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Sodium carbonate

Sodium carbonate (also known as washing soda, soda ash and soda crystals) is the inorganic compound with the formula Na2CO3 and its various hydrates. All forms are white, odourless, water-soluble salts that yield alkaline solutions in water. Historically, it was extracted from the ashes of plants grown in sodium-rich soils, and because the ashes of these sodium-rich plants were noticeably different from ashes of wood (once used to produce potash), sodium carbonate became known as "soda ash".[12] It is produced in large quantities from sodium chloride and limestone by the Solvay process, as well as by carbonating sodium hydroxide which is made using the Chlor-alkali process.

Sodium carbonate
Names
IUPAC name
Sodium carbonate
Other names
Soda ash, washing soda, soda crystals, sodium trioxocarbonate
Identifiers
  • 497-19-8 (anhydrous) Y
  • 5968-11-6 (monohydrate) Y
  • 6132-02-1 (decahydrate) Y
3D model (JSmol)
  • Interactive image
ChEBI
  • CHEBI:29377 Y
ChEMBL
  • ChEMBL186314 Y
ChemSpider
  • 9916 Y
ECHA InfoCard 100.007.127
EC Number
  • 207-838-8
E number E500(i) (acidity regulators, ...)
  • 10340
RTECS number
  • VZ4050000
UNII
  • 45P3261C7T Y
  • 2A1Q1Q3557 (monohydrate) Y
  • LS505BG22I (decahydrate) Y
  • DTXSID1029621
  • InChI=1S/CH2O3.2Na/c2-1(3)4;;/h(H2,2,3,4);;/q;2*+1/p-2 Y
    Key: CDBYLPFSWZWCQE-UHFFFAOYSA-L Y
  • InChI=1/NaHCO3.2Na/c2-1(3)4;;/h(H2,2,3,4);;/q;2*+1/p-2
    Key: CDBYLPFSWZWCQE-NUQVWONBAP
  • [Na+].[Na+].[O-]C([O-])=O
Properties
Na2CO3
Molar mass 105.9888 g/mol (anhydrous)
286.1416 g/mol (decahydrate)
Appearance White solid, hygroscopic
Odor Odorless
Density
  • 2.54 g/cm3 (25 °C, anhydrous)
  • 1.92 g/cm3 (856 °C)
  • 2.25 g/cm3 (monohydrate)[1]
  • 1.51 g/cm3 (heptahydrate)
  • 1.46 g/cm3 (decahydrate)[2]
Melting point 851 °C (1,564 °F; 1,124 K) (Anhydrous)
100 °C (212 °F; 373 K)
decomposes (monohydrate)
33.5 °C (92.3 °F; 306.6 K)
decomposes (heptahydrate)
34 °C (93 °F; 307 K)
(decahydrate)[2][6]
Anhydrous, g/100 mL:
  • 7 (0 °C)
  • 16.4 (15 °C)
  • 34.07 (27.8 °C)
  • 48.69 (34.8 °C)
  • 48.1 (41.9 °C)
  • 45.62 (60 °C)
  • 43.6 (100 °C)[3]
Solubility Soluble in aq. alkalis,[3] glycerol
Slightly soluble in aq. alcohol
Insoluble in CS2, acetone, alkyl acetates, alcohol, benzonitrile, liquid ammonia[4]
Solubility in glycerine 98.3 g/100 g (155 °C)[4]
Solubility in ethanediol 3.46 g/100 g (20 °C)[5]
Solubility in dimethylformamide 0.5 g/kg[5]
Acidity (pKa) 10.33
−4.1·10−5 cm3/mol[2]
1.485 (anhydrous)
1.420 (monohydrate)[6]
1.405 (decahydrate)
Viscosity 3.4 cP (887 °C)[5]
Structure
Monoclinic (γ-form, β-form, δ-form, anhydrous)[7]
Orthorhombic (monohydrate, heptahydrate)[1][8]
C2/m, No. 12 (γ-form, anhydrous, 170 K)
C2/m, No. 12 (β-form, anhydrous, 628 K)
P21/n, No. 14 (δ-form, anhydrous, 110 K)[7]
Pca21, No. 29 (monohydrate)[1]
Pbca, No. 61 (heptahydrate)[8]
2/m (γ-form, β-form, δ-form, anhydrous)[7]
mm2 (monohydrate)[1]
2/m 2/m 2/m (heptahydrate)[8]
a = 8.920(7) Å, b = 5.245(5) Å, c = 6.050(5) Å (γ-form, anhydrous, 295 K)[7]
α = 90°, β = 101.35(8)°, γ = 90°
Octahedral (Na+, anhydrous)
Thermochemistry
112.3 J/mol·K[2]
135 J/mol·K[2]
−1130.7 kJ/mol[2][5]
−1044.4 kJ/mol[2]
Hazards
Occupational safety and health (OHS/OSH):
Main hazards
Irritant
GHS labelling:
[9]
Warning
H319[9]
P305+P351+P338[9]
NFPA 704 (fire diamond)
Lethal dose or concentration (LD, LC):
4090 mg/kg (rat, oral)[10]
Safety data sheet (SDS)
Related compounds
Other anions
Sodium bicarbonate
Other cations
Lithium carbonate
Potassium carbonate
Rubidium carbonate
Cesium carbonate
Related compounds
Sodium sesquicarbonate
Sodium percarbonate
Except where otherwise noted, data are given for materials in their standard state (at 25 °C [77 °F], 100 kPa).
N verify (what is YN ?)

Hydrates edit

Sodium carbonate is obtained as three hydrates and as the anhydrous salt:

  • sodium carbonate decahydrate (natron), Na2CO3·10H2O, which readily effloresces to form the monohydrate.
  • sodium carbonate heptahydrate (not known in mineral form), Na2CO3·7H2O.
  • sodium carbonate monohydrate (thermonatrite), Na2CO3·H2O. Also known as crystal carbonate.
  • anhydrous sodium carbonate (natrite), also known as calcined soda, is formed by heating the hydrates. It is also formed when sodium hydrogencarbonate is heated (calcined) e.g. in the final step of the Solvay process.

