Lead(II) sulfate

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Lead(II) sulfate
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UN number 1759 1794
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Template:Longitem PbSO4
Molar mass 303.26 g/mol[1][2]
Appearance white solid
Density 6.29 g/cm3[3]
Melting point Template:Chembox CalcTemperatures
Template:Longitem 2.13 x 10−8 (20 °C)
Solubility insoluble in alcohol

soluble in ammonium acetate (≥ 6 mol/L)

soluble in ammonium tartrate in presence of ammonium chloride and ammonia

Template:Longitem −69.7·10−6 cm3/mol
Template:Longitem 1.877
Template:Longitem orthorhombic, barite
Template:Longitem 103 J/degree mol
Template:Longitem 149 J·mol−1·K−1[5]
Template:Longitem −920 kJ·mol−1[5]
Template:Longitem Lead(II) chloride, Lead(II) bromide, Lead(II) iodide, Lead(II) fluoride
Template:Longitem Tin(II) sulfate, Sodium sulfate, Copper(II) sulfate

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Lead(II) sulfate (PbSO4) is a white solid, which appears white in microcrystalline form. It is also known as fast white, milk white, sulfuric acid lead salt or anglesite.

It is often seen in the plates/electrodes of car batteries, as it is formed when the battery is discharged (when the battery is recharged, then the lead sulfate is transformed back to metallic lead and sulfuric acid on the negative terminal or lead dioxide and sulfuric acid on the positive terminal). Lead sulfate is poorly soluble in water.

Structure

Anglesite (lead(II) sulfate, Template:Chem2) adopts the same orthorhombic crystal structure as celestite (strontium sulfate, Template:Chem2) and barite (barium sulfate, Template:Chem2). All three minerals' structures are in the space group Pbnm (number 62).[6] Each lead(II) ion is surrounded by 12 oxygen atoms from 7 sulfate ions, forming a PbO12 polyhedron.[7] The lead–oxygen distances range from 2.612 Å to 3.267 Å and the average distance is 2.865 Å.[6]

Coordination geometry in lead(II) sulfate[6]
Lead coordination Sulfate coordination
File:Lead(II)-sulfate-xtal-Pb-coordination-3D-bs-17.png File:Lead(II)-sulfate-xtal-SO4-coordination-3D-bs-17.png

Manufacturing

Lead(II) sulfate is prepared by treating lead oxide, hydroxide or carbonate with warm sulfuric acid or by treating a soluble lead salt with sulfuric acid.

Alternatively, it can be made by the interaction of solutions of lead nitrate and sodium sulfate.

Toxicology

Lead sulfate is toxic by inhalation, ingestion and skin contact. It is a cumulative poison, and repeated exposure may lead to anemia, kidney damage, eyesight damage or damage to the central nervous system (especially in children). It is also corrosive - contact with the eyes can lead to severe irritation or burns. Typical threshold limit value is 0.15 mg/m3.

Mineral

The naturally occurring mineral anglesite, PbSO4, occurs as an oxidation product of primary lead sulfide ore,

Basic and hydrogen lead sulfates

A number of lead basic sulfates are known: PbSO4·PbO; PbSO4·2PbO; PbSO4·3PbO; PbSO4·4PbO. They are used in manufacturing of active paste for lead–acid batteries. A related mineral is leadhillite, 2PbCO3·PbSO4·Pb(OH)2.

At high concentration of sulfuric acid (>80%), lead hydrogensulfate, Pb(HSO4)2, forms.[8]

Chemical properties

Lead(II) sulfate can be dissolved in concentrated HNO3, HCl, H2SO4 producing acidic salts or complex compounds, and in concentrated alkali giving soluble tetrahydroxidoplumbate(II) [Pb(OH)4]2− complexes.

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Lead(II) sulfate decomposes when heated above 1000 °C:

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Applications

See also

References

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External links

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