Rubidium chloride


title: "Rubidium chloride" type: doc version: 1 created: 2026-02-28 author: "Wikipedia contributors" status: active scope: public tags: ["rubidium-compounds", "chlorides", "metal-halides", "antidepressants", "stimulants", "alkali-metal-chlorides", "rock-salt-crystal-structure"] topic_path: "general/rubidium-compounds" source: "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rubidium_chloride" license: "CC BY-SA 4.0" wikipedia_page_id: 0 wikipedia_revision_id: 0

| Verifiedfields = changed | Watchedfields = changed | verifiedrevid = 464384175 | Name = Rubidium chloride | ImageFile = Rubidium-chloride-3D-ionic.png

| ImageName = Rubidium chloride's NaCl structure | ImageFile1 = Rubidium-chloride-CsCl-structure-3D-ionic.png

| ImageName1 = Rubidium chloride's CsCl structure | ImageFile2=Rubidium chloride.JPG | OtherNames = rubidium(I) chloride |Section1={{Chembox Identifiers | ChemSpiderID_Ref = | ChemSpiderID = 56434 | SMILES = [Rb+].[Cl-] | StdInChI_Ref = | StdInChI = 1S/ClH.Rb/h1H;/q;+1/p-1 | StdInChIKey_Ref = | StdInChIKey = FGDZQCVHDSGLHJ-UHFFFAOYSA-M | CASNo = 7791-11-9 | CASNo_Ref = | UNII_Ref = | UNII = N3SHC5273S | PubChem = 62683 | ChEBI_Ref = | ChEBI = 78672 | RTECS = VL8575000 | InChI = 1/ClH.Rb/h1H;/q;+1/p-1 |Section2={{Chembox Properties | Formula = RbCl | MolarMass = 120.921 g/mol | Appearance = white crystals hygroscopic | Density = 2.80 g/cm3 (25 °C) 2.088 g/mL (750 °C) | Solubility = 77 g/100mL (0 °C) 91 g/100 mL (20 °C) 130 g/100 mL (100 °C) | Solvent1 = methanol | Solubility1 = 1.41 g/100 mL | MeltingPtC = 718 | BoilingPtC = 1390 | RefractIndex = 1.5322 | MagSus = −46.0·10−6 cm3/mol |Section4={{Chembox Thermochemistry | DeltaHf = −435.14 kJ/mol | Entropy = 95.9 J K−1 mol−1 | HeatCapacity = 52.4 J K−1 mol−1 |Section7={{Chembox Hazards | ExternalSDS = Fisher Scientific | NFPA-H = 1 | NFPA-R = 0 | NFPA-F = 0 | FlashPt = Non-flammable | LD50 = 4440 mg/kg (rat) |Section8={{Chembox Related | OtherAnions = Rubidium fluoride Rubidium bromide Rubidium iodide Rubidium astatide | OtherCations = Lithium chloride Sodium chloride Potassium chloride Caesium chloride Francium chloride

Rubidium chloride is the chemical compound with the formula RbCl. This alkali metal halide salt is composed of rubidium and chlorine, and finds diverse uses ranging from electrochemistry to molecular biology.

Structure

In its gas phase, RbCl is diatomic with a bond length estimated at 2.7868 Å. This distance increases to 3.285 Å for cubic RbCl, reflecting the higher coordination number of the ions in the solid phase.

Depending on conditions, solid RbCl exists in one of three arrangements or polymorphs as determined with holographic imaging:

Sodium chloride (octahedral 6:6)

The sodium chloride (NaCl) polymorph is most common. A cubic close-packed arrangement of chloride anions with rubidium cations filling the octahedral holes describes this polymorph. Both ions are six-coordinate in this arrangement. The lattice energy of this polymorph is only 3.2 kJ/mol less than the following structure's.

Caesium chloride (cubic 8:8)

At high temperature and pressure, RbCl adopts the caesium chloride (CsCl) structure (NaCl and KCl undergo the same structural change at high pressures). Here, the chloride ions form a simple cubic arrangement with chloride anions occupying the vertices of a cube surrounding a central Rb+. This is RbCl's densest packing motif. Because a cube has eight vertices, both ions' coordination numbers equal eight. This is RbCl's highest possible coordination number. Therefore, according to the radius ratio rule, cations in this polymorph will reach their largest apparent radius because the anion-cation distances are greatest.

Sphalerite (tetrahedral 4:4)

The sphalerite polymorph of rubidium chloride has not been observed experimentally. This is consistent with the theory; the lattice energy is predicted to be nearly 40.0 kJ/mol smaller in magnitude than those of the preceding structures.

Synthesis and reaction

The most common preparation of pure rubidium chloride involves the reaction of its hydroxide with hydrochloric acid, followed by recrystallization: :RbOH + HCl → RbCl + H2O

Because RbCl is hygroscopic, it must be protected from atmospheric moisture, e.g. using a desiccator. RbCl is primarily used in laboratories. Therefore, numerous suppliers (see below) produce it in smaller quantities as needed. It is offered in a variety of forms for chemical and biomedical research.

Rubidium chloride reacts with sulfuric acid to give rubidium hydrogen sulfate.

Radioactivity

Every 18 mg of rubidium chloride is equivalent to approximately one banana equivalent dose due to the large fraction (27.8%) of naturally occurring radioactive isotope rubidium-87.

Uses

References

References

  1. (1963). "Microwave Spectrum of Lithium Chloride". Journal of Chemical Physics.
  2. Wells, A. F.. (1984). "Structural Inorganic Chemistry". Oxford University Press.
  3. (2005). "X-ray diffuse scattering holography of a centrosymmetric sample". Applied Physics Letters.
  4. (2006). "Cohesion and polymorphism in solid rubidium chloride". Journal of Physics: Condensed Matter.
  5. (1990). "Inorganic Chemistry". Freeman.
  6. Winter, M.. (2006). "Compounds of Rubidium". WebElements.
  7. (2002). "Formation of oriented molecular nanowires on mica surface". Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A..
  8. (1994). "Rubidium chloride fuses split circadian activity rhythms in hamsters housed in bright constant light". Chronobiology International.
  9. (2003). "Marking bark beetle parasitoids within the host plant with rubidium for dispersal studies". Entomologia Experimentalis et Applicata.
  10. (2006). "RbCl Transformation Protocol". [[New England Biolabs]].
  11. Budavari, S.. (1996). "The Merck index: an encyclopedia of chemicals, drugs, and biologicals". Merck.

::callout[type=info title="Wikipedia Source"] This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page. ::

rubidium-compoundschloridesmetal-halidesantidepressantsstimulantsalkali-metal-chloridesrock-salt-crystal-structure