The decahydrate is formed from water solutions crystallizing in the temperature range −2.1 to +32.0 °C, the heptahydrate in the narrow range 32.0 to 35.4 °C and above this temperature the monohydrate forms.[13] In dry air the decahydrate and heptahydrate lose water to give the monohydrate. Other hydrates have been reported, e.g. with 2.5 units of water per sodium carbonate unit ("Penta hemihydrate").[14]

Washing soda edit

Sodium carbonate decahydrate (Na2CO3·10H2O), also known as washing soda, is the most common hydrate of sodium carbonate containing 10 molecules of water of crystallization. Soda ash is dissolved in water and crystallized to get washing soda.

 

It is one of the few metal carbonates that is soluble in water.

Applications edit

Some common applications of sodium carbonate include:

Glass manufacture edit

Sodium carbonate serves as a flux for silica (SiO2, melting point 1,713 °C), lowering the melting point of the mixture to something achievable without special materials. This "soda glass" is mildly water-soluble, so some calcium carbonate is added to the melt mixture to make the glass insoluble. Bottle and window glass ("soda–lime glass" with transition temperature ~570 °C) is made by melting such mixtures of sodium carbonate, calcium carbonate, and silica sand (silicon dioxide (SiO2)). When these materials are heated, the carbonates release carbon dioxide. In this way, sodium carbonate is a source of sodium oxide. Soda–lime glass has been the most common form of glass for centuries. It is also a key input for tableware glass manufacturing.[15]

Water softening edit

Hard water usually contains calcium or magnesium ions. Sodium carbonate is used for removing these ions and replacing them with sodium ions.[16]

Sodium carbonate is a water-soluble source of carbonate. The calcium and magnesium ions form insoluble solid precipitates upon treatment with carbonate ions:

Ca2+ + CO2−3 → CaCO3 (s)

The water is softened because it no longer contains dissolved calcium ions and magnesium ions.[16]

Food additive and cooking edit

Sodium carbonate has several uses in cuisine, largely because it is a stronger base than baking soda (sodium bicarbonate) but weaker than lye (which may refer to sodium hydroxide or, less commonly, potassium hydroxide). Alkalinity affects gluten production in kneaded doughs, and also improves browning by reducing the temperature at which the Maillard reaction occurs. To take advantage of the former effect, sodium carbonate is therefore one of the components of kansui (かん水), a solution of alkaline salts used to give Japanese ramen noodles their characteristic flavour and chewy texture; a similar solution is used in Chinese cuisine to make lamian, for similar reasons. Cantonese bakers similarly use sodium carbonate as a substitute for lye-water to give moon cakes their characteristic texture and improve browning. In German cuisine (and Central European cuisine more broadly), breads such as pretzels and lye rolls traditionally treated with lye to improve browning can be treated instead with sodium carbonate; sodium carbonate does not produce quite as strong a browning as lye, but is much safer and easier to work with.[17]

Sodium carbonate is used in the production of sherbet powder. The cooling and fizzing sensation results from the endothermic reaction between sodium carbonate and a weak acid, commonly citric acid, releasing carbon dioxide gas, which occurs when the sherbet is moistened by saliva.

Sodium carbonate also finds use in the food industry as a food additive (E500) as an acidity regulator, anticaking agent, raising agent, and stabilizer. It is also used in the production of snus to stabilize the pH of the final product.

While it is less likely to cause chemical burns than lye, care must still be taken when working with sodium carbonate in the kitchen, as it is corrosive to aluminum cookware, utensils, and foil.[18]

Other applications edit

Sodium carbonate is also used as a relatively strong base in various fields. As a common alkali, it is preferred in many chemical processes because it is cheaper than sodium hydroxide and far safer to handle. Its mildness especially recommends its use in domestic applications.

For example, it is used as a pH regulator to maintain stable alkaline conditions necessary for the action of the majority of photographic film developing agents. It is also a common additive in swimming pools and aquarium water to maintain a desired pH and carbonate hardness (KH). In dyeing with fiber-reactive dyes, sodium carbonate (often under a name such as soda ash fixative or soda ash activator) is used to ensure proper chemical bonding of the dye with cellulose (plant) fibers, typically before dyeing (for tie dyes), mixed with the dye (for dye painting), or after dyeing (for immersion dyeing). It is also used in the froth flotation process to maintain a favourable pH as a float conditioner besides CaO and other mildly basic compounds.

Precursor to other compounds edit

Sodium bicarbonate (NaHCO3) or baking soda, also a component in fire extinguishers, is often generated from sodium carbonate. Although NaHCO3 is itself an intermediate product of the Solvay process, the heating needed to remove the ammonia that contaminates it decomposes some NaHCO3, making it more economical to react finished Na2CO3 with CO2:

Na2CO3 + CO2 + H2O → 2NaHCO3

In a related reaction, sodium carbonate is used to make sodium bisulfite (NaHSO3), which is used for the "sulfite" method of separating lignin from cellulose. This reaction is exploited for removing sulfur dioxide from flue gases in power stations:

Na2CO3 + SO2 + H2O → NaHCO3 + NaHSO3

This application has become more common, especially where stations have to meet stringent emission controls.

Sodium carbonate is used by the cotton industry to neutralize the sulfuric acid needed for acid delinting of fuzzy cottonseed.

It is also used to form carbonates of other metals by ion exchange, often with the other metals' sulphates.

Miscellaneous edit

Sodium carbonate is used by the brick industry as a wetting agent to reduce the amount of water needed to extrude the clay. In casting, it is referred to as "bonding agent" and is used to allow wet alginate to adhere to gelled alginate. Sodium carbonate is used in toothpastes, where it acts as a foaming agent and an abrasive, and to temporarily increase mouth pH.

