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| Sodium chloride |
|---|
USGOV.jpg) Sodium chloride  Sodium chloride |
| General | |
|---|---|
| Systematic name | Sodium chloride |
| Other names | Common salt, halite, table salt |
| Chemical formula | NaCl |
| Molar mass | 58.442 g/mol |
| Appearance | white and crystalized |
| CAS number | [7647-14-5] |
| Properties |
|---|
| Density and phase | 2.16 g/cm³, solid |
| Solubility in water | 35.9 g/100 ml (25 °C) |
| Melting point | 801 °C (1074 K) |
| Boiling point | 1465 °C (1738 K) |
| Structure |
|---|
Coordination geometry | Octahedral |
| Crystal structure | Face centered cubic |
| Hazards |
|---|
| MSDS | External MSDS |
| Main hazards | Irritant and Might Sting |
| NFPA 704 | |
| Flash point | Non-flammable |
| R/S statement | R: 36 S: none |
| RTECS number | VZ4725000 |
| Supplementary data page |
|---|
Structure and properties | ''n'', εr, etc. |
Thermodynamic data | Phase behaviour Solid, liquid, gas |
| Spectral data | UV, IR, NMR, MS |
| Related compounds |
|---|
| Other anions | NaF, NaBr, NaI |
| Other cations | LiCl, KCl, RbCl, CsCl, MgCl2, CaCl2 |
| Related salts | Sodium acetate |
Except where noted otherwise, data are given for materials in their standard state (at 25 °C, 100 kPa)
|
'Sodium chloride', also known as 'common salt', 'table salt', or
halite, is a
chemical compound with the
formula NaCl. Sodium chloride is the
salt most responsible for the salinity of the
ocean and of the
extracellular fluid of many multicellular
organisms. As the main ingredient in
edible salt, it is commonly used as a
condiment and food
preservative. In one gram of sodium chloride, there are approximately 0.3933 grams of sodium, and 0.6067 g of chlorine.
Production and use
Salt is currently produced by
evaporation of
seawater or
brine from other sources, such as brine wells and
salt lakes, and by
mining 'rock salt', called
halite. In 2002, world production was estimated at 210 million metric tonnes, the top five producers being the United States (40.3 million tonnes), China (32.9), Germany (17.7), India (14.5), and Canada (12.3).
[1]
While most people are familiar with the many uses of salt in
cooking, they might be unaware that salt is used in a plethora of applications, from
manufacturing pulp and paper to setting dyes in textiles and fabric, to producing
soaps and
detergents. In most of Canada and the northern USA, large quantities of rock salt are used to help clear highways of ice during winter, although "Road Salt" loses its melting ability at temperatures below -15°C to -20°C (5°F to -4°F).
Synthetic uses
Salt is also the raw material used to produce
chlorine which itself is required for the production of many modern materials including
PVC and
pesticides.
Industrially, elemental chlorine is usually produced by the
electrolysis of sodium chloride dissolved in water. Along with chlorine, this
chloralkali process yields
hydrogen gas and
sodium hydroxide, according to the
chemical equation
:2NaCl + 2H
2O → Cl
2 + H
2 + 2NaOH
Sodium metal is produced commercially through the electrolysis of liquid sodium chloride. This is done in a
Down's cell in which sodium chloride is mixed with calcium chloride to lower the melting point below 700 °C. As calcium is more electropositive than sodium, no calcium will be formed at the cathode. This method is less expensive than the previous method of electrolyzing sodium hydroxide.
Sodium chloride is used in other chemical processes for the large-scale production of compounds containing sodium or chlorine. In the
Solvay process, sodium chloride is used for producing
sodium carbonate and
calcium chloride. In the
Mannheim process and in the
Hargreaves process, it is used for the production of
sodium sulfate and
hydrochloric acid.
