Antimony (revised)

views updated May 11 2018

ANTIMONY (REVISED)

Note: This article, originally published in 1998, was updated in 2006 for the eBook edition.

Overview

Antimony compounds have been used by humans for centuries. Women of ancient Egypt used stibic stone, antimony sulfide, (Sb2S3), to darken their eyes. Antimony was also used in making colored glazes for beads and glassware. The chemical symbol for antimony was taken from the ancient name for the element, stibium. Not recognized as a chemical element until the Middle Ages, antimony became a common material used by alchemists.

Alchemy was a kind of pre-science that existed from about 500 b.c. to about the end of the 16th century. Alchemists wanted to find a way of changing lead, iron, and other metals into gold. They also wanted to find a way of having eternal life. Alchemy contained too much magic and mysticism to be a real science, but alchemists developed a number of techniques and produced many new materials that were later found to be useful in modern chemistry. Antimony was one of these materials.

SYMBOL
Sb

ATOMIC
NUMBER 51

ATOMIC MASS
121.75

FAMILY
Group 15 (VA)
Nitrogen

PRONUNCIATION
AN-ti-moh-nee

Antimony is a metalloid. A metalloid is an element that has characteristics of both metals and non-metals. The metalloids can be found on either side of the staircase line on the right side of the periodic table (with the exception of aluminum, which is not considered a metalloid).

Antimony is primarily used in alloys, ceramics and glass, plastics, and flame retardant materials. Flame retardant materials do not burn with an open flame. Instead, they smolder or do not burn at all.

Discovery and naming

Compounds of antimony were known to ancient cultures. They have been found, for example, in the colored glazes used on beads, vases, and other glassware. But these compounds were not widely used until the Middle Ages when they became popular among alchemists. They thought that antimony could be used to convert lead into gold. It was during this period that records about the properties of antimony begin to appear.

The element was probably first named by Roman scholar Pliny (a.d. 23-79), who called it stibium. Muslim alchemist Abu Musa Jabir Ibn Hayyan (c. 721-c. 815) probably first called it antimonyanti ("not") and monos ("alone"). The name comes from the fact that antimony does not occur alone in nature.

Alchemists used secret codes to write about much of their work, so modern scholars do not know a great deal about how antimony was used. The first detailed reports about antimony were published in 1707 when French chemist Nicolas Lemery (1645-1715) published his famous book, Treatise on Antimony.

Physical properties

Antimony is a silvery-white, shiny element that looks like a metal. It has a scaly surface and is hard and brittle like a non-metal. It can also be prepared as a black powder with a shiny brilliance to it.

The melting point of antimony is 630°C (1,170°F) and its boiling point is 1,635°C (2,980°F). It is a relatively soft material that can be scratched by glass. Its density is 6.68 grams per cubic centimeter.

A metalloid is an element that has characteristics of both metals and non-metals.

Chemical properties

Antimony is a moderately active element. It does not combine with oxygen in the air at room temperature. It also does not react with cold water or with most cold acids. It does dissolve in some hot acids, however, and in aqua regia. Aqua regia is a mixture of hydrochloric and nitric acids. It often reacts with materials that do not react with either acid separately.

Occurrence in nature

Antimony is rarely found in its native (as an element) state. Instead, it usually occurs as a compound. The most common minerals of antimony are stibnite, tetrahedrite, bournonite, boulangerite, and jamesonite. In most of these minerals, antimony is combined with sulfur to produce some form of antimony sulfide (Sb2S3).

The largest producers of antimony are China, Russia, Bolivia, South Africa, and Kyrgyzstan, in that order. The United States produces antimony as a by-product at only one silver mine in Idaho.

The abundance of antimony is estimated to be about 0.2 parts per million, placing it in the bottom fifth among the chemical elements found in the Earth's crust. It is more abundant than silver or mercury, but less abundant than iodine.

Isotopes

There are two naturally occurring isotopes of antimony, antimony-121 and antimony-123. Isotopes are two or more forms of an element. Isotopes differ from each other according to their mass number. The number written to the right of the element's name is the mass number. The mass number represents the number of protons plus neutrons in the nucleus of an atom of the element. The number of protons determines the element, but the number of neutrons in the atom of any one element can vary. Each variation is an isotope.

About 20 radioactive isotopes of antimony are also known. A radioactive isotope is one that breaks apart and gives off some form of radiation. Radioactive isotopes are produced when very small particles are fired at atoms. These particles stick in the atoms and make them radioactive.

Two of antimony's radioactive isotopes are used commercially as tracers. These isotopes are antimony-124 and antimony-125. A tracer is an isotope injected into a living or non-living system. The movement of the isotope can then be followed as it moves through the system. For example, a small amount of antimony-124 could be injected into an oil pipeline. The presence of the isotope can be detected by means of an instrument held above the pipeline. The radiation given off by the isotope causes a light to flash or a sound to occur in the instrument. The movement of the isotope through the pipeline can be followed in this way. If the pipeline has a leak, the tracer will escape from it. Its movement through the soil can be detected.

