Caesium chloride or cesium chloride is the inorganic compound with the formula CaesiumChloride. This colorless salt is an important source of caesium in a variety of niche applications. Its crystal structure forms a major structural type where each caesium ion is coordinated by 8 chloride ions. Caesium chloride dissolves in water. CsCl changes to NaCl structure on heating. Caesium chloride occurs naturally as impurities in carnallite (up to 0.002%), sylvite and kainite. Less than 20 of CsCl is produced annually worldwide, mostly from a caesium-bearing mineral pollucite.
Caesium chloride is widely used in isopycnic centrifugation for separating various types of DNA. It is a reagent in analytical chemistry, where it is used to identify ions by the color and morphology of the precipitate. When enriched in radionuclide, such as 137CsCl or 131CsCl, caesium chloride is used in nuclear medicine applications such as treatment of cancer and diagnosis of myocardial infarction. Another form of cancer treatment was studied using conventional non-radioactive CsCl. Whereas conventional caesium chloride has a rather low toxicity to humans and animals, the radioactive form easily contaminates the environment due to the high solubility of CsCl in water. Spread of 137CsCl powder from a 93-gram container in 1987 in Goiânia, Brazil, resulted in one of the worst-ever radiation spill accidents killing four and directly affecting 249 people.
+Solubility of CsCl in waterHaynes, p. 5.191
!Т (°C) !0 !10 !20 !25 !30 !40 !50 !60 !70 !80 !90 !100 | |||||||||||||
S (wt%) | 61.83 | 63.48 | 64.96 | 65.64 | 66.29 | 67.50 | 68.60 | 69.61 | 70.54 | 71.40 | 72.21 | 72.96 |
In contrast to sodium chloride and potassium chloride, caesium chloride readily dissolves in concentrated hydrochloric acid. Caesium chloride has also a relatively high solubility in formic acid (1077 g/L at 18 °C) and hydrazine; medium solubility in methanol (31.7 g/L at 25 °C) and low solubility in ethanol (7.6 g/L at 25 °C),Plyushev, p. 97 sulfur dioxide (2.95 g/L at 25 °C), ammonia (3.8 g/L at 0 °C), acetone (0.004% at 18 °C), acetonitrile (0.083 g/L at 18 °C), ethylacetate and other complex , butanone, acetophenone, pyridine and chlorobenzene.
Despite its wide band gap of about 8.35 eV at 80 K, caesium chloride weakly conducts electricity, and the conductivity is not electronic but ionic. The conductivity has a value of the order 10−7 S/cm at 300 °C. It occurs through nearest-neighbor jumps of lattice vacancies, and the mobility is much higher for the Cl− than Cs+ vacancies. The conductivity increases with temperature up to about 450 °C, with an activation energy changing from 0.6 to 1.3 eV at about 260 °C. It then sharply drops by two orders of magnitude because of the phase transition from the α-CsCl to β-CsCl phase. The conductivity is also suppressed by application of pressure (about 10 times decrease at 0.4 GPa) which reduces the mobility of lattice vacancies.
Caesium chloride forms a variety of double salts with other chlorides. Examples include 2CsCl·BaCl2, 2CsCl·CuCl2, CsCl·2CuCl and CsCl·LiCl, and with interhalogen compounds:
On industrial scale, CsCl is produced from the mineral pollucite, which is powdered and treated with hydrochloric acid at elevated temperature. The extract is treated with antimony chloride, iodine monochloride, or cerium(IV) chloride to give the poorly soluble double salt, e.g.:
Treatment of the double salt with hydrogen sulfide gives CsCl:
High-purity CsCl is also produced from recrystallized (and ) by thermal decomposition:Plsyushev, pp. 357–358
Only about 20 of caesium compounds, with a major contribution from CsCl, were being produced annually around the 1970s and 2000s worldwide. Caesium chloride enriched with caesium-137 for radiation therapy applications is produced at a single facility Mayak in the Ural Region of RussiaEnrique Lima "Cesium: Radionuclide" in Encyclopedia of Inorganic Chemistry, 2006, Wiley-VCH, Weinheim. and is sold internationally through a UK dealer. The salt is synthesized at 200 °C because of its hygroscopic nature and sealed in a thimble-shaped steel container which is then enclosed into another steel casing. The sealing is required to protect the salt from moisture.
A similar reaction – heating CsCl with calcium in vacuum in presence of phosphorus – was first reported in 1905 by the French chemist M. L. Hackspill and is still used industrially.
Caesium hydroxide is obtained by electrolysis of aqueous caesium chloride solution:Plyushev, p. 90
where TBAB is tetrabutylammonium bromide (interphase catalyst) and CPME is a cyclopentyl methyl ether (solvent).
Another reaction is substitution of tetranitromethane
where DMF is dimethylformamide (solvent).
It is also used for detection of the following ions:
CsCl is a potent inhibitor of HCN channels, which carry the h-current in excitable cells such as neurons. Therefore, it can be useful in electrophysiology experiments in neuroscience.
Because of its high solubility in water, caesium chloride is highly mobile and can even diffuse through concrete. This is a drawback for its radioactive form which urges a search for less chemically mobile radioisotope materials. Commercial sources of radioactive caesium chloride are well sealed in a double steel enclosure. However, in the Goiânia accident in Brazil, such a source containing about 93 grams of 137CsCl, was stolen from an abandoned hospital and forced open by two scavengers. The blue glow emitted in the dark by the radioactive caesium chloride attracted the thieves and their relatives who were unaware of the associated dangers and spread the powder. This resulted in one of the worst radiation spill accidents in which 4 people died within a month from the exposure, 20 showed signs of radiation sickness, 249 people were contaminated with radioactive caesium chloride, and about a thousand received a dose exceeding a yearly amount of background radiation. More than 110,000 people overwhelmed the local hospitals, and several city blocks had to be demolished in the cleanup operations. In the first days of the contamination, stomach disorders and nausea due to radiation sickness were experienced by several people, but only after several days one person associated the symptoms with the powder and brought a sample to the authorities. "The Worst Nuclear Disasters". Time. 2009.
