Sodium is a Group 1 element (or IA in older labelling
styles). Group 1 elements are often referred to as the "alkali
metals". The chemistry of sodium is dominated by the +1 ion Na+. Sodium
salts impart a characteristic orange/yellow color to flames and orange street
lighting is orange because of the presence of sodium in the lamp.
Soap is generally a sodium salt of fatty acids. The
importance of common salt to animal nutrition has been recognized since
prehistoric times. The most common compound is sodium chloride, (table salt).
•Name: Sodium
•Symbol: Na
•Atomic number: 11
•Atomic weight: 22.98976928
•Standard state: solid at 298 K
•CAS Registry ID: 7440-23-5
•Group in periodic table: 1
•Group name: Alkali metal
•Period in periodic table: 3
•Block in periodic table: s-block
•Color: silvery white
•Classification: Metallic
•Symbol: Na
•Atomic number: 11
•Atomic weight: 22.98976928
•Standard state: solid at 298 K
•CAS Registry ID: 7440-23-5
•Group in periodic table: 1
•Group name: Alkali metal
•Period in periodic table: 3
•Block in periodic table: s-block
•Color: silvery white
•Classification: Metallic
Historical information
Sodium was discovered by Sir Humphrey Davy at 1807 in
England. Origin of name: from the English word "soda" (the origin of
the symbol Na comes from the Latin word "natrium").Until the 18th
century no distinction was made between potassium and sodium. This was because
early chemists did not recognize that "vegetable alkali" (K2CO3,
potassium carbonate, coming from deposits in the earth) and "mineral
alkali" (Na2CO3, sodium carbonate, derived from wood ashes) are distinct
from each other. Eventually a distinction was made.
Sodium was first isolated in 1807 by Sir Humphry Davy, who
made it by the electrolysis of very dry molten sodium hydroxide, NaOH. Sodium
collected at the cathode. Davy isolated potassium by a similar procedure, also
in 1807. Shortly after, Thenard and Gay-Lussac isolated sodium by reducing
sodium hydroxide with iron metal at high temperatures.
Sodium is one of the elements which has an alchemical
symbol, shown below (alchemy is an ancient pursuit concerned with, for
instance, the transformation of other metals into gold).
Sometime prior to the autumn of 1803, the Englishman John
Dalton was able to explain the results of some of his studies by assuming that
matter is composed of atoms and that all samples of any given compound consist
of the same combination of these atoms. Dalton also noted that in series of
compounds, the ratios of the masses of the second element that combine with a
given weight of the first element can be reduced to small whole numbers (the
law of multiple proportions). This was further evidence for atoms. Dalton's
theory of atoms was published by Thomas Thomson in the 3rd edition of his
System of Chemistry in 1807 and in a paper about strontium oxalates published
in the Philosophical Transactions. Dalton published these ideas himself in the
following year in the New System of Chemical Philosophy.
Physical properties
•Melting point: 370.87 [or 97.72 °C (207.9 °F)] K
•Boiling point: 1156 [or 883 °C (1621 °F)] K
•Density of solid: 968 kg m-3
•Boiling point: 1156 [or 883 °C (1621 °F)] K
•Density of solid: 968 kg m-3
Orbital properties
•Ground state electron configuration: [Ne].3s1
•Shell structure: 2.8.1
•Term symbol: 2S1/2
•Shell structure: 2.8.1
•Term symbol: 2S1/2
Isolation
Sodium would not normally be made in the laboratory as it is
so readily available commercially. All syntheses require an electrolytic step
as it is so difficult to add an electron to the poorly electronegative sodium
ion Na+.
Sodium is present as salt (sodium chloride, NaCl) in huge
quantities in underground deposits (salt mines) and seawater and other natural
waters. It is easily recovered as a solid by drying.
Sodium chloride has a high melting point (> 800°C)
meaning that it should be expensive to melt it in order to carry out the
electrolysis. However a mixture of NaCl (40%) and calcium chloride, CaCl2 (60%)
melts at about 580°C and so much less energy and so expense is required for the
electrolysis.
Cathode: Na+(l) + e- → Na (l) Anode: Cl-(l) → 1/2Cl2 (g) + e-
The electrolysis is carried out as a melt in a "Downs
cell". In practice, the electrolysis process produces calcium metal as
well but this is solidified in a collection pipe and returned back to the melt
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