Antimony trisulfide (Sb2S3) is found in nature as the crystalline mineral stibnite and the amorphous red mineral (actually a mineraloid)[3] metastibnite.[4] It is manufactured for use in safety matches, military ammunition, explosives and fireworks. It also is used in the production of ruby-colored glass and in plastics as a flame retardant.[5] Historically the stibnite form was used as a grey pigment in paintings produced in the 16th century.[6] In 1817, the dye and fabric chemist, John Mercer discovered the non-stoichiometric compound Antimony Orange (approximate formula Sb2S3·Sb2O3), the first good orange pigment available for cotton fabric printing.[7]
Sb2S3 can be prepared from the elements at temperature 500–900 °C:[5]
2 Sb + 3 S → Sb2S3
Sb2S3 is precipitated when H2S is passed through an acidified solution of Sb(III).[9] This reaction has been used as a gravimetric method for determining antimony, bubbling H2S through a solution of Sb(III) compound in hot HCl deposits an orange form of Sb2S3 which turns black under the reaction conditions.[10]
Sb2S3 is readily oxidised, reacting vigorously with oxidising agents.[5] It burns in air with a blue flame. It reacts with incandescence with cadmium, magnesium and zinc chlorates. Mixtures of Sb2S3 and chlorates may explode.[11]
In the extraction of antimony from antimony ores the alkaline sulfide process is employed where Sb2S3 reacts to form thioantimonate(III) salts (also called thioantimonite):[12]
3 Na2S + Sb2S3 → 2 Na3SbS3
A number of salts containing different thioantimonate(III) ions can be prepared from Sb2S3. These include:[13]
[SbS3]3−, [SbS2]−, [Sb2S5]4−, [Sb4S9]6−, [Sb4S7]2− and [Sb8S17]10−
Schlippe's salt, Na3SbS4·9H2O, a thioantimonate(V) salt is formed when Sb2S3 is boiled with sulfur and sodium hydroxide. The reaction can be represented as:[9]
Sb2S3 + 3 S2− + 2 S → 2 [SbS4]3−
Structure
The structure of the black needle-like form of Sb2S3, stibnite, consists of linked ribbons in which antimony atoms are in two different coordination environments, trigonal pyramidal and square pyramidal.[9] Similar ribbons occur in Bi2S3 and Sb2Se3.[14] The red form, metastibnite, is amorphous. Recent work suggests that there are a number of closely related temperature dependent structures of stibnite which have been termed stibnite (I) the high temperature form, identified previously, stibnite (II) and stibnite (III).[15] Other paper shows that the actual coordination polyhedra of antimony are in fact SbS7, with (3+4) coordination at the M1 site and (5+2) at the M2 site.[clarification needed] These coordinations consider the presence of secondary bonds. Some of the secondary bonds impart cohesion and are connected with packing.[16]
References
^ abHaynes, W. M., ed. (2014). CRC Handbook of Chemistry and Physics (95th ed.). Boca Raton, FL: CRC Press. pp. 4–48. ISBN978-1-4822-0867-2.
^Parnell, Edward A (1886). The life and labours of John Mercer. London: Longmans, Green & Co. p. 23.
^Electrochemistry of Metal Chalcogenides, Mirtat Bouroushian, Springer, 2010
^ abcHolleman, Arnold Frederik; Wiberg, Egon (2001), Wiberg, Nils (ed.), Inorganic Chemistry, translated by Eagleson, Mary; Brewer, William, San Diego/Berlin: Academic Press/De Gruyter, p. 765-766, ISBN0-12-352651-5
^A.I. Vogel, (1951), Quantitative Inorganic analysis, (2d edition), Longmans Green and Co
^Inorganic Reactions and Methods, The Formation of Bonds to Group VIB (O, S, Se, Te, Po) Elements (Part 1) (Volume 5) Ed. A.P, Hagen,1991, Wiley-VCH, ISBN0-471-18658-9
^Kuze S., Du Boulay D., Ishizawa N., Saiki A, Pring A.; (2004), X ray diffraction evidence for a monoclinic form of stibnite, Sb2S3, below 290K; American Mineralogist, 9(89), 1022-1025.
^Kyono, A.; Kimata, M.; Matsuhisa, M.; Miyashita, Y.; Okamoto, K. (2002). "Low-temperature crystal structures of stibnite implying orbital overlap of Sb 5s 2 inert pair electrons". Physics and Chemistry of Minerals. 29 (4): 254–260. Bibcode:2002PCM....29..254K. doi:10.1007/s00269-001-0227-1. S2CID95067785.