic synthesis nbsp Reduction reactions using sodium in liquid ammoniaReaction 1 is known as Birch reduction Other reductions 144 that can be carried by these solutions are S8 2e S82 Fe CO 5 2e Fe CO 42 COExtensions edit nbsp Empirical Na Cs Mg Ra and predicted Fr Uhp Ubn Uhh atomic radius of the alkali and alkaline earth metals from the third to the ninth period measured in angstroms 37 1730 148 Although francium is the heaviest alkali metal that has been discovered there has been some theoretical work predicting the physical and chemical characteristics of hypothetical heavier alkali metals Being the first period 8 element the undiscovered element ununennium element 119 is predicted to be the next alkali metal after francium and behave much like their lighter congeners however it is also predicted to differ from the lighter alkali metals in some properties 37 1729 1730 Its chemistry is predicted to be closer to that of potassium 42 or rubidium 37 1729 1730 instead of caesium or francium This is unusual as periodic trends ignoring relativistic effects would predict ununennium to be even more reactive than caesium and francium This lowered reactivity is due to the relativistic stabilisation of ununennium s valence electron increasing ununennium s first ionisation energy and decreasing the metallic and ionic radii 42 this effect is already seen for francium 37 1729 1730 This assumes that ununennium will behave chemically as an alkali metal which although likely may not be true due to relativistic effects 149 The relativistic stabilisation of the 8s orbital also increases ununennium s electron affinity far beyond that of caesium and francium indeed ununennium is expected to have an electron affinity higher than all the alkali metals lighter than it Relativistic effects also cause a very large drop in the polarisability of ununennium 37 1729 1730 On the other hand ununennium is predicted to continue the trend of melting points decreasing going down the group being expected to have a melting point between 0 C and 30 C 37 1724 nbsp Empirical Na Fr and predicted Uue electron affinity of the alkali metals from the third to the eighth period measured in electron volts 37 1730 148 The stabilisation of ununennium s valence electron and thus the contraction of the 8s orbital cause its atomic radius to be lowered to 240 pm 37 1729 1730 very close to that of rubidium 247 pm 5 so that the chemistry of ununennium in the 1 oxidation state should be more similar to the chemistry of rubidium than to that of francium On the other hand the ionic radius of the Uue ion is predicted to be larger than that of Rb because the 7p orbitals are destabilised and are thus larger than the p orbitals of the lower shells Ununennium may also show the 3 37 1729 1730 and 5 oxidation states 150 which are not seen in any other alkali metal 11 28 in addition to the 1 oxidation state that is characteristic of the other alkali metals and is also the main oxidation state of all the known alkali metals this is because of the destabilisation and expansion of the 7p3 2 spinor causing its outermost electrons to have a lower ionisation energy than what would otherwise be expected 11 28 37 1729 1730 Indeed many ununennium compounds are expected to have a large covalent character due to the involvement of the 7p3 2 electrons in the bonding 87 nbsp Empirical Na Fr Mg Ra and predicted Uue Uhp Ubn Uhh ionisation energy of the alkali and alkaline earth metals from the third to the ninth period measured in electron volts 37 1730 148 Not as much work has been done predicting the properties of the alkali metals beyond ununennium Although a simple extrapolation of the periodic table by the Aufbau principle would put element 169 unhexennium under ununennium Dirac Fock calculations predict that the next element after ununennium with alkali metal like properties may be element 165 unhexpentium which is predicted to have the electron configuration Og 5g18 6f14 7d10 8s2 8p1 22 9s1 37 1729 1730 148 This element would be intermediate in properties between an alkali metal and a group 11 element and while its physical and atomic properties would be closer to the former its chemistry may be closer to that of the latter Further calculations show that unhexpentium would follow the trend of increasing ionisation energy beyond caesium having an ionisation energy comparable to that of sodium and that it should also continue the trend of decreasing atomic radii beyond caesium having an atomic radius comparable to that of potassium 37 1729 1730 However the 7d electrons of unhexpentium may also be able to participate in chemical reactions along with the 9s electron possibly allowing oxidation states beyond 1 whence the likely transition metal behaviour of unhexpentium 37 1732 1733 151 Due to the alkali and alkaline