Flavour enhancer
Main articles: Salt
Salt is commonly used as a
flavour enhancer for
food and has been identified as one of the
basic tastes. Unfortunately, given its history, this has resulted in large sections of the developed world ingesting salt massively in excess of the required intake. . This causes elevated levels of
blood pressure (
hypertension) in some, which in turn is associated with increased risks of
heart attack and
stroke. Consuming salt in excess can also dehydrate the human body.
Biological uses
Many
microorganisms cannot live in an overly salty environment: water is drawn out of their
cells by
osmosis. For this reason salt is used to
preserve some foods, such as smoked bacon or fish and can also be used to detach leeches that have attached themselves to feed. It has also been used to disinfect wounds. In
medieval times salt would be rubbed into household surfaces as a cleansing agent.
Possible uses
'energetic sector.'
Its high heat of fusion value is 25.2 kj/mol (259 kwh/m3!).
It's practically possible to store 259 kwh/m3 of thermal energy at constant temperature...
It's potentially a great business!
Crystal structure
Sodium chloride forms
crystals with cubic
symmetry. In these, the larger
chloride ions, shown to the right as green spheres, are arranged in a cubic
close-packing, while the smaller
sodium ions, shown to the right as blue spheres, fill the octahedral gaps between them.

The crystal structure of sodium chloride. Each atom has six nearest neighbors, with octahedral geometry.
Each ion is surrounded by six ions of the other kind. This same basic structure is found in many other
minerals, and is known as the
halite structure. This arrangement is known as ''
cubic close packed'' (ccp).
It is held together with an
ionic bond and
electrostatic forces.
Salt is also known in the chemical world as a nuclear additive.
Road salt
De-icing
While salt was once a scarce commodity in history, industrialized production has now made salt plentiful. About 51% of world output is now used by cold countries to
de-ice roads in winter, both in
grit bins and spread by
winter service vehicles. This works because salt and water form an
eutectic mixture. For a solution of table salt (sodium chloride, NaCl) in water, the freezing temperature becomes -21 °C (-6 °F) under controlled lab conditions. In practice, however, sodium chloride can melt ice only down to about -9 °C (15 °F).
Additives
Table salt sold for consumption today is not pure sodium chloride. In
1911 magnesium carbonate was first added to salt to make it flow more freely.
[2] In
1924 trace amounts of
iodine in form of sodium iodide,
potassium iodide or
potassium iodate were first added, creating iodized salt to reduce the incidence of simple
goiter.
[3]
Salt for de-icing in the UK typically contains sodium
hexacyanoferrate (II) at less than 100ppm as an anti-caking agent. In recent years this additive has also been used in table salt.
Common chemicals
Chemicals used in de-icing salts are mostly found to be sodium chloride (NaCl) or
calcium chloride (CaCl
2). Both are similar and are effective in de-icing roads. When these chemicals are produced, they are mined/made, crushed to fine granules, then treated with an anti-caking agent. Adding
salt lowers the freezing point of the water, which allows the liquid to be
stable at lower temperatures and allows the ice to melt.
Alternative de-icing chemicals have also been used. Chemicals such as
calcium magnesium acetate and
potassium formate are being produced. These chemicals have few of the negative chemical effects on the environment commonly associated with NaCl and CaCl
[1][2].
See also
★
Biosalinity
★
Black salt
★
Edible salt
★
Halite, the mineral form of sodium chloride
★
Salinity
★
Soap
★
Salting the earth
References
1. Susan R. Feldman. Sodium chloride. ''Kirk-Othmer Encyclopedia of Chemical Technology''. John Wiley & Sons, Inc. Published online '2005'.
2. Morton Salt FAQ
3. "When it rains it pours": endemic goiter, iodized salt, and David Murray Cowie, MD, Markel H, , , American journal of public health, 1987
External Links
★
The Salt Manufacturers Association website
★
Salt Institute website
★
Salt Archive website
★
Video of rotating rock salt unit cell (divx, 378kb)
★
Salt United States Geological Survey Statistics and Information
★
US Road Management website
★
Salt Intake in Cold Weather