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Encyclopedia Britannica - Main :: ORC-PAI |
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OSMIUM [symbol Os., atomic weight 190.9 (0= r6)] , in chemistry, a metallic element
1803 by Smithson Tennant (Phil. Trans., 1804, 94, p. 411). It may be prepared from osmiridium by fusing the alloy with zinc, the zinc being afterwards removed by distillation. T e residue so obtained is then powdered and ignited with bariu nitrate, which converts the iridium into its oxide
Wohler , Pogg. 31, p. 161; E. Leidie and L. Quenessen, Bull . soc. aim., 1903 (8), 29, p. 801). The tetroxide, OsO4, can be easily reduced to the metal by dissolving it in hydrochloric acid and adding zinc, mercury, or an alkaline formate to the liquid, or by passing its vapour, mixed with carbon dioxide and monoxide, through a red-hot porcelain
Regnault
p. 452) by reducing osmium compounds with hydrazine hydrate in the presence of gum arabic. Several oxides of osmium are known. The protoxide, OsO, is obtained as a dark grey insoluble powder when osmium sulphite is heated with sodium carbonate in a current of carbon dioxide. The sesquioxide, OS20,, results on heating osmium with an excess of the tetroxide. The dioxide, OsO2, is formed when potassium osmichloride is heated with sodium carbonate in a current of carbon dioxide, or by electrolysis of a solution of the tetroxide in the presence of alkali. It is insoluble in acids and exists in several hydrated forms. The osmiates, corresponding to the unknown trioxide OsO3, are red or green coloured salts; the solutions are only stable in the presence of excess of caustic alkali; on boiling an aqueous solution of the potassium salt it decomposes readily, forming a black precipitate of osmic acid, H20s04. Potassium osmiate, K20sO42H2O, formed when an alkaline solution of the tetroxide is decomposed by alcohol, or by potassium nitrite, crystallizes in red octahedra. It is stable in dry air, but in moist air rapidly decomposes. The tetroxide, OsO4, is formed when osmium compounds are heated in air, or with aqua regia, or fused with caustic alkali and nitre. It is obtained as a yellowish coloured mass and can be sublimed in the form of needles which melt at 4o C. It possesses an unpleasant smell and its vapour is extremely poisonous. It dissolves slowly in water, and the aqueous solution is reduced by most metals with precipitation of osmium. It acts as an oxidizing agent, liberating iodine from potassium iodide, converting alcohol into acetaldehyde, &c. Osmium dichloride, OsC12, is obtained as a dark coloured powder when the metal is heated in a current of chlorine. Its solution in water is deep blue in colour, but the colour changes rapidly togreen and yellow. The trichloride, OsC18, is only known in solution and is formed by the reducing action of mercury on ammonia-cal solutions of the tetroxide. A hydrated form of composition OsC12.3H2O has been described. The tetrachloride, OsC14, is obtained as a dark red sublimate (mixed with the dichloride) when osmium is heated in dry chlorine. It is soluble in water, but the dilute solution readily decomposes on standing
double
emerald
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