earth metals both being s block elements these predictions for the trends and properties of ununennium and unhexpentium also mostly hold quite similarly for the corresponding alkaline earth metals unbinilium Ubn and unhexhexium Uhh 37 1729 1733 Unsepttrium element 173 may be an even better heavier homologue of ununennium with a predicted electron configuration of Usb 6g1 it returns to the alkali metal like situation of having one easily removed electron far above a closed p shell in energy and is expected to be even more reactive than caesium 152 153 The probable properties of further alkali metals beyond unsepttrium have not been explored yet as of 2019 and they may or may not be able to exist 148 In periods 8 and above of the periodic table relativistic and shell structure effects become so strong that extrapolations from lighter congeners become completely inaccurate In addition the relativistic and shell structure effects which stabilise the s orbitals and destabilise and expand the d f and g orbitals of higher shells have opposite effects causing even larger difference between relativistic and non relativistic calculations of the properties of elements with such high atomic numbers 37 1732 1733 Interest in the chemical properties of ununennium unhexpentium and unsepttrium stems from the fact that they are located close to the expected locations of islands of stability centered at elements 122 306Ubb and 164 482Uhq 154 155 156 Pseudo alkali metals editMany other substances are similar to the alkali metals in their tendency to form monopositive cations Analogously to the pseudohalogens they have sometimes been called pseudo alkali metals These substances include some elements and many more polyatomic ions the polyatomic ions are especially similar to the alkali metals in their large size and weak polarising power 157 Hydrogen edit The element hydrogen with one electron per neutral atom is usually placed at the top of Group 1 of the periodic table because of its electron configuration But hydrogen is not normally considered to be an alkali metal 158 Metallic hydrogen which only exists at very high pressures is known for its electrical and magnetic properties not its chemical properties 159 Under typical conditions pure hydrogen exists as a diatomic gas consisting of two atoms per molecule H2 160 however the alkali metals form diatomic molecules such as dilithium Li2 only at high temperatures when they are in the gaseous state 161 Hydrogen like the alkali metals has one valence electron 123 and reacts easily with the halogens 123 but the similarities mostly end there because of the small size of a bare proton H compared to the alkali metal cations 123 Its placement above lithium is primarily due to its electron configuration 158 It is sometimes placed above fluorine due to their similar chemical properties though the resemblance is likewise not absolute 162 The first ionisation energy of hydrogen 1312 0 kJ mol is much higher than that of the alkali metals 163 164 As only one additional electron is required to fill in the outermost shell of the hydrogen atom hydrogen often behaves like a halogen forming the negative hydride ion and is very occasionally considered to be a halogen on that basis The alkali metals can also form negative ions known as alkalides but these are little more than laboratory curiosities being unstable 80 81 An argument against this placement is that formation of hydride from hydrogen is endothermic unlike the exothermic formation of halides from halogens The radius of the H anion also does not fit the trend of increasing size going down the halogens indeed H is very diffuse because its single proton cannot easily control both electrons 123 15 6 It was expected for some time that liquid hydrogen would show metallic properties 162 while this has been shown to not be the case under extremely high pressures such as those found at the cores of Jupiter and Saturn hydrogen does become metallic and behaves like an alkali metal in this phase it is known as metallic hydrogen 165 The electrical resistivity of liquid metallic hydrogen at 3000 K is approximately equal to that of liquid rubidium and caesium at 2000 K at the respective pressures when they undergo a nonmetal to metal transition 166 The 1s1 electron configuration of hydrogen while analogous to that of the alkali metals ns1 is unique because there is no 1p subshell Hence it can lose an electron to form the hydron H or gain one to form the hydride ion H 11 43 In the former case it resembles superficially the alkali metals in the latter case the halogens but the differences due to the lack of a 1p subshell are important enough that neither group fits the properties of hydrogen well 11 43 Group 14 is also a good fit in terms of thermodynamic properties such as ionisation