Sodium carbonate is also used in the processing and tanning of animal hides. [19]

Physical properties edit

The integral enthalpy of solution of sodium carbonate is −28.1 kJ/mol for a 10% w/w aqueous solution.[20] The Mohs hardness of sodium carbonate monohydrate is 1.3.[6]

Occurrence as natural mineral edit

 
Structure of monohydrate at 346 K

Sodium carbonate is soluble in water, and can occur naturally in arid regions, especially in mineral deposits (evaporites) formed when seasonal lakes evaporate. Deposits of the mineral natron have been mined from dry lake bottoms in Egypt since ancient times, when natron was used in the preparation of mummies and in the early manufacture of glass.

The anhydrous mineral form of sodium carbonate is quite rare and called nitrite. Sodium carbonate also erupts from Ol Doinyo Lengai, Tanzania's unique volcano, and it is presumed to have erupted from other volcanoes in the past, but due to these minerals' instability at the Earth's surface, are likely to be eroded. All three mineralogical forms of sodium carbonate, as well as trona, trisodium hydrogendi carbonate dihydrate, are also known from ultra-alkaline pegmatitic rocks, that occur for example in the Kola Peninsula in Russia.

Extra terrestrially, known sodium carbonate is rare. Deposits have been identified as the source of bright spots on Ceres, interior material that has been brought to the surface.[21] While there are carbonates on Mars, and these are expected to include sodium carbonate,[22] deposits have yet to be confirmed, this absence is explained by some as being due to a global dominance of low pH in previously aqueous Martian soil.[23]

Production edit

Mining edit

Trona, also known as trisodium hydrogendicarbonate dihydrate (Na3HCO3CO3·2H2O), is mined in several areas of the US and provides nearly all the US consumption of sodium carbonate. Large natural deposits found in 1938, such as the one near Green River, Wyoming, have made mining more economical than industrial production in North America. There are important reserves of trona in Turkey;[24] two million tons of soda ash have been extracted from the reserves near Ankara.

Barilla and kelp edit

Several "halophyte" (salt-tolerant) plant species and seaweed species can be processed to yield an impure form of sodium carbonate, and these sources predominated in Europe and elsewhere until the early 19th century. The land plants (typically glassworts or saltworts) or the seaweed (typically Fucus species) were harvested, dried, and burned. The ashes were then "lixivated" (washed with water) to form an alkali solution. This solution was boiled dry to create the final product, which was termed "soda ash"; this very old name derives from the Arabic word soda, in turn applied to Salsola soda, one of the many species of seashore plants harvested for production. "Barilla" is a commercial term applied to an impure form of potash obtained from coastal plants or kelp.[25]

The sodium carbonate concentration in soda ash varied very widely, from 2–3 percent for the seaweed-derived form ("kelp"), to 30 percent for the best barilla produced from saltwort plants in Spain. Plant and seaweed sources for soda ash, and also for the related alkali "potash", became increasingly inadequate by the end of the 18th century, and the search for commercially viable routes to synthesizing soda ash from salt and other chemicals intensified.[26]

Leblanc process edit

In 1792, the French chemist Nicolas Leblanc patented a process for producing sodium carbonate from salt, sulfuric acid, limestone, and coal. In the first step, sodium chloride is treated with sulfuric acid in the Mannheim process. This reaction produces sodium sulfate (salt cake) and hydrogen chloride:

2NaCl + H2SO4 → Na2SO4 + 2HCl

The salt cake and crushed limestone (calcium carbonate) was reduced by heating with coal.[15] This conversion entails two parts. First is the carbothermic reaction whereby the coal, a source of carbon, reduces the sulfate to sulfide:

Na2SO4 + 2C → Na2S + 2CO2

The second stage is the reaction to produce sodium carbonate and calcium sulfide:

Na2S + CaCO3 → Na2CO3 + CaS

This mixture is called black ash. The soda ash is extracted from the black ash with water. Evaporation of this extract yields solid sodium carbonate. This extraction process was termed lixiviating.

The hydrochloric acid produced by the Leblanc process was a major source of air pollution, and the calcium sulfide byproduct also presented waste disposal issues. However, it remained the major production method for sodium carbonate until the late 1880s.[26][27]

Solvay process edit

In 1861, the Belgian industrial chemist Ernest Solvay developed a method to make sodium carbonate by first reacting sodium chloride, ammonia, water, and carbon dioxide to generate sodium bicarbonate and ammonium chloride:[15]

NaCl + NH3 + CO2 + H2O → NaHCO3 + NH4Cl

The resulting sodium bicarbonate was then converted to sodium carbonate by heating it, releasing water and carbon dioxide:

2NaHCO3 → Na2CO3 + H2O + CO2

Meanwhile, the ammonia was regenerated from the ammonium chloride byproduct by treating it with the lime (calcium oxide) left over from carbon dioxide generation:

2NH4Cl + CaO → 2NH3 + CaCl2 + H2O

The Solvay process recycles its ammonia. It consumes only brine and limestone, and calcium chloride is its only waste product. The process is substantially more economical than the Leblanc process, which generates two waste products, calcium sulfide and hydrogen chloride. The Solvay process quickly came to dominate sodium carbonate production worldwide. By 1900, 90% of sodium carbonate was produced by the Solvay process, and the last Leblanc process plant closed in the early 1920s.[15]

The second step of the Solvay process, heating sodium bicarbonate, is used on a small scale by home cooks and in restaurants to make sodium carbonate for culinary purposes (including pretzels and alkali noodles). The method is appealing to such users because sodium bicarbonate is widely sold as baking soda, and the temperatures required (250 °F (121 °C) to 300 °F (149 °C)) to convert baking soda to sodium carbonate are readily achieved in conventional kitchen ovens.[17]

Hou's process edit

This process was developed by Chinese chemist Hou Debang in the 1930s. The earlier steam reforming by-product carbon dioxide was pumped through a saturated solution of sodium chloride and ammonia to produce sodium bicarbonate by these reactions:

CH4 + 2H2OCO2 + 4H2
3H2 + N2 → 2NH3
NH3 + CO2 + H2ONH4HCO3

The sodium bicarbonate was collected as a precipitate due to its low solubility and then heated up to approximately 80 °C (176 °F) or 95 °C (203 °F) to yield pure sodium carbonate similar to last step of the Solvay process. More sodium chloride is added to the remaining solution of ammonium and sodium chlorides; also, more ammonia is pumped at 30-40 °C to this solution. The solution temperature is then lowered to below 10 °C. Solubility of ammonium chloride is higher than that of sodium chloride at 30 °C and lower at 10 °C. Due to this temperature-dependent solubility difference and the common-ion effect, ammonium chloride is precipitated in a sodium chloride solution.

