Sodium iodide

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Sodium iodide (chemical formula NaI) is an ionic compound formed from the chemical reaction of sodium metal and iodine. Under standard conditions, it is a white, water-soluble solid comprising a 1:1 mix of sodium cations (Na+) and iodide anions (I) in a crystal lattice. It is used mainly as a nutritional supplement and in organic chemistry. It is produced industrially as the salt formed when acidic iodides react with sodium hydroxide.[1] It is a chaotropic salt.

Uses

Food supplement

Sodium iodide, as well as potassium iodide, is commonly used to treat and prevent iodine deficiency. Iodized table salt contains 10 ppm iodide.[1]

Organic synthesis

File:NaI@DWNT.png
Monatomic NaI chains grown inside double-wall carbon nanotubes.[2]

Sodium iodide is used for conversion of alkyl chlorides into alkyl iodides. This method, the Finkelstein reaction,[3] relies on the insolubility of sodium chloride in acetone to drive the reaction:[4]

R–Cl + NaI → R–I + NaCl

Nuclear medicine

Some radioactive iodide salts of sodium, including Na125I and Na131I, have radiopharmaceutical uses for thyroid cancer and hyperthyroidism or as radioactive tracer in imaging (see Isotopes of iodine > Radioiodines I-123, I-124, I-125, and I-131 in medicine and biology).

Thallium-doped NaI(Tl) scintillators

Sodium iodide activated with thallium, NaI(Tl), when subjected to ionizing radiation, emits photons (i.e., scintillate) and is used in scintillation detectors, traditionally in nuclear medicine, geophysics, nuclear physics, and environmental measurements. NaI(Tl) is the most widely used scintillation material. The crystals are usually coupled with a photomultiplier tube, in a hermetically sealed assembly, as sodium iodide is hygroscopic. Fine-tuning of some parameters (i.e., radiation hardness, afterglow, transparency) can be achieved by varying the conditions of the crystal growth. Crystals with a higher level of doping are used in X-ray detectors with high spectrometric quality. Sodium iodide can be used both as single crystals and as polycrystals for this purpose. The wavelength of maximum emission is 415 nm.[5]

Radiocontrast

António Egas Moniz searched for a radiocontrast agent for cerebral angiography.[6] After experiments on rabbits and dogs he settled upon sodium iodide as the best medium.[6]

Solubility data

Sodium iodide exhibits high solubility in some organic solvents, unlike sodium chloride or even bromide:

Solvent Solubility of NaI (g NaI/kg of solvent at 25 °C)[7]
H2O 1842
Liquid ammonia 1620
Liquid sulfur dioxide 150
Methanol 625–830
Formic acid 618
Acetonitrile 249
Acetone 504[8]
Formamide 570–850
Acetamide 323 (41.5 °C)
Dimethylformamide 37–64
Dichloromethane 0.09[9]

Stability

Iodides (including sodium iodide) are detectably oxidized by atmospheric oxygen (O2) to molecular iodine (I2). I2 and I complex to form the triiodide complex, which has a yellow color, unlike the white color of sodium iodide. Water accelerates the oxidation process, and iodide can also produce I2 by photooxidation, therefore for maximum stability sodium iodide should be stored under dark, low temperature, low humidity conditions.

See also

References

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External links

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Template:Sodium compounds Template:Navbox top

HI
+H
He
LiI BeI2 BI3
+BO3
CI4
+C
NI3
NH4I
+N
I2O4
I2O5
I2O6
I4O9
IF
IF3
IF5
IF7
Ne
NaI MgI2 AlI
AlI3
SiI4 PI3
P2I4
+P
PI5
S2I2 ICl
ICl3
Ar
KI CaI2 ScI3 TiI2
TiI3
TiI4
VI2
VI3
CrI2
CrI3
CrI4
MnI2 FeI2
FeI3
CoI2 NiI2
-Ni
CuI ZnI2 GaI
GaI3
GeI2
GeI4
+Ge
AsI3
As2I4
+As
Se IBr
IBr3
Kr
RbI
RbI3
SrI2 YI3 ZrI2
ZrI3
ZrI4
NbI4
NbI5
MoI2
MoI3
TcI3 RuI3 RhI3 PdI2 AgI CdI2 InI
InI3
SnI2
SnI4
SbI3
+Sb
TeI4
+Te
I
IScript error: No such module "Su".
Xe
CsI
CsI3
BaI2   LuI3 HfI3
HfI4
TaI4
TaI5
WI2
WI3
WI4
ReI3
[[Rhenium tetraiodide|Template:Chem/link]]
OsI
Template:Chem2
Template:Chem2
IrI3
[[Iridium tetraiodide|Template:Chem/link]]
PtI2
PtI4
AuI
AuI3
Hg2I2
HgI2
TlI
TlI3
PbI2 BiI3 PoI2
PoI4
AtI Rn
Fr RaI2   Lr Rf Db Sg Bh Hs Mt Ds Rg Cn Nh Fl Mc Lv Ts Og
LaI2
LaI3
CeI2
CeI3
PrI2
PrI3
NdI2
NdI3
PmI3 SmI2
SmI3
EuI2
EuI3
GdI2
GdI3
TbI3 DyI2
[[Dysprosium(III) iodide|Template:Chem/link]]
HoI3 ErI3 TmI2
TmI3
YbI2
YbI3
AcI3 ThI2
ThI3
ThI4
PaI4
PaI5
UI3
UI4
NpI3 PuI3 AmI2
AmI3
CmI3 [[Berkelium(III) iodide|Template:Chem/link]] [[Californium(II) iodide|Template:Chem/link]]
[[Californium(III) iodide|Template:Chem/link]]
EsI2
EsI3
Fm Md No

Template:Navbox bottom Template:Molecules detected in outer space