energy and electron affinity but hydrogen cannot be tetravalent Thus none of the three placements are entirely satisfactory although group 1 is the most common placement if one is chosen because of the electron configuration and the fact that the hydron is by far the most important of all monatomic hydrogen species being the foundation of acid base chemistry 162 As an example of hydrogen s unorthodox properties stemming from its unusual electron configuration and small size the hydrogen ion is very small radius around 150 fm compared to the 50 220 pm size of most other atoms and ions and so is nonexistent in condensed systems other than in association with other atoms or molecules Indeed transferring of protons between chemicals is the basis of acid base chemistry 11 43 Also unique is hydrogen s ability to form hydrogen bonds which are an effect of charge transfer electrostatic and electron correlative contributing phenomena 162 While analogous lithium bonds are also known they are mostly electrostatic 162 Nevertheless hydrogen can take on the same structural role as the alkali metals in some molecular crystals and has a close relationship with the lightest alkali metals especially lithium 167 Ammonium and derivatives edit nbsp Similarly to the alkali metals ammonia reacts with hydrochloric acid to form the salt ammonium chloride The ammonium ion NH 4 has very similar properties to the heavier alkali metals acting as an alkali metal intermediate between potassium and rubidium 157 168 and is often considered a close relative 169 170 171 For example most alkali metal salts are soluble in water a property which ammonium salts share 172 Ammonium is expected to behave stably as a metal NH 4 ions in a sea of delocalised electrons at very high pressures though less than the typical pressure where transitions from insulating to metallic behaviour occur around 100 GPa and could possibly occur inside the ice giants Uranus and Neptune which may have significant impacts on their interior magnetic fields 170 171 It has been estimated that the transition from a mixture of ammonia and dihydrogen molecules to metallic ammonium may occur at pressures just below 25 GPa 170 Under standard conditions ammonium can form a metallic amalgam with mercury 173 Other pseudo alkali metals include the alkylammonium cations in which some of the hydrogen atoms in the ammonium cation are replaced by alkyl or aryl groups In particular the quaternary ammonium cations NR 4 are very useful since they are permanently charged and they are often used as an alternative to the expensive Cs to stabilise very large and very easily polarisable anions such as HI 2 11 812 9 Tetraalkylammonium hydroxides like alkali metal hydroxides are very strong bases that react with atmospheric carbon dioxide to form carbonates 123 256 Furthermore the nitrogen atom may be replaced by a phosphorus arsenic or antimony atom the heavier nonmetallic pnictogens creating a phosphonium PH 4 or arsonium AsH 4 cation that can itself be substituted similarly while stibonium SbH 4 itself is not known some of its organic derivatives are characterised 157 Cobaltocene and derivatives edit Cobaltocene Co C5H5 2 is a metallocene the cobalt analogue of ferrocene It is a dark purple solid Cobaltocene has 19 valence electrons one more than usually found in organotransition metal complexes such as its very stable relative ferrocene in accordance with the 18 electron rule This additional electron occupies an orbital that is antibonding with respect to the Co C bonds Consequently many chemical reactions of Co C5H5 2 are characterized by its tendency to lose this extra electron yielding a very stable 18 electron cation known as cobaltocenium Many cobaltocenium salts coprecipitate with caesium salts and cobaltocenium hydroxide is a strong base that absorbs atmospheric carbon dioxide to form cobaltocenium carbonate 123 256 Like the alkali metals cobaltocene is a strong reducing agent and decamethylcobaltocene is stronger still due to the combined inductive effect of the ten methyl groups 174 Cobalt may be substituted by its heavier congener rhodium to give rhodocene an even stronger reducing agent 175 Iridocene involving iridium would presumably be still more potent but is not very well studied due to its instability 176 Thallium edit nbsp Very pure thallium pieces in a glass ampoule stored under argon gasThallium is the heaviest stable element in group 13 of the periodic table At the bottom of the periodic table the inert pair effect is quite strong because of the relativistic stabilisation of the 6s orbital and the decreasing bond energy as the atoms increase in size so that the amount of energy released in forming two more bonds is not worth the high ionisation energies of the 6s electrons 11 226 7 It displays the 1 oxidation