The Chinese name of Hou's process, lianhe zhijian fa (联合制碱法), means "coupled manufacturing alkali method": Hou's process is coupled to the Haber process and offers better atom economy by eliminating the production of calcium chloride, since ammonia no longer needs to be regenerated. The by-product ammonium chloride can be sold as a fertilizer.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d Harper, J. P. (1936). Antipov, Evgeny; Bismayer, Ulrich; Huppertz, Hubert; Petrícek, Václav; Pöttgen, Rainer; Schmahl, Wolfgang; Tiekink, E. R. T.; Zou, Xiaodong (eds.). "Crystal Structure of Sodium Carbonate Monohydrate, Na2CO3. H2O". Zeitschrift für Kristallographie - Crystalline Materials. 95 (1): 266–273. doi:10.1524/zkri.1936.95.1.266. ISSN 2196-7105. Retrieved 2014-07-25.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g Lide, David R., ed. (2009). CRC Handbook of Chemistry and Physics (90th ed.). Boca Raton, Florida: CRC Press. ISBN 978-1-4200-9084-0.
  3. ^ a b Seidell, Atherton; Linke, William F. (1919). Solubilities of Inorganic and Organic Compounds (2nd ed.). New York: D. Van Nostrand Company. p. 633.
  4. ^ a b Comey, Arthur Messinger; Hahn, Dorothy A. (February 1921). A Dictionary of Chemical Solubilities: Inorganic (2nd ed.). New York: The MacMillan Company. pp. 208–209.
  5. ^ a b c d Anatolievich, Kiper Ruslan. "sodium carbonate". chemister.ru. Retrieved 2014-07-25.
  6. ^ a b c Pradyot, Patnaik (2003). Handbook of Inorganic Chemicals. McGraw-Hill. p. 861. ISBN 978-0-07-049439-8.
  7. ^ a b c d Dusek, Michal; Chapuis, Gervais; Meyer, Mathias; Petricek, Vaclav (2003). "Sodium carbonate revisited" (PDF). Acta Crystallographica Section B. 59 (3): 337–352. Bibcode:2003AcCrB..59..337D. doi:10.1107/S0108768103009017. ISSN 0108-7681. PMID 12761404. Retrieved 2014-07-25.
  8. ^ a b c Betzel, C.; Saenger, W.; Loewus, D. (1982). "Sodium Carbonate Heptahydrate". Acta Crystallographica Section B. 38 (11): 2802–2804. Bibcode:1982AcCrB..38.2802B. doi:10.1107/S0567740882009996.
  9. ^ a b c Sigma-Aldrich Co., Sodium carbonate. Retrieved on 2014-05-06.
  10. ^ Chambers, Michael. "ChemIDplus - 497-19-8 - CDBYLPFSWZWCQE-UHFFFAOYSA-L - Sodium carbonate [NF] - Similar structures search, synonyms, formulas, resource links, and other chemical information".
  11. ^ "Material Safety Data Sheet – Sodium Carbonate, Anhydrous" (PDF). conservationsupportsystems.com. ConservationSupportSystems. Retrieved 2014-07-25.
  12. ^ "Soda Ash Statistics and Information". United States Geographical Survey. Retrieved 2024-03-03.
  13. ^ T.W.Richards and A.H. Fiske (1914). "On the transition temperatures of the transition temperatures of the hydrates of sodium carbonate as fix points in thermometry". Journal of the American Chemical Society. 36 (3): 485–490. doi:10.1021/ja02180a003.
  14. ^ A. Pabst. "On the hydrates of sodium carbonate" (PDF).
  15. ^ a b c d e Christian Thieme (2000). "Sodium Carbonates". Ullmann's Encyclopedia of Industrial Chemistry. Weinheim: Wiley-VCH. doi:10.1002/14356007.a24_299. ISBN 978-3527306732.
  16. ^ a b c "Water Hardness Reading" (PDF). Cornell Center for Materials Research.
  17. ^ a b McGee, Harold (24 September 2010). "For Old-Fashioned Flavor, Bake the Baking Soda". The New York Times. Retrieved 25 April 2019.
  18. ^ "Sodium Carbonate". corrosionpedia. Janalta Interactive. Retrieved 9 November 2020.
  19. ^ "Home Tanning Hides and Furs" (PDF). Retrieved 16 April 2024.
  20. ^ "Tatachemicals.com/north-america/product/images/fig_2_1.jpg".
  21. ^ De Sanctis, M. C.; et al. (29 June 2016). "Bright carbonate deposits as evidence of aqueous alteration on (1) Ceres". Nature. 536 (7614): 54–57. Bibcode:2016Natur.536...54D. doi:10.1038/nature18290. PMID 27362221. S2CID 4465999.
  22. ^ Jeffrey S. Kargel (23 July 2004). Mars - A Warmer, Wetter Planet. Springer Science & Business Media. pp. 399–. ISBN 978-1-85233-568-7.
  23. ^ Grotzinger, J. and R. Milliken (eds.) 2012. Sedimentary Geology of Mars. SEPM
  24. ^ "Ciner Weighs Sale of Stake in $5 Billion Soda Ash Unit". Bloomberg.com. 2021-08-09. Retrieved 2023-12-04.
  25. ^ Hooper, Robert (1802). Lexicon Medicum (1848 ed.). London: Longman. pp. 1198–9. OCLC 27671024.
  26. ^ a b Clow, Archibald and Clow, Nan L. (June 1952). Chemical Revolution. Ayer. pp. 65–90. ISBN 0-8369-1909-2.
  27. ^ Kiefer, David M. (January 2002). "It was all about alkali". Today's Chemist at Work. 11 (1): 45–6.

