- Source: Barium metaphosphate
Barium metaphosphate is an inorganic substance with the molecular formula Ba(PO3)2. It is a colourless solid that is insoluble in water, though is soluble in acidic solutions through "slow dissolution". X-ray crystallography shows that this material is composed of Ba2+ cations attached to a polyphosphate ((PO3−)n) anion. A number of hydrated forms are known which are actually cyclic metaphosphates, Ba2(P4O12)·3.5H2O, Ba3(P3O9)2·6H2O.
Preparation
Barium metaphosphate can be prepared by the reaction of barium carbonate with metaphosphoric acid:
BaCO3 + 2HPO3 → Ba(PO3)2 +CO2 +H2O
or alternatively by the aqueous reaction of barium chloride and sodium metaphosphate:
BaCl2(aq) + 2NaPO3(aq) → Ba(PO3)2 + 2NaCl
Applications
The combination of soda and barium polyphosphate forms a low-melting glass with a high coefficient of thermal expansion. The melting point of the glass increases with barium content. This glass makes seals with low melting metals like aluminium (melting point 650 °C). Normal borosilicate glasses soften above the melting point of aluminium. This mixture is prepared by heating a mixture of diammonium phosphate, sodium carbonate, and barium carbonate.
References
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