state 11 28 that all the known alkali metals display 11 28 and thallium compounds with thallium in its 1 oxidation state closely resemble the corresponding potassium or silver compounds stoichiometrically due to the similar ionic radii of the Tl 164 pm K 152 pm and Ag 129 pm ions 177 178 It was sometimes considered an alkali metal in continental Europe but not in England in the years immediately following its discovery 178 126 and was placed just after caesium as the sixth alkali metal in Dmitri Mendeleev s 1869 periodic table and Julius Lothar Meyer s 1868 periodic table 22 Mendeleev s 1871 periodic table and Meyer s 1870 periodic table put thallium in its current position in the boron group and left the space below caesium blank 22 However thallium also displays the oxidation state 3 11 28 which no known alkali metal displays 11 28 although ununennium the undiscovered seventh alkali metal is predicted to possibly display the 3 oxidation state 37 1729 1730 The sixth alkali metal is now considered to be francium 179 While Tl is stabilised by the inert pair effect this inert pair of 6s electrons is still able to participate chemically so that these electrons are stereochemically active in aqueous solution Additionally the thallium halides except TlF are quite insoluble in water and TlI has an unusual structure because of the presence of the stereochemically active inert pair in thallium 180 Copper silver and gold edit nbsp Copper nbsp Silver nbsp Gold The group 11 metals or coinage metals copper silver and gold are typically categorised as transition metals given they can form ions with incomplete d shells Physically they have the relatively low melting points and high electronegativity values associated with post transition metals The filled d subshell and free s electron of Cu Ag and Au contribute to their high electrical and thermal conductivity Transition metals to the left of group 11 experience interactions between s electrons and the partially filled d subshell that lower electron mobility 181 Chemically the group 11 metals behave like main group metals in their 1 valence states and are hence somewhat related to the alkali metals this is one reason for their previously being labelled as group IB paralleling the alkali metals group IA They are occasionally classified as post transition metals 182 Their spectra are analogous to those of the alkali metals 30 Their monopositive ions are paramagnetic and contribute no colour to their salts like those of the alkali metals 183 In Mendeleev s 1871 periodic table copper silver and gold are listed twice once under group VIII with the iron triad and platinum group metals and once under group IB Group IB was nonetheless parenthesised to note that it was tentative Mendeleev s main criterion for group assignment was the maximum oxidation state of an element on that basis the group 11 elements could not be classified in group IB due to the existence of copper II and gold III compounds being known at that time 30 However eliminating group IB would make group I the only main group group VIII was labelled a transition group to lack an A B bifurcation 30 Soon afterward a majority of chemists chose to classify these elements in group IB and remove them from group VIII for the resulting symmetry this was the predominant classification until the rise of the modern medium long 18 column periodic table which separated the alkali metals and group 11 metals 30 The coinage metals were traditionally regarded as a subdivision of the alkali metal group due to them sharing the characteristic s1 electron configuration of the alkali metals group 1 p6s1 group 11 d10s1 However the similarities are largely confined to the stoichiometries of the 1 compounds of both groups and not their chemical properties 11 1177 This stems from the filled d subshell providing a much weaker shielding effect on the outermost s electron than the filled p subshell so that the coinage metals have much higher first ionisation energies and smaller ionic radii than do the corresponding alkali metals 11 1177 Furthermore they have higher melting points hardnesses and densities and lower reactivities and solubilities in liquid ammonia as well as having more covalent character in their compounds 11 1177 Finally the alkali metals are at the top of the electrochemical series whereas the coinage metals are almost at the very bottom 11 1177 The coinage metals filled d shell is much more easily disrupted than the alkali metals filled p shell so that the second and third ionisation energies are lower enabling higher oxidation states than 1 and a richer coordination chemistry thus giving the group 11 metals clear transition metal character 11 1177 Particularly noteworthy is gold forming ionic compounds with rubidium and caesium in which it forms the