Further reading edit

  • Eggeman, T. (2011). "Sodium Carbonate". Kirk-Othmer Encyclopedia of Chemical Technology. pp. 1–11. doi:10.1002/0471238961.1915040918012108.a01.pub3. ISBN 978-0471238966.
  • Thieme, C. (2000). "Sodium Carbonates". Ullmann's Encyclopedia of Industrial Chemistry. doi:10.1002/14356007.a24_299. ISBN 978-3527306732.

External links edit

  • American Natural Soda Ash Company
  • International Chemical Safety Card 1135
  • FMC Wyoming Corporation
  • Use of sodium carbonate in dyeing
  • by synthetic processes


sodium, carbonate, confused, with, sodium, bicarbonate, baking, soda, similar, compound, also, known, washing, soda, soda, soda, crystals, inorganic, compound, with, formula, na2co3, various, hydrates, forms, white, odourless, water, soluble, salts, that, yiel. Not to be confused with Sodium bicarbonate baking soda a similar compound Sodium carbonate also known as washing soda soda ash and soda crystals is the inorganic compound with the formula Na2CO3 and its various hydrates All forms are white odourless water soluble salts that yield alkaline solutions in water Historically it was extracted from the ashes of plants grown in sodium rich soils and because the ashes of these sodium rich plants were noticeably different from ashes of wood once used to produce potash sodium carbonate became known as soda ash 12 It is produced in large quantities from sodium chloride and limestone by the Solvay process as well as by carbonating sodium hydroxide which is made using the Chlor alkali process Sodium carbonate Names IUPAC name Sodium carbonate Other names Soda ash washing soda soda crystals sodium trioxocarbonate Identifiers CAS Number 497 19 8 anhydrous Y5968 11 6 monohydrate Y6132 02 1 decahydrate Y 3D model JSmol Interactive image ChEBI CHEBI 29377 Y ChEMBL ChEMBL186314 Y ChemSpider 9916 Y ECHA InfoCard 100 007 127 EC Number 207 838 8 E number E500 i acidity regulators PubChem CID 10340 RTECS number VZ4050000 UNII 45P3261C7T Y2A1Q1Q3557 monohydrate YLS505BG22I decahydrate Y CompTox Dashboard EPA DTXSID1029621 InChI InChI 1S CH2O3 2Na c2 1 3 4 h H2 2 3 4 q 2 1 p 2 YKey CDBYLPFSWZWCQE UHFFFAOYSA L YInChI 1 NaHCO3 2Na c2 1 3 4 h H2 2 3 4 q 2 1 p 2Key CDBYLPFSWZWCQE NUQVWONBAP SMILES Na Na O C O O Properties Chemical formula Na2CO3 Molar mass 105 9888 g mol anhydrous 286 1416 g mol decahydrate Appearance White solid hygroscopic Odor Odorless Density 2 54 g cm3 25 C anhydrous 1 92 g cm3 856 C 2 25 g cm3 monohydrate 1 1 51 g cm3 heptahydrate 1 46 g cm3 decahydrate 2 Melting point 851 C 1 564 F 1 124 K Anhydrous 100 C 212 F 373 K decomposes monohydrate 33 5 C 92 3 F 306 6 K decomposes heptahydrate 34 C 93 F 307 K decahydrate 2 6 Solubility in water Anhydrous g 100 mL 7 0 C 16 4 15 C 34 07 27 8 C 48 69 34 8 C 48 1 41 9 C 45 62 60 C 43 6 100 C 3 Solubility Soluble in aq alkalis 3 glycerol Slightly soluble in aq alcohol Insoluble in CS2 acetone alkyl acetates alcohol benzonitrile liquid ammonia 4 Solubility in glycerine 98 3 g 100 g 155 C 4 Solubility in ethanediol 3 46 g 100 g 20 C 5 Solubility in dimethylformamide 0 5 g kg 5 Acidity pKa 10 33 Magnetic susceptibility x 4 1 10 5 cm3 mol 2 Refractive index nD 1 485 anhydrous 1 420 monohydrate 6 1 405 decahydrate Viscosity 3 4 cP 887 C 5 Structure Crystal structure Monoclinic g form b form d form anhydrous 7 Orthorhombic monohydrate heptahydrate 1 8 Space group C2 m No 12 g form anhydrous 170 K C2 m No 12 b form anhydrous 628 K P21 n No 14 d form anhydrous 110 K 7 Pca21 No 29 monohydrate 1 Pbca No 61 heptahydrate 8 Point group 2 m g form b form d form anhydrous 7 mm2 monohydrate 1 2 m 2 m 2 m heptahydrate 8 Lattice constant a 8 920 7 A b 5 245 5 A c 6 050 5 A g form anhydrous 295 K 7 a 90 b 101 35 8 g 90 Coordination geometry Octahedral Na anhydrous Thermochemistry Heat capacity C 112 3 J mol K 2 Std molarentropy S 298 135 J mol K 2 Std enthalpy offormation DfH 298 1130 7 kJ mol 2 5 Gibbs free energy DfG 1044 4 kJ mol 2 Hazards Occupational safety and health OHS OSH Main hazards Irritant GHS labelling Pictograms 9 Signal word Warning Hazard statements H319 9 Precautionary statements P305 P351 P338 9 NFPA 704 fire diamond 11 200 Lethal dose or concentration LD LC LD50 median dose 4090 mg kg rat oral 10 Safety data sheet SDS MSDS Related compounds Other anions Sodium bicarbonate Other cations Lithium carbonate Potassium carbonateRubidium carbonate Cesium carbonate Related compounds Sodium sesquicarbonate Sodium percarbonate Except where otherwise noted data are given for materials in their standard state at 25 C 77 F 100 kPa N verify what is Y N Infobox references Contents 1 Hydrates 1 1 Washing soda 2 Applications 2 1 Glass manufacture 2 2 Water softening 2 3 Food additive and cooking 2 4 Other applications 2 5 Precursor to other compounds 2 6 Miscellaneous 3 Physical properties 4 Occurrence as natural mineral 5 Production 5 1 Mining 5 2 Barilla and kelp 5 3 Leblanc process 5 4 Solvay process 5 5 Hou s process 6 See also 7 References 8 Further reading 9 External linksHydrates editSodium carbonate is obtained as three hydrates and as the anhydrous salt sodium carbonate decahydrate natron Na2CO3 10H2O which readily effloresces to form the monohydrate sodium carbonate heptahydrate not known in mineral form Na2CO3 7H2O sodium carbonate monohydrate thermonatrite Na2CO3 H2O Also known as crystal carbonate anhydrous sodium carbonate natrite also known as calcined soda is formed by heating the hydrates It is also formed when sodium hydrogencarbonate is heated calcined e g in the final step of the Solvay process The decahydrate is formed from water solutions crystallizing in the temperature range 2 1 to 32 0 C the heptahydrate in the narrow range 32 0 to 35 4 C and above this temperature the monohydrate forms 13 In dry air the decahydrate and heptahydrate lose water to give the monohydrate Other hydrates have been reported e g with 2 5 units of water per sodium carbonate unit Penta hemihydrate 14 Washing soda edit Sodium carbonate decahydrate