Sodium bromide

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Crystal structure
Structure of sodium bromide
__ Na +      __ Br -
Crystal system

cubic

Space group

Fm 3 m (No. 225)Template: room group / 225

Coordination numbers

Na [6], Br [6]

General
Surname Sodium bromide
Ratio formula NaBr
Brief description

colorless crystals

External identifiers / databases
CAS number 7647-15-6
EC number 231-599-9
ECHA InfoCard 100,028,727
PubChem 253881
Wikidata Q15768
properties
Molar mass 102.89 g mol −1
Physical state

firmly

density
  • 3.20 g cm −3 (20 ° C) ( anhydrate )
  • 2.176 g cm −3 (dihydrate)
Melting point

755 ° C

boiling point

1393 ° C

Vapor pressure

1.3 h Pa (806 ° C)

solubility
  • 905 g l −1 (20 ° C) in water
  • 25 g l −1 (20 ° C) in ethanol
Refractive index

1.642

safety instructions
GHS labeling of hazardous substances
no GHS pictograms
H and P phrases H: no H-phrases
P: no P-phrases
Toxicological data
As far as possible and customary, SI units are used. Unless otherwise noted, the data given apply to standard conditions . Refractive index: Na-D line , 20 ° C

Sodium bromide is the sodium salt of hydrogen bromide . It is a colorless solid with the formula NaBr.

Presentation and extraction

Sodium bromide can be made by reacting sodium hydroxide and hydrogen bromide :

properties

Sodium bromide crystallizes in the sodium chloride structure . The aqueous solution reacts slightly acidic . A solution of 50 g of sodium bromide per liter of water at 20 ° C has a pH value of 5.4. Below 50.7 ° C, a dihydrate crystallizes from aqueous solution .

The standard enthalpy of formation of sodium bromide is ΔH f 0  = −360 kJ / mol.

The salt is very soluble in water. The solubility increases with increasing temperature.

solubility in water
temperature in ° C −20 0 20th 40 60 80 100 120
solubility in g / 100 g H 2 O 71.8 79.5 90.5 106 118 118.3 121.2 125.3

use

Sodium bromide can be used to produce elemental bromine on a laboratory scale. For this purpose, chlorine gas is fed into an aqueous solution of sodium bromide. This reaction can generally be used to detect soluble bromides .

Hydrogen bromide can be produced from sodium bromide on a laboratory scale . For this purpose, concentrated phosphoric acid is added dropwise to the solid at a slightly elevated temperature.

Other acids , for example dilute sulfuric acid , can also be used for this purpose , but here the reaction is often too difficult to control to generate a constant gas flow.

medicine

Sodium bromide was used as a sedative , particularly in the late 19th and early 20th centuries . Today it is no longer used as it can lead to bromism .

Individual evidence

  1. a b c d Sodium bromide data sheet (PDF) from Merck , accessed on January 18, 2011.
  2. a b c d e f g h i j Entry on sodium bromide in the GESTIS substance database of the IFA , accessed on December 19, 2019(JavaScript required) .
  3. a b Brockhaus ABC Chemie, FA Brockhaus Verlag Leipzig 1971, p. 920.
  4. Simao P. Pinho and Eugenia A. Macedo: Solubility of NaCl, NaBr, and KCl in Water, Methanol, Ethanol, and Their Mixed Solvents . Ed .: American Chemical Society. Portugal 2005, p. 30 .
  5. David R. Lide (Ed.): CRC Handbook of Chemistry and Physics . 90th edition. (Internet version: 2010), CRC Press / Taylor and Francis, Boca Raton, FL, Index of Refraction of Inorganic Crystals, pp. 10-247.
  6. ^ A b A. F. Holleman , E. Wiberg , N. Wiberg : Textbook of Inorganic Chemistry . 101st edition. Walter de Gruyter, Berlin 1995, ISBN 3-11-012641-9 , p. 1170.
  7. a b Yoffe, D .; Frim, R .; Ukeles, SD; Dagani, MJ; Barda, HJ; Benya, TJ; Sanders, DC: Bromine Compounds , in: Ullmanns Enzyklopädie der Technischen Chemie , Wiley-VCH Verlag GmbH & Co. KGaA, Weinheim 2013; doi : 10.1002 / 14356007.a04_405.pub2 .
  8. Jander, Blasius, Strähle: Introduction to the inorganic-chemical practical course , p. 281, 14th edition. Hirzel, Stuttgart 1995, ISBN 978-3-7776-0672-9 .