auride ion Au which also occurs in solvated form in liquid ammonia solution here gold behaves as a pseudohalogen because its 5d106s1 configuration has one electron less than the quasi closed shell 5d106s2 configuration of mercury 11 1177 Production and isolation edit nbsp nbsp Salt flats are rich in lithium such as these in Salar del Hombre Muerto Argentina left and Uyuni Bolivia right The lithium rich brine is concentrated by pumping it into solar evaporation ponds visible in Argentina image The production of pure alkali metals is somewhat complicated due to their extreme reactivity with commonly used substances such as water 5 66 From their silicate ores all the stable alkali metals may be obtained the same way sulfuric acid is first used to dissolve the desired alkali metal ion and aluminium III ions from the ore leaching whereupon basic precipitation removes aluminium ions from the mixture by precipitating it as the hydroxide The remaining insoluble alkali metal carbonate is then precipitated selectively the salt is then dissolved in hydrochloric acid to produce the chloride The result is then left to evaporate and the alkali metal can then be isolated 66 Lithium and sodium are typically isolated through electrolysis from their liquid chlorides with calcium chloride typically added to lower the melting point of the mixture The heavier alkali metals however are more typically isolated in a different way where a reducing agent typically sodium for potassium and magnesium or calcium for the heaviest alkali metals is used to reduce the alkali metal chloride The liquid or gaseous product the alkali metal then undergoes fractional distillation for purification 66 Most routes to the pure alkali metals require the use of electrolysis due to their high reactivity one of the few which does not is the pyrolysis of the corresponding alkali metal azide which yields the metal for sodium potassium rubidium and caesium and the nitride for lithium 123 77 Lithium salts have to be extracted from the water of mineral springs brine pools and brine deposits The metal is produced electrolytically from a mixture of fused lithium chloride and potassium chloride 184 Sodium occurs mostly in seawater and dried seabed 5 but is now produced through electrolysis of sodium chloride by lowering the melting point of the substance to below 700 C through the use of a Downs cell 185 186 Extremely pure sodium can be produced through the thermal decomposition of sodium azide 187 Potassium occurs in many minerals such as sylvite potassium chloride 5 Previously potassium was generally made from the electrolysis of potassium chloride or potassium hydroxide 188 found extensively in places such as Canada Russia Belarus Germany Israel United States and Jordan in a method similar to how sodium was produced in the late 1800s and early 1900s 189 It can also be produced from seawater 5 However these methods are problematic because the potassium metal tends to dissolve in its molten chloride and vaporises significantly at the operating temperatures potentially forming the explosive superoxide As a result pure potassium metal is now produced by reducing molten potassium chloride with sodium metal at 850 C 11 74 Na g KCl l NaCl l K g Although sodium is less reactive than potassium this process works because at such high temperatures potassium is more volatile than sodium and can easily be distilled off so that the equilibrium shifts towards the right to produce more potassium gas and proceeds almost to completion 11 74 Metals like sodium are obtained by electrolysis of molten salts Rb amp Cs obtained mainly as by products of Li processing To make pure caesium ores of caesium and rubidium are crushed and heated to 650 C with sodium metal generating an alloy that can then be separated via a fractional distillation technique Because metallic caesium is too reactive to handle it is normally offered as caesium azide CsN3 Caesium hydroxide is formed when caesium interacts aggressively with water and ice CsOH 190 Rubidium is the 16th most prevalent element in the earth s crust however it is quite rare Some minerals found in North America South Africa Russia and Canada contain rubidium Some potassium minerals lepidolites biotites feldspar carnallite contain it together with caesium Pollucite carnallite leucite and lepidolite are all minerals that contain rubidium As a by product of lithium extraction it is commercially obtained from lepidolite Rubidium is also found in potassium rocks and brines which is a commercial supply The majority of rubidium is now obtained as a byproduct of refining lithium Rubidium is used in vacuum tubes as a getter a material that combines with and removes trace gases from vacuum tubes 191 192 nbsp This sample of uraninite contains about 100 000 atoms 3 3 10 20 g of