Na2CO3 10H2O also known as washing soda is the most common hydrate of sodium carbonate containing 10 molecules of water of crystallization Soda ash is dissolved in water and crystallized to get washing soda Na 2 CO 3 10 H 2 O Na 2 CO 3 10 H 2 O displaystyle ce Na2CO3 10H2O gt Na2CO3 10H2O nbsp It is one of the few metal carbonates that is soluble in water Applications editSome common applications of sodium carbonate include As a cleansing agent for domestic purposes like washing clothes Sodium carbonate is a component of many dry soap powders It has detergent properties through the process of saponification which converts fats and grease to water soluble salts specifically soaps 15 It is used for lowering the hardness of water 16 see Water softening It is used in the manufacture of glass soap and paper see Glass manufacture It is used in the manufacture of sodium compounds like borax Glass manufacture edit Sodium carbonate serves as a flux for silica SiO2 melting point 1 713 C lowering the melting point of the mixture to something achievable without special materials This soda glass is mildly water soluble so some calcium carbonate is added to the melt mixture to make the glass insoluble Bottle and window glass soda lime glass with transition temperature 570 C is made by melting such mixtures of sodium carbonate calcium carbonate and silica sand silicon dioxide SiO2 When these materials are heated the carbonates release carbon dioxide In this way sodium carbonate is a source of sodium oxide Soda lime glass has been the most common form of glass for centuries It is also a key input for tableware glass manufacturing 15 Water softening edit See also Hard water Hard water usually contains calcium or magnesium ions Sodium carbonate is used for removing these ions and replacing them with sodium ions 16 Sodium carbonate is a water soluble source of carbonate The calcium and magnesium ions form insoluble solid precipitates upon treatment with carbonate ions Ca2 CO2 3 CaCO3 s The water is softened because it no longer contains dissolved calcium ions and magnesium ions 16 Food additive and cooking edit Sodium carbonate has several uses in cuisine largely because it is a stronger base than baking soda sodium bicarbonate but weaker than lye which may refer to sodium hydroxide or less commonly potassium hydroxide Alkalinity affects gluten production in kneaded doughs and also improves browning by reducing the temperature at which the Maillard reaction occurs To take advantage of the former effect sodium carbonate is therefore one of the components of kansui かん水 a solution of alkaline salts used to give Japanese ramen noodles their characteristic flavour and chewy texture a similar solution is used in Chinese cuisine to make lamian for similar reasons Cantonese bakers similarly use sodium carbonate as a substitute for lye water to give moon cakes their characteristic texture and improve browning In German cuisine and Central European cuisine more broadly breads such as pretzels and lye rolls traditionally treated with lye to improve browning can be treated instead with sodium carbonate sodium carbonate does not produce quite as strong a browning as lye but is much safer and easier to work with 17 Sodium carbonate is used in the production of sherbet powder The cooling and fizzing sensation results from the endothermic reaction between sodium carbonate and a weak acid commonly citric acid releasing carbon dioxide gas which occurs when the sherbet is moistened by saliva Sodium carbonate also finds use in the food industry as a food additive E500 as an acidity regulator anticaking agent raising agent and stabilizer It is also used in the production of snus to stabilize the pH of the final product While it is less likely to cause chemical burns than lye care must still be taken when working with sodium carbonate in the kitchen as it is corrosive to aluminum cookware utensils and foil 18 Other applications edit Sodium carbonate is also used as a relatively strong base in various fields As a common alkali it is preferred in many chemical processes because it is cheaper than sodium hydroxide and far safer to handle Its mildness especially recommends its use in domestic applications For example it is used as a pH regulator to maintain stable alkaline conditions necessary for the action of the majority of photographic film developing agents It is also a common additive in swimming pools and aquarium water to maintain a desired pH and carbonate hardness KH In dyeing with fiber reactive dyes sodium carbonate often under a name such as soda ash fixative or soda ash activator is used to ensure proper chemical bonding of the dye with cellulose plant fibers typically before dyeing for tie dyes mixed with the dye for dye painting or after dyeing for immersion dyeing It is also used in the froth flotation process to maintain a favourable pH as a float conditioner besides CaO and other mildly basic compounds Precursor to other compounds edit Sodium bicarbonate NaHCO3 or baking soda also a component in fire extinguishers is often generated from sodium carbonate Although NaHCO3 is itself an intermediate product of the Solvay process the heating needed to remove the ammonia that contaminates it decomposes some NaHCO3 making it more economical to react finished Na2CO3 with CO2 Na2CO3 CO2 H2O 2NaHCO3 In a related reaction sodium carbonate is used to make sodium bisulfite NaHSO3 which is used for the sulfite method of separating lignin from cellulose This reaction is exploited for removing sulfur dioxide from flue gases in power stations Na2CO3 SO2 H2O NaHCO3 NaHSO3 This application has become more common especially where stations have to meet stringent emission controls Sodium carbonate is used by the cotton industry to neutralize the sulfuric acid needed for acid delinting of fuzzy cottonseed It is also used to form carbonates of other metals by ion exchange often with the other metals sulphates Miscellaneous edit Sodium