Extraction

Antimony can be recovered from stibnite with hot iron:

About half the antimony produced in the United States is recycled from old lead storage batteries used in cars and trucks.

Uses

Antimony is used to make alloys with a number of different metals. An alloy is made by melting and mixing two or more metals. The properties of the mixture are different than those of the individual metals. One of the most common of these alloys is one made with lead. Lead-antimony alloys are used for solder, ammunition, fishing tackle, covering for electrical cables, alloys that melt at low temperatures, and batteries. The manufacture of lead storage batteries, like the ones used in cars and trucks, account for about one-fifth of all the antimony used each year. A small amount of antimony is also used in making transistors, which are found in such consumer electrical devices as computer games, pocket calculators, and portable stereos. A transistor is a solid-state (using special properties of solids, rather than electron tubes) electronic device used to control the flow of an electric current.

Other minor uses of antimony include the manufacture of glass and ceramics and the production of plastics. In glass and ceramics, a small amount of antimony insures that the final product will be clear and colorless. In the production of plastics, antimony is used as a catalyst. A catalyst is a substance used to speed up or slow down a chemical reaction. The catalyst does not undergo any change itself during the reaction.

Compounds

The most important use of antimony is in making compounds used in the manufacture of flame-retardant materials. Slightly more than half of all antimony goes to this use. These include antimony oxychloride (SbOCl), antimony pentoxide (Sb2O5), antimony trichloride (SbCl3), and antimony trioxide (Sb2O3). These compounds are sprayed on or added to a fabric to make it flame retardant.

Health effects

Antimony and its compounds are dangerous to human health. In low levels, these materials can irritate the eyes and lungs. They may also cause stomach pain, diarrhea, vomiting, and stomach ulcers. At higher doses, antimony and its compounds can cause lung, heart, liver, and kidney damage. At very high doses, they can cause death.

Antimony

views updated May 21 2018

Antimony


melting point: 630°C
boiling point: 1,750°C
density: 6.684 g/cm3
most common ions: Sb3+, SbO+

Antimony is a metalloid element, or a semimetal, its chemical behavior being between those of metals and nonmetals. It is a substance that was known in the ancient world. Antimony sulfide was used as cosmetic eye paint in ancient Egypt, and artifacts composed of almost pure antimony have been found at archaeological sites. Pure antimony is silvery gray and metalliclooking. If antimony is melted and then allowed to crystallize, it manifests a characteristic pattern known as the star of antimony.

There are two stable isotopes of antimony: 121Sb (57.25%) and 123Sb (42.75%), leading to an atomic weight calculation of 121.75. It is not abundant in Earth's crust (an abundance of only 0.2 parts per million), but several antimony compounds occur as minerals, including stibnite, Sb2S3, the cosmetic mentioned above. Antimony is also a common impurity in ores of copper, lead, and silver. When antimony is heated in air it burns vigorously, forming the white oxide Sb2O3.

Alloys of antimony and other metals have many applications. Alloys of antimony and lead are much harder than pure lead and are used in the making of low-friction bearings, lead-acid batteries, and printing type metal. Alloys of antimony, lead, and tin have the unusual property of expanding upon crystallization from a melt, and thus fill all recesses of the molds used to make printing type. Antimony compounds are used as flame-retardants and in paints, glazes for ceramics, specialty glasses, and semiconductor materials. The sulfide Sb2S5 is a rubber additive. Tartar emetic, a complex antimony tartrate of formula K[C4H2O5Sb(OH)2] · ½H2O has been used medically for over three hundred years.

Harold Goldwhite

Bibliography

Greenwood, Norman N., and Earnshaw, A. (1984). Chemistry of the Elements. London: Pergamon Press.

Weeks, Mary Elvira, and Leicester, Henry M. (1968). Discovery of the Elements, 7th edition. Easton, PA: Journal of Chemical Education.

antimony

views updated Jun 08 2018

an·ti·mo·ny / ˈantəˌmōnē/ • n. the chemical element of atomic number 51, a brittle silvery-white metalloid. (Symbol: Sb) DERIVATIVES: an·ti·mo·ni·al / ˌantəˈmōnēəl/ adj.an·ti·mo·nic / ˌantəˈmänik/ adj.an·ti·mo·ni·ous / ˌantəˈmōnēəs/ adj.

antimony

views updated May 21 2018

antimony (symbol Sb) Toxic semimetallic element of group V of the periodic table. Stibnite (a sulphide) is its commonest ore. It is used in some alloys, particularly in hardening lead for batteries and type metal, and in semiconductors. The element has two allotropes: a silvery white metallic and an amorphous grey form. Properties: at.no. 51; r.a.m. 121.75; r.d. 6.68; m.p. 630.5°C (1166.9°F); b.p. 1750°C (3182°F); most common isotope Sb121 (57.25%).

antimony

views updated May 17 2018

antimony Toxic metal of no known metabolic function, and therefore not a dietary essential. Antimony compounds are used in treatment of some parasitic diseases.

antimony

views updated Jun 27 2018

antimony XV. — medL. antimōnium.