Lead carbide
Lead carbide is a hypothetical chemical compound of carbon and lead. Lead and elemental carbon do not normally combine, even at very high temperatures.[1] Modern literature on lead carbide is almost non-existent.
Production
[edit]J. F. Durand reported in 1923 the synthesis of lead carbide from calcium carbide CaC2 by treatment with an aqueous solution of lead(II) acetate Pb(CH3COO)2, but this result was not reproduced.[2][3]
A 2007 textbook repeats this claim, describing lead carbide as a green powder with formula PbC2 that is decomposed by hydrochloric acid HCl to acetylene C2H2 and lead(II) chloride PbCl2.[4]
A compound analyzed as lead carbide PbC2 has also been obtained accidentally, as a thin layer (about 10 μm thick) on the inner wall of a graphite crucible that had been used to heat a lead-bismuth eutectic alloy for 100 hours at 1073 K in a helium atmosphere.[5]: p.27 [6]
Pyrophoric lead
[edit]Several reports of "lead carbide" synthesis appeared in the early 19th century, and were widely cited and copied into textbooks during the next few decades. In 1820, for instance, a certain John claimed to have sublimated a black carbide of lead from finely divided mixture of lead and charcoal,[7][8] but this claim apparently was never reproduced.[1]: p.67 Also in 1820, Berzelius claimed that the pyrolysis (decomposition by heat) of iron-lead cyanide resulted in a double iron and lead carbide, FeC4·2PbC4.[9] In 1823 Göbel from Jena obtained, by pyrolysis of lead tartrate in a closed vessel, a black powder that ignited spontaneously in contact with air, and believed it to be a carbide of lead.[10][11][12] This product still provides a popular school demonstration of pyrophoricity.[13] Shortly thereafter, Proust obtained a similar product from lead acetate[7] and Berzelius obtained one from lead cyanide.[7]: p.122 [14][15]: p.436
However, by 1870 those pyrophoric residues came to be regarded as an "intimate mixture" of carbon and lead; and the existence of lead carbide was considered unproven.[1]: p.67
References
[edit]- ^ a b c John Percy (1870), The Metallurgy of Lead, including Desiverization and Cupellation. J.Murray, London.
- ^ William A Frad (1968), Metal Carbides. In Harry Julius Emeléus, Advances in inorganic chemistry and radiochemistry. volume 12, page 213. Online version at books.google.com, accessed on 2010-01-17.
- ^ J. F. Durand (1923), Comptes Rendus... cited by W. A. Frad.
- ^ R. K. Sharma (2007) Chemistry of Hydrides and Carbides. Discovery Publishing House, New Delhi. ISBN 81-8356-227-2.
- ^ P. K. Wattal (2007) Nuclear Fuel Cycle. BARC Highlights, Bhaba Atomic Research Center, Chapter 4: Basic Studies Archived 2011-07-27 at the Wayback Machine
- ^ A. K. Sengupta, R. K. Bhagat, A. Laik, G. B. Kale, T. Jarvis, S. Majumdar, H. S. Kamath (2006): "Out-of-pile chemical compatibility of Pb–Bi eutectic alloy with Graphite". Zeitschrift für Metallkunde, volume 97, issue 6, pages 834–837. doi:10.3139/146.101311
- ^ a b c Leopold Gmelin (1851), Hand-book of Chemistry. Translated by Henry Watts. Cavendish Society
- ^ John (1820). Berlinisches Jahrbuch der Pharmacie, p. 320. Cited by Gmelin (1851) with a "?".
- ^ Jöns Jacob Berzelius (1820), Des rercherches sur la composition des prussiates ou des hydrocyanates ferrugineux. Annales de chimie et de physique, volume 15
- ^ Friedmann Göbel (1823). Archiv des Apotheker-Vereins, 11, p.347.
- ^ Perdonnet (1824). Nouveau Pyrophore. Short note in Bulletin universal des sciences et de l'índustrie, Volume 2, Paris, p.30
- ^ Anonymous note (1824), New Pyrophorus of Tartrate of Lead. The Edinburgh Philosophical Journal, Volume 10 issue 20, p. 368
- ^ Bassam Z. Shakhashiri (1983), Pyrophoric lead; in Chemical demonstrations: a handbook for teachers of chemistry, Univ of Wisconsin Press, p. 94
- ^ Jöns Jacob Berzelius (1846), Traité de Chimie Minérale, Végetale et Animale, vol. 2. Transl. by F.H. Esslinger. Firmin Didot, Paris.
- ^ William Thomas Brande and Alfred Swayne Taylor (1867),Chemistry. 2nd American edition, Henry C. Lea, Philadelphia.