carbonate is used by the brick industry as a wetting agent to reduce the amount of water needed to extrude the clay In casting it is referred to as bonding agent and is used to allow wet alginate to adhere to gelled alginate Sodium carbonate is used in toothpastes where it acts as a foaming agent and an abrasive and to temporarily increase mouth pH Sodium carbonate is also used in the processing and tanning of animal hides 19 Physical properties editThe integral enthalpy of solution of sodium carbonate is 28 1 kJ mol for a 10 w w aqueous solution 20 The Mohs hardness of sodium carbonate monohydrate is 1 3 6 Occurrence as natural mineral edit nbsp Structure of monohydrate at 346 K Sodium carbonate is soluble in water and can occur naturally in arid regions especially in mineral deposits evaporites formed when seasonal lakes evaporate Deposits of the mineral natron have been mined from dry lake bottoms in Egypt since ancient times when natron was used in the preparation of mummies and in the early manufacture of glass The anhydrous mineral form of sodium carbonate is quite rare and called nitrite Sodium carbonate also erupts from Ol Doinyo Lengai Tanzania s unique volcano and it is presumed to have erupted from other volcanoes in the past but due to these minerals instability at the Earth s surface are likely to be eroded All three mineralogical forms of sodium carbonate as well as trona trisodium hydrogendi carbonate dihydrate are also known from ultra alkaline pegmatitic rocks that occur for example in the Kola Peninsula in Russia Extra terrestrially known sodium carbonate is rare Deposits have been identified as the source of bright spots on Ceres interior material that has been brought to the surface 21 While there are carbonates on Mars and these are expected to include sodium carbonate 22 deposits have yet to be confirmed this absence is explained by some as being due to a global dominance of low pH in previously aqueous Martian soil 23 Production editMining edit Trona also known as trisodium hydrogendicarbonate dihydrate Na3HCO3CO3 2H2O is mined in several areas of the US and provides nearly all the US consumption of sodium carbonate Large natural deposits found in 1938 such as the one near Green River Wyoming have made mining more economical than industrial production in North America There are important reserves of trona in Turkey 24 two million tons of soda ash have been extracted from the reserves near Ankara Barilla and kelp edit Several halophyte salt tolerant plant species and seaweed species can be processed to yield an impure form of sodium carbonate and these sources predominated in Europe and elsewhere until the early 19th century The land plants typically glassworts or saltworts or the seaweed typically Fucus species were harvested dried and burned The ashes were then lixivated washed with water to form an alkali solution This solution was boiled dry to create the final product which was termed soda ash this very old name derives from the Arabic word soda in turn applied to Salsola soda one of the many species of seashore plants harvested for production Barilla is a commercial term applied to an impure form of potash obtained from coastal plants or kelp 25 The sodium carbonate concentration in soda ash varied very widely from 2 3 percent for the seaweed derived form kelp to 30 percent for the best barilla produced from saltwort plants in Spain Plant and seaweed sources for soda ash and also for the related alkali potash became increasingly inadequate by the end of the 18th century and the search for commercially viable routes to synthesizing soda ash from salt and other chemicals intensified 26 Leblanc process edit Main article Leblanc process In 1792 the French chemist Nicolas Leblanc patented a process for producing sodium carbonate from salt sulfuric acid limestone and coal In the first step sodium chloride is treated with sulfuric acid in the Mannheim process This reaction produces sodium sulfate salt cake and hydrogen chloride 2NaCl H2SO4 Na2SO4 2HCl The salt cake and crushed limestone calcium carbonate was reduced by heating with coal 15 This conversion entails two parts First is the carbothermic reaction whereby the coal a source of carbon reduces the sulfate to sulfide Na2SO4 2C Na2S 2CO2 The second stage is the reaction to produce sodium carbonate and calcium sulfide Na2S CaCO3 Na2CO3 CaS This mixture is called black ash The soda ash is extracted from the black ash with water Evaporation of this extract yields solid sodium carbonate This extraction process was termed lixiviating The hydrochloric acid produced by the Leblanc process was a major source of air pollution and the calcium sulfide byproduct also presented waste disposal issues However it remained the major production method for sodium carbonate until the late 1880s 26 27 Solvay process edit Main article Solvay process In 1861 the Belgian industrial chemist Ernest Solvay developed a method to make sodium carbonate by first reacting sodium chloride ammonia water and carbon dioxide to generate sodium bicarbonate and ammonium chloride 15 NaCl NH3 CO2 H2O NaHCO3 NH4Cl The resulting sodium bicarbonate was then converted to sodium carbonate by heating it releasing water and carbon dioxide 2NaHCO3 Na2CO3 H2O CO2 Meanwhile the ammonia was regenerated from the ammonium chloride byproduct by treating it with the lime calcium oxide left over from carbon dioxide generation 2NH4Cl CaO 2NH3 CaCl2 H2O The Solvay process recycles its ammonia It consumes only brine and limestone and calcium chloride is its only waste product The process is substantially more economical than the Leblanc process which generates two waste products calcium sulfide and hydrogen chloride The Solvay process quickly came to dominate sodium carbonate production worldwide By 1900 90 of sodium carbonate was produced by the Solvay process and the last Leblanc process plant closed in the early 1920s 15 The second step of the Solvay process heating sodium