francium 223 at any given time 61 For several years in the 1950s and 1960s a by product of the potassium production called Alkarb was a main source for rubidium Alkarb contained 21 rubidium while the rest was potassium and a small fraction of caesium 193 Today the largest producers of caesium for example the Tanco Mine in Manitoba Canada produce rubidium as by product from pollucite 194 Today a common method for separating rubidium from potassium and caesium is the fractional crystallisation of a rubidium and caesium alum Cs Rb Al SO4 2 12H2O which yields pure rubidium alum after approximately 30 recrystallisations 194 195 The limited applications and the lack of a mineral rich in rubidium limit the production of rubidium compounds to 2 to 4 tonnes per year 194 Caesium however is not produced from the above reaction Instead the mining of pollucite ore is the main method of obtaining pure caesium extracted from the ore mainly by three methods acid digestion alkaline decomposition and direct reduction 194 196 Both metals are produced as by products of lithium production after 1958 when interest in lithium s thermonuclear properties increased sharply the production of rubidium and caesium also increased correspondingly 11 71 Pure rubidium and caesium metals are produced by reducing their chlorides with calcium metal at 750 C and low pressure 11 74 As a result of its extreme rarity in nature 63 most francium is synthesised in the nuclear reaction 197Au 18O 210Fr 5 n yielding francium 209 francium 210 and francium 211 197 The greatest quantity of francium ever assembled to date is about 300 000 neutral atoms 198 which were synthesised using the nuclear reaction given above 198 When the only natural isotope francium 223 is specifically required it is produced as the alpha daughter of actinium 227 itself produced synthetically from the neutron irradiation of natural radium 226 one of the daughters of natural uranium 238 199 Applications edit nbsp FOCS 1 a caesium atomic clock in SwitzerlandLithium sodium and potassium have many applications while rubidium and caesium are very useful in academic contexts but do not have many applications yet 11 68 Lithium is often used in lithium ion batteries and lithium oxide can help process silica Lithium stearate is a thickener and can be used to make lubricating greases it is produced from lithium hydroxide which is also used to absorb carbon dioxide in space capsules and submarines 11 70 Lithium chloride is used as a brazing alloy for aluminium parts 200 Metallic lithium is used in alloys with magnesium and aluminium to give very tough and light alloys 11 70 Sodium compounds have many applications the most well known being sodium chloride as table salt Sodium salts of fatty acids are used as soap 201 Pure sodium metal also has many applications including use in sodium vapour lamps which produce very efficient light compared to other types of lighting 202 203 and can help smooth the surface of other metals 204 205 Being a strong reducing agent it is often used to reduce many other metals such as titanium and zirconium from their chlorides Furthermore it is very useful as a heat exchange liquid in fast breeder nuclear reactors due to its low melting point viscosity and cross section towards neutron absorption 11 74 Potassium compounds are often used as fertilisers 11 73 206 as potassium is an important element for plant nutrition Potassium hydroxide is a very strong base and is used to control the pH of various substances 207 208 Potassium nitrate and potassium permanganate are often used as powerful oxidising agents 11 73 Potassium superoxide is used in breathing masks as it reacts with carbon dioxide to give potassium carbonate and oxygen gas Pure potassium metal is not often used but its alloys with sodium may substitute for pure sodium in fast breeder nuclear reactors 11 74 Rubidium and caesium are often used in atomic clocks 209 Caesium atomic clocks are extraordinarily accurate if a clock had been made at the time of the dinosaurs it would be off by less than four seconds after 80 million years 57 For that reason caesium atoms are used as the definition of the second 210 Rubidium ions are often used in purple fireworks 211 and caesium is often used in drilling fluids in the petroleum industry 57 212 Francium has no commercial applications 61 62 213 but because of francium s relatively simple atomic structure among other things it has been used in spectroscopy experiments leading to more information regarding energy levels and the coupling constants between subatomic particles 214 Studies on the light emitted by laser trapped francium 210 ions have provided accurate data on transitions between atomic energy levels similar to those predicted by quantum theory 215 Biological role and precautions editMetals