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Alkali metal halide

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Alkali metal halides are the family of inorganic compounds with the chemical formula MX, where M is an alkali metal and X is a halogen. These compounds are the often most commercially significant derivatives of these metals and halides. The best known of these compounds is sodium chloride, table salt.

Structure

They crystallize in either centered cubic or face centered cubic lattices, which feature metals in hexacoordinate or octacoordinate coordination spheres.[1]

Ball-and-stick model of the coordination of Cs and Cl in CsCl

Properties

The alkali metal halides exist as colourless crystalline solids, although as finely ground powders appear white. They melt at high temperature, usually several hundred degrees to colorless liquids. Their high melting point reflects their high lattice energies. At still higher temperatures, these liquids evaporate to give gases composed of diatomic molecules.

These compounds dissolve in polar solvents to give ionic solutions that contain highly solvated anions and cations.

The table below provides links to each of the individual articles for these compounds. The numbers beside the compounds show the electronegativity difference between the elements based on the Pauling scale. The higher the number is, the more ionic is the solid.

  Alkali Metals
Lithium Sodium Potassium Rubidium Caesium
H
a
l
o
g
e
n
s
Fluorine LiF (3.0) NaF (3.1) KF (3.2) RbF (3.2) CsF (3.3)
Chlorine LiCl (2.0) NaCl (2.1) KCl (2.2) RbCl (2.2) CsCl (2.3)
Bromine LiBr (1.8) NaBr (1.9) KBr (2.0) RbBr (2.0) CsBr (2.1)
Iodine LiI (1.5) NaI (1.6) KI (1.7) RbI (1.7) CsI (1.8)

References

  1. ^ Greenwood, N. N.; & Earnshaw, A. (1997). Chemistry of the Elements (2nd Edn.), Oxford:Butterworth-Heinemann. ISBN 0-7506-3365-4.