Rubidium azide

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Template:Chembox Rubidium azide is an inorganic compound with the formula Template:Chem2. It is the rubidium salt of the hydrazoic acid Template:Chem2. Like most azides, it is explosive.[1]

Preparation

Rubidium azide can be created by the reaction between rubidium sulfate and barium azide which results in formation of easily separated insoluble barium sulfate:[2]

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In at least one study, rubidium azide was produced by the reaction between butyl nitrite, hydrazine monohydrate, and rubidium hydroxide in the presence of ethanol:

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This formula is typically used to synthesize potassium azide from caustic potash.[3]

Uses

Rubidium azide has been investigated for possible use in alkali vapor cells, which are components of atomic clocks, atomic magnetometers and atomic gyroscopes. Azides are desirable starting materials because they decompose into rubidium metal and nitrogen gas when exposed to UV light. According to one publication:

Among the different techniques used to fill microfabricated alkali vapor cell Template:Small, UV decomposition of rubidium azide (Template:Chem2) into metallic Rb and nitrogen in Template:Chem2 coated cells is a very promising approach for low-cost wafer-level fabrication.[4]

Structure

At room temperature, rubidium azide has the same structure as potassium hydrogen fluoride; a distorted caesium chloride structure. At 315 °C and 1 atm, rubidium azide will transition to the normal caesium chloride structure. The II/I transition temperature of rubidium azide is within 2 °C of its melting point.[1]

Rubidium azide has a high pressure structure transition, which occurs at about 4.8 kilobars of pressure at 0 °C. The transition boundary of the II/III transition can be defined by the relationship P=4.82+0.0240t, where P is the pressure in kilobars and t is the temperature in degrees Celsius.[1]

Reactions

As with all azides, it will decompose and release nitrogen gas when heated or severely shocked:

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Discharge rubidium azide in nitrogen gas will produce rubidium nitride.[5]

Hazards

At 4.1 kilobars of pressure and about 460 °C, rubidium azide will explosively decompose.[1] Under normal circumstances, it explodes at 395 °C.[6] It also decomposes upon exposure to ultraviolet light.[4]

Rubidium azide is very sensitive to mechanical shock, with an impact sensitivity comparable to that of TNT.[7]

Like all azides, rubidium azide is toxic.

References

Template:Reflist

Template:Rubidium compounds Template:Azides

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 Template:Cite web
  2. Cite error: Invalid <ref> tag; no text was provided for refs named [1]
  3. Template:Cite journal
  4. 4.0 4.1 Template:Cite journal
  5. H. Wattenberg: "Über zwei Bildungsweisen von Natriumnitrid und Kaliumnitrid" in Ber. d. dt. chem. Ges. 1930, 63(7), S. 1667-1672. Template:Doi
  6. Cite error: Invalid <ref> tag; no text was provided for refs named alkali
  7. Template:Cite journal