edit Pure alkali metals are dangerously reactive with air and water and must be kept away from heat fire oxidising agents acids most organic compounds halocarbons plastics and moisture They also react with carbon dioxide and carbon tetrachloride so that normal fire extinguishers are counterproductive when used on alkali metal fires 216 Some Class D dry powder extinguishers designed for metal fires are effective depriving the fire of oxygen and cooling the alkali metal 217 Experiments are usually conducted using only small quantities of a few grams in a fume hood Small quantities of lithium may be disposed of by reaction with cool water but the heavier alkali metals should be dissolved in the less reactive isopropanol 216 218 The alkali metals must be stored under mineral oil or an inert atmosphere The inert atmosphere used may be argon or nitrogen gas except for lithium which reacts with nitrogen 216 Rubidium and caesium must be kept away from air even under oil because even a small amount of air diffused into the oil may trigger formation of the dangerously explosive peroxide for the same reason potassium should not be stored under oil in an oxygen containing atmosphere for longer than 6 months 219 220 Ions edit nbsp Lithium carbonateThe bioinorganic chemistry of the alkali metal ions has been extensively reviewed 221 Solid state crystal structures have been determined for many complexes of alkali metal ions in small peptides nucleic acid constituents carbohydrates and ionophore complexes 222 Lithium naturally only occurs in traces in biological systems and has no known biological role but does have effects on the body when ingested 223 Lithium carbonate is used as a mood stabiliser in psychiatry to treat bipolar disorder manic depression in daily doses of about 0 5 to 2 grams although there are side effects 223 Excessive ingestion of lithium causes drowsiness slurred speech and vomiting among other symptoms 223 and poisons the central nervous system 223 which is dangerous as the required dosage of lithium to treat bipolar disorder is only slightly lower than the toxic dosage 223 224 Its biochemistry the way it is handled by the human body and studies using rats and goats suggest that it is an essential trace element although the natural biological function of lithium in humans has yet to be identified 225 226 Sodium and potassium occur in all known biological systems generally functioning as electrolytes inside and outside cells 227 228 Sodium is an essential nutrient that regulates blood volume blood pressure osmotic equilibrium and pH the minimum physiological requirement for sodium is 500 milligrams per day 229 Sodium chloride also known as common salt is the principal source of sodium in the diet and is used as seasoning and preservative such as for pickling and jerky most of it comes from processed foods 230 The Dietary Reference Intake for sodium is 1 5 grams per day 231 but most people in the United States consume more than 2 3 grams per day 232 the minimum amount that promotes hypertension 233 this in turn causes 7 6 million premature deaths worldwide 234 Potassium is the major cation positive ion inside animal cells 227 while sodium is the major cation outside animal cells 227 228 The concentration differences of these charged particles causes a difference in electric potential between the inside and outside of cells known as the membrane potential The balance between potassium and sodium is maintained by ion transporter proteins in the cell membrane 235 The cell membrane potential created by potassium and sodium ions allows the cell to generate an action potential a spike of electrical discharge The ability of cells to produce electrical discharge is critical for body functions such as neurotransmission muscle contraction and heart function 235 Disruption of this balance may thus be fatal for example ingestion of large amounts of potassium compounds can lead to hyperkalemia strongly influencing the cardiovascular system 236 237 Potassium chloride is used in the United States for lethal injection executions 236 nbsp A wheel type radiotherapy device which has a long collimator to focus the radiation into a narrow beam The caesium 137 chloride radioactive source is the blue square and gamma rays are represented by the beam emerging from the aperture This was the radiation source involved in the Goiania accident containing about 93 grams of caesium 137 chloride Due to their similar atomic radii rubidium and caesium in the body mimic potassium and are taken up similarly Rubidium has no known biological role but may help stimulate metabolism 238 239 240 and similarly to caesium 238 241 replace potassium in the body causing potassium deficiency 238 240 Partial substitution is quite possible and rather non toxic a 70 kg person contains on