bicarbonate is used on a small scale by home cooks and in restaurants to make sodium carbonate for culinary purposes including pretzels and alkali noodles The method is appealing to such users because sodium bicarbonate is widely sold as baking soda and the temperatures required 250 F 121 C to 300 F 149 C to convert baking soda to sodium carbonate are readily achieved in conventional kitchen ovens 17 Hou s process edit This process was developed by Chinese chemist Hou Debang in the 1930s The earlier steam reforming by product carbon dioxide was pumped through a saturated solution of sodium chloride and ammonia to produce sodium bicarbonate by these reactions CH4 2H2O CO2 4H2 3H2 N2 2NH3 NH3 CO2 H2O NH4HCO3 NH4HCO3 NaCl NH4Cl NaHCO3 The sodium bicarbonate was collected as a precipitate due to its low solubility and then heated up to approximately 80 C 176 F or 95 C 203 F to yield pure sodium carbonate similar to last step of the Solvay process More sodium chloride is added to the remaining solution of ammonium and sodium chlorides also more ammonia is pumped at 30 40 C to this solution The solution temperature is then lowered to below 10 C Solubility of ammonium chloride is higher than that of sodium chloride at 30 C and lower at 10 C Due to this temperature dependent solubility difference and the common ion effect ammonium chloride is precipitated in a sodium chloride solution The Chinese name of Hou s process lianhe zhijian fa 联合制碱法 means coupled manufacturing alkali method Hou s process is coupled to the Haber process and offers better atom economy by eliminating the production of calcium chloride since ammonia no longer needs to be regenerated The by product ammonium chloride can be sold as a fertilizer See also editResidual sodium carbonate indexReferences edit a b c d Harper J P 1936 Antipov Evgeny Bismayer Ulrich Huppertz Hubert Petricek Vaclav Pottgen Rainer Schmahl Wolfgang Tiekink E R T Zou Xiaodong eds Crystal Structure of Sodium Carbonate Monohydrate Na2CO3 H2O Zeitschrift fur Kristallographie Crystalline Materials 95 1 266 273 doi 10 1524 zkri 1936 95 1 266 ISSN 2196 7105 Retrieved 2014 07 25 a b c d e f g Lide David R ed 2009 CRC Handbook of Chemistry and Physics 90th ed Boca Raton Florida CRC Press ISBN 978 1 4200 9084 0 a b Seidell Atherton Linke William F 1919 Solubilities of Inorganic and Organic Compounds 2nd ed New York D Van Nostrand Company p 633 a b Comey Arthur Messinger Hahn Dorothy A February 1921 A Dictionary of Chemical Solubilities Inorganic 2nd ed New York The MacMillan Company pp 208 209 a b c d Anatolievich Kiper Ruslan sodium carbonate chemister ru Retrieved 2014 07 25 a b c Pradyot Patnaik 2003 Handbook of Inorganic Chemicals McGraw Hill p 861 ISBN 978 0 07 049439 8 a b c d Dusek Michal Chapuis Gervais Meyer Mathias Petricek Vaclav 2003 Sodium carbonate revisited PDF Acta Crystallographica Section B 59 3 337 352 Bibcode 2003AcCrB 59 337D doi 10 1107 S0108768103009017 ISSN 0108 7681 PMID 12761404 Retrieved 2014 07 25 a b c Betzel C Saenger W Loewus D 1982 Sodium Carbonate Heptahydrate Acta Crystallographica Section B 38 11 2802 2804 Bibcode 1982AcCrB 38 2802B doi 10 1107 S0567740882009996 a b c Sigma Aldrich Co Sodium carbonate Retrieved on 2014 05 06 Chambers Michael ChemIDplus 497 19 8 CDBYLPFSWZWCQE UHFFFAOYSA L Sodium carbonate NF Similar structures search synonyms formulas resource links and other chemical information Material Safety Data Sheet Sodium Carbonate Anhydrous PDF conservationsupportsystems com ConservationSupportSystems Retrieved 2014 07 25 Soda Ash Statistics and Information United States Geographical Survey Retrieved 2024 03 03 T W Richards and A H Fiske 1914 On the transition temperatures of the transition temperatures of the hydrates of sodium carbonate as fix points in thermometry Journal of the American Chemical Society 36 3 485 490 doi 10 1021 ja02180a003 A Pabst On the hydrates of sodium carbonate PDF a b c d e Christian Thieme 2000 Sodium Carbonates Ullmann s Encyclopedia of Industrial Chemistry Weinheim Wiley VCH doi 10 1002 14356007 a24 299 ISBN 978 3527306732 a b c Water Hardness Reading PDF Cornell Center for Materials Research a b McGee Harold 24 September 2010 For Old Fashioned Flavor Bake the Baking Soda The New York Times Retrieved 25 April 2019 Sodium Carbonate corrosionpedia Janalta Interactive Retrieved 9 November 2020 Home Tanning Hides and Furs PDF Retrieved 16 April 2024 Tatachemicals com north america product images fig 2 1 jpg De Sanctis M C et al 29 June 2016 Bright carbonate deposits as evidence of aqueous alteration on 1 Ceres Nature 536 7614 54 57 Bibcode 2016Natur 536 54D doi 10 1038 nature18290 PMID 27362221 S2CID 4465999 Jeffrey S Kargel 23 July 2004 Mars A Warmer Wetter Planet Springer Science amp Business Media pp 399 ISBN 978 1 85233 568 7 Grotzinger J and R Milliken eds 2012 Sedimentary Geology of Mars SEPM Ciner Weighs Sale of Stake in 5 Billion Soda Ash Unit Bloomberg com 2021 08 09 Retrieved 2023 12 04 Hooper Robert 1802 Lexicon Medicum 1848 ed London Longman pp 1198 9 OCLC 27671024 a b Clow Archibald and Clow Nan L June 1952 Chemical Revolution Ayer pp 65 90 ISBN 0 8369 1909 2 Kiefer David M January 2002 It was all about alkali Today s Chemist at Work 11 1 45 6 Further reading editEggeman T 2011 Sodium Carbonate Kirk Othmer Encyclopedia of Chemical Technology pp 1 11 doi 10 1002 0471238961 1915040918012108 a01 pub3 ISBN 978 0471238966 Thieme C 2000 Sodium Carbonates Ullmann s Encyclopedia of Industrial Chemistry doi 10 1002 14356007 a24 299 ISBN 978 3527306732 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Sodium carbonate American Natural Soda Ash Company International Chemical Safety Card 1135 FMC Wyoming Corporation Use of sodium carbonate in dyeing Sodium carbonate manufacturing by synthetic processes Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Sodium carbonate amp oldid 1219276459, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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