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Sodium oxide
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Sodium oxide is a chemical compound with the formula . It is used in and . It is a white solid but the compound is rarely encountered. Instead "sodium oxide" is used to describe components of various materials such as glasses and fertilizers which contain oxides that include sodium and other elements. Sodium oxide is a component.


Structure
The structure of sodium oxide has been determined by X-ray crystallography. Most alkali metal oxides (M = , , , ) crystallise in the antifluorite structure. In this motif the positions of the and are reversed relative to their positions in , with ions tetrahedrally coordinated to 4 oxide ions and oxide cubically coordinated to 8 sodium ions.Wells, A. F. (1984) Structural Inorganic Chemistry, Oxford: Clarendon Press


Preparation
Sodium oxide is produced by the reaction of with , , or :
To the extent that NaOH is contaminated with water, correspondingly greater amounts of sodium are employed. Excess sodium is distilled from the crude product.

A second method involves heating a mixture of and :

Burning sodium in produces a mixture of and ().

A third much less known method involves heating sodium metal with iron(III) oxide (rust):

the reaction should be done in an inert atmosphere to avoid the reaction of sodium with the air instead.


Applications

Glassmaking
Glasses are often described in terms of their sodium oxide content although they do not really contain . Furthermore, such glasses are not made from sodium oxide, but the equivalent of is added in the form of "soda" (), which loses at high temperatures:

A typical manufactured contains around 15% sodium oxide, 70% silica (), and 9% lime (). The sodium carbonate "soda" serves as a flux to lower the temperature at which the silica mixture melts. Such has a much lower melting temperature than pure silica and has slightly higher elasticity. These changes arise because the -based material is somewhat more flexible.


Reactions
Sodium oxide reacts readily and irreversibly with water to give :
Because of this reaction, sodium oxide is sometimes referred to as the of sodium hydroxide (more archaically, "anhydride of caustic soda").

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