Sodium pyrosilicate is the chemical compound Na
6Si
2O
7. It is one of the sodium silicates, specifically a pyrosilicate, formally a salt of the unstable pyrosilicic acid H
6Si
2O
7.[1][2]
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Other names
hexasodium diorthosilicate
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3D model (JSmol)
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Properties | |
Na6O7Si2 | |
Molar mass | 306.102 g·mol−1 |
Except where otherwise noted, data are given for materials in their standard state (at 25 °C [77 °F], 100 kPa).
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Structure
editThe anhydrous solid has the triclinic crystal structure, with space group P1 (a = 5.8007(8) Å, b = 11.5811(15) Å, c = 23.157(3) Å, α = 89.709(10)°, β = 88.915(11)°, γ = 89.004(11)°, V = 1555.1(4) Å3, Z = 8, Dx = 2.615 g·cm−3, μ(Mo‐Kα) = 7.94 cm−1). The Si
2O6−
7 anions are arranged in layers parallel to the (100) plane, with the sodium cations distributed in 24 distinct crystallographic positions, coordinated by 4 to 6 near oxygen atoms. Some of the 4-coordinated sodium atoms can be interpreted as parallel columns of edge-sharing NaO
4 tetrahedra. The columnar arrangement forms tunnels that house the remaining sodium cations. Twinning at a microscopic scale simulates a much larger monoclinic C centered lattice (V′ = 6220 Å3, Z = 32).[3]
See also
edit- Sodium metasilicate, Na
2SiO
3 - Sodium orthosilicate, Na
4SiO
4
References
edit- ^ Myron C Waddell (1932): "Process of purifying technical sodium pyrosilicate hydrates". US patent US1931364A.
- ^ J. F. Schairer and N. L. Bowen (1956): "The system Na
2O—Al
2O
3—SiO
2". American Journal of Science, volume 254, issue 3, pages 129-195 doi:10.2475/ajs.254.3.129 - ^ Volker Kahlenberg, Thomas Langreiter, and Erik Arroyabe (2010): "Na6Si2O7 – The Missing Structural Link among Alkali Pyrosilicates". Zeitschrift für anorganishe und allgemeine Chemie (Journal for Inorganic and General Chemistry), volume 636, issue 11, pages 1974-1979. doi:10.1002/zaac.201000120