average 0 36 g of rubidium and an increase in this value by 50 to 100 times did not show negative effects in test persons 242 Rats can survive up to 50 substitution of potassium by rubidium 240 243 Rubidium and to a much lesser extent caesium can function as temporary cures for hypokalemia while rubidium can adequately physiologically substitute potassium in some systems caesium is never able to do so 239 There is only very limited evidence in the form of deficiency symptoms for rubidium being possibly essential in goats even if this is true the trace amounts usually present in food are more than enough 244 245 Caesium compounds are rarely encountered by most people but most caesium compounds are mildly toxic Like rubidium caesium tends to substitute potassium in the body but is significantly larger and is therefore a poorer substitute 241 Excess caesium can lead to hypokalemia arrythmia and acute cardiac arrest 246 but such amounts would not ordinarily be encountered in natural sources 247 As such caesium is not a major chemical environmental pollutant 247 The median lethal dose LD50 value for caesium chloride in mice is 2 3 g per kilogram which is comparable to the LD50 values of potassium chloride and sodium chloride 248 Caesium chloride has been promoted as an alternative cancer therapy 249 but has been linked to the deaths of over 50 patients on whom it was used as part of a scientifically unvalidated cancer treatment 250 Radioisotopes of caesium require special precautions the improper handling of caesium 137 gamma ray sources can lead to release of this radioisotope and radiation injuries Perhaps the best known case is the Goiania accident of 1987 in which an improperly disposed of radiation therapy system from an abandoned clinic in the city of Goiania Brazil was scavenged from a junkyard and the glowing caesium salt sold to curious uneducated buyers This led to four deaths and serious injuries from radiation exposure Together with caesium 134 iodine 131 and strontium 90 caesium 137 was among the isotopes distributed by the Chernobyl disaster which constitute the greatest risk to health 98 Radioisotopes of francium would presumably be dangerous as well due to their high decay energy and short half life but none have been produced in large enough amounts to pose any serious risk 199 Notes edit The symbols Na and K for sodium and potassium are derived from their Latin names natrium and kalium these are still the origins of the names for the elements in some languages such as German and Russian Caesium is the spelling recommended by the International Union of Pure and Applied Chemistry IUPAC 1 The American Chemical Society ACS has used the spelling cesium since 1921 2 3 following Webster s Third New International Dictionary In both the old IUPAC and the CAS systems for group numbering this group is known as group IA pronounced as group one A as the I is a Roman numeral 4 While hydrogen also has this electron configuration it is not considered an alkali metal as it has very different behaviour owing to the lack of valence p orbitals in period 1 elements In the 1869 version of Mendeleev s periodic table copper and silver were placed in their own group aligned with hydrogen and mercury while gold was tentatively placed under uranium and the undiscovered eka aluminium in the boron group The asterisk denotes an excited state The number given in parentheses refers to the measurement uncertainty This uncertainty applies to the least significant figure s of the number prior to the parenthesised value ie counting from rightmost digit to left For instance 1 00794 7 stands for 1 00794 0 00007 while 1 00794 72 stands for 1 00794 0 00072 67 The value listed is the conventional value suitable for trade and commerce the actual value may range from 6 938 to 6 997 depending on the isotopic composition of the sample 59 The element does not have any stable nuclides and a value in brackets indicates the mass number of the longest lived isotope of the element 58 59 Linus Pauling estimated the electronegativity of francium at 0 7 on the Pauling scale the same as caesium 69 the value for caesium has since been refined to 0 79 although there are no experimental data to allow a refinement of the value for francium 70 Francium has a slightly higher ionisation energy than caesium 68 392 811 4 kJ mol as opposed to 375 7041 2 kJ mol for caesium as would be expected from relativistic effects and this would imply that caesium is the less electronegative of the two References edit International Union of Pure and Applied Chemistry 2005 Nomenclature of Inorganic 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Diffraction Study Chem Mater 14 5 2063 2070 a cla, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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