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Potassium chromate


|Potassium dichromate |Chromic acid, dipotassium salt |hexagonal (α-form, above 666 C) |rhombic (β-form, common) | NFPA-H = 2 | NFPA-F = 0 | NFPA-R = 0 | NFPA-S = - |Sodium chromate |Calcium chromate |Barium chromate |Potassium hypochromate |Potassium perchromate Potassium chromate is the inorganic compound with the formula . This yellow solid is the potassium salt of the chromate anion. It is a common laboratory chemical, whereas sodium chromate is important industrially.

Production and reactions

It is prepared by treating potassium dichromate with potassium hydroxide: :

Or with potassium carbonate: :

Or, the fusion of potassium hydroxide and chromium trioxide: :

When treated with lead(II) nitrate, it gives an orange-yellow precipitate, lead(II) chromate.

Applications

Unlike the less expensive sodium salt, the potassium salt is mainly used for laboratory work in situations where an anhydrous salt is required, or as an oxidizing agent in organic synthesis.

It is used in qualitative inorganic analysis, e.g. as a colorimetric test for silver ion. It is also used as an indicator in precipitation titrations with silver nitrate to measure levels of chloride ion (the Mohr method of determining chloride) since red silver chromate is precipitated in the presence of any excess of silver ions when potassium chromate is present. This titration proceeds by the following reactions, where silver nitrate is used as the titrant: : :

Structure

Two crystalline forms are known, both being very similar to the corresponding potassium sulfate. Orthorhombic is the common form, but it converts to an α-form above 666 C.

File:Structure of K2SO4, K2CrO4 and some related compounds.tif|Structure of File:TopView10cnK.tif|Coordination sphere of one of two types of site File:SO4sphere.tif|The environment about the tetrahedral center in

Safety

As with other Cr(VI) compounds, potassium chromate is carcinogenic. Positive associations with lung cancer at a very high rate, and nasal / sinus cancer at a 100x lower rate than lung cancer have been found using worker exposure data. In general, less soluble chromates are a larger chronic hazard as they can be encapsulated in the lung without being absorbed and excreted, giving more time for reactive intermediates to be produced. Animal data indicates a potential for impaired fertility, heritable genetic damage and harm to unborn children, along with other types of cancer via less common exposure routes.

As a highly soluble hexavalent chromium compound, potassium chromate is also acutely toxic, though it is poorly absorbed from the intestinal tract. The compound is also corrosive and exposure may produce severe eye damage or blindness.

References

References

  1. {{CRC85
  2. {{Sigma-Aldrich
  3. (29 March 2024). "SDS - Potassium Chromate". Thermo Fisher Scientific.
  4. (1 January 1966). "Encyclopedia of Explosives and Related Items". U.S. Army Armament Research Development And Engineering Center - TACOM, ARDEC - Warheads, Energetics And Combat Support Armaments Center.
  5. "Chloride, titrimetric, Mohr". National Environment Methods Index (NEMI).
  6. "Chromium Compounds".
  7. (2012). "Volume 100C: Arsenic, Metals, Fibres, and Dusts". World Health Organization - International Agency for Research on Cancer.
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