+Properties of aqueous solutions of CsCl at 20 °CHaynes, p. 5.126Lidin, p. 645
! width="16%"
Concentration,
wt%
! width="16%"Density,
kg/L
! width="16%"Concentration,
mol/L
! width="17%"[[refractive index]]
(at 589 nm)
! width="18%"Freezing point depression, °C relative to water
! width="17%" [[Viscosity]],
10−3 Pa·s 0.5 – 0.030 1.3334 0.10 1.000 1.0 1.0059 0.060 1.3337 0.20 0.997 2.0 1.0137 0.120 1.3345 0.40 0.992 3.0 0.182 1.3353 0.61 0.988 4.0 1.0296 0.245 1.3361 0.81 0.984 5.0 0.308 1.3369 1.02 0.980 6.0 1.0461 0.373 1.3377 1.22 0.977 7.0 0.438 1.3386 1.43 0.974 8.0 1.0629 0.505 1.3394 1.64 0.971 9.0 0.573 1.3403 1.85 0.969 10.0 1.0804 0.641 1.3412 2.06 0.966 12.0 1.0983 0.782 1.3430 2.51 0.961 14.0 1.1168 0.928 1.3448 2.97 0.955 16.0 1.1358 1.079 1.3468 3.46 0.950 18.0 1.1555 1.235 1.3487 3.96 0.945 20.0 1.1758 1.397 1.3507 4.49 0.939 22.0 1.1968 1.564 1.3528 – 0.934 24.0 1.2185 1.737 1.3550 – 0.930 26.0 1.917 1.3572 – 0.926 28.0 2.103 1.3594 – 0.924 30.0 1.2882 2.296 1.3617 – 0.922 32.0 2.497 1.3641 – 0.922 34.0 2.705 1.3666 – 0.924 36.0 2.921 1.3691 – 0.926 38.0 3.146 1.3717 – 0.930 40.0 1.4225 3.380 1.3744 – 0.934 42.0 3.624 1.3771 – 0.940 44.0 3.877 1.3800 – 0.947 46.0 4.142 1.3829 – 0.956 48.0 4.418 1.3860 – 0.967 50.0 1.5858 4.706 1.3892 – 0.981 60.0 1.7886 6.368 1.4076 – 1.120 64.0 7.163 1.4167 – 1.238
Reactions
Occurrence and production
Laboratory methods
Uses
Precursor to Cs metal
Solute for ultracentrifugation
Organic chemistry
->\ce{TBAB,\\ce{CPME,\
{ArCH=N-C(C2H4COOCH3)(CH3)-COOC(CH3)3}}
Analytical chemistry
! width="14%" >Ion
! width="20%" Accompanying reagents
! Residue
! Morphology
! width="14%" Detection limit (μg) '''AsO33−''' Potassium iodide]] Cs2[AsI5] or Cs3[AsI6] Red hexagons 0.01 '''Au3+''' [[AgCl]], [[HCl]] Cs2Ag[AuCl6] Gray-black crosses, four and six-beamed stars 0.01 '''Au3+''' NH4SCN Cs[Au(SCN)4] Orange-yellow needles 0.4 '''Bi3+''' Potassium iodide]], [[HCl]] Cs2[BiI5] or 2.5H2O Red hexagons 0.13 '''Cu2+''' (CH3COO)2Pb, CH3COOH, KNO2 Cs2Pb[Cu(NO2)6] Small black cubes 0.01 '''In3+''' — Cs3[InCl6] Small octahedra 0.02 '''[IrCl6]3−''' — Cs2[IrCl6] Small dark-red octahedra – '''Mg2+''' Na2HPO4 CsMgPO4 or 6H2O Small tetrahedra – '''Pb2+''' KI Cs[PbI3] Yellow-green needles 0.01 '''Pd2+''' NaBr Cs2[PdBr4] Dark-red needles and prisms – '''[ReCl4]−''' — Cs[ReCl4] Dark-red rhombs, bipyramids 0.2 '''[ReCl6]2−''' — Cs2[ReCl6] Small yellow-green octahedra 0.5 '''ReO4−''' — CsReO4 Tetragonal bipyramids 0.13 '''Rh3+''' KNO2 Cs3[Rh(NO2)6] Yellow cubes 0.1 '''Ru3+''' — Cs3[RuCl6] Pink needles – '''[RuCl6]2−''' — Cs2[RuCl6] Small dark-red crystals 0.8 '''Sb3+''' — Cs2[SbCl5]·''n''H2O Hexagons 0.16 '''Sb3+''' NaI Red hexagons 0.1 '''Sn4+''' — Cs2[SnCl6] Small octahedra 0.2 '''TeO33−''' HCl Cs2[TeCl6] Light yellow octahedra 0.3 '''Tl3+''' NaI Orange-red hexagons or rectangles 0.06 ! width="14%" >Ion
! width="20%" Accompanying reagents
! Detection
! width="14%" Detection limit (μg/mL) '''Al3+''' K2SO4 Colorless crystals form in neutral media after evaporation 0.01 '''Ga3+''' KHSO4 Colorless crystals form upon heating 0.5 '''Cr3+''' KHSO4 Pale-violet crystals precipitate in slightly acidic media 0.06
Medicine
Nuclear medicine and radiography
Miscellaneous applications
Toxicity
See also
Bibliography
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