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CADMIUM (symbol Cd, atomic weight 112...

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Originally appearing in Volume V04, Page 931 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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CADMIUM (symbol Cd, atomic
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weight 112.4 (0=16))
  , a metallic element, showing a close relationship to
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zinc, with which it is very frequently associated . It was discovered in 1817 by F . Stromeyer in a sample of zinc carbonate from which a specimen of zinc
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oxide was obtained, having a yellow colour, although quite
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free from iron; Stromeyer showing that this coloration was due to the presence of the oxide of a new metal . Simultaneously Hermann, a German chemical manufacturer, discovered the new metal in a specimen of zinc oxide which had been thought to contain arsenic, since it gave a yellow precipitate, in acid solution, on the addition of sulphuretted hydrogen . This supposition was shown to be incorrect, and the nature of the new element was ascertained . Cadmium does not occur naturally in the uncombined condition, and only one
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mineral is known which contains it in any appreciable quantity, namely,
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greenockite, or cadmium sulphide, found at
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Greenock and at Bishopton in Scotland, and in Bohemia and Pennsylvania . It is, however, nearly always found associated with zinc blende, and with
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calamine, although only in small quantities . The metal is usually obtained from the flue-dust (produced during the first three or four hours working of a zinc distillation) which is collected in the
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sheet iron cones or adapters of the zinc retorts . This is mixed with small
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coal, and when redistilled gives an enriched dust, and by repeating the
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process and distilling from cast iron retorts the metal is obtained . It can be purified by solution in hydrochloric acid and subsequent precipitation by metallic zinc . Cadmium is a white metal, possessing a bluish tinge, and is capable of taking a high
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polish; on breaking, it shows a distinct fibrous fracture . By sublimation in a current of hydrogen it can be crystallized in the form of
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regular octahedra; it is slightly harder than tin, but is softer than zinc, and like tin, emits a crackling sound when bent .

It is malleable and can he rolled out into sheets . The specific gravity of the metal is 8.564, this value being slightly increased after hammering; its specific

heat is 0.0548 (R . Bunsen), it melts at 310-320° C. and boils between 763-772° C . (T . Carnelley), forming a deep yellow vapour . The cadmium molecule, as shown by determinations of the density of its vapour, is monatomic . The metal unites with the majority of the heavy metals to form alloys; some of these, the so-called fusible alloys, find a useful application from the fact that they possess a low melting-point . It also teeth . The metal is quite permanent in dry air, but in moist air it becomes coated with a superficial layer of the oxide; it burns on
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heating to redness, forming a brown coloured oxide; and is readily soluble in mineral acids with formation of the corresponding salts . Cadmium vapour decomposes
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water at a red heat, with liberation of hydrogen, and formation of the oxide of the metal . Cadmium oxide, CdO, is a brown powder of specific gravity 6.5, which can be prepared by heating the metal in air or in oxygen; or by ignition of the nitrate or carbonate; by heating the metal to a white heat in a current of oxygen it is obtained as a dark red crystalline sublimate . It does not melt at a white heat, and is easily reduced to the metal by heating in a current of hydrogen or with carbon .

It is a basic oxide, dissolving readily in acids, with the formation of salts, somewhat analogous to those of zinc . Cadmium hydroxide, Cd(OH)2, is obtained as a white precipitate by adding

potassium hydroxide to a solution of any soluble cadmium salt . It is decomposed by heat into the oxide and water, and is soluble in
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ammonia but not in excess of dilute potassium hydroxide; this latter
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property serves to distinguish it from zinc hydroxide . The chloride,CdCl2,bromide,CdBr2,and iodide,Cdl2,arealsoknown, cadmium iodide being sometimes used in photography, as it is one of the few iodides which are soluble in
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alcohol . Cadmium chloride and iodide have been shown to behave in an anomalous way in aqueous solution (W . Hittorf, Pogg .
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Ann., 1859, 106, 513), probably owing to the formation of complex ions; the abnormal behaviour apparently diminishing as the solution becomes more and more dilute, until, at very high dilutions the salts are ionized in the normal manner . Cadmium sulphate, CdSO4, is known in several hydrated forms; being deposited, on spontaneous evaporation of a concentrated aqueous solution, in the form of large monosymmetric crystals of composition 3CdSO4.8H20, whilst a boiling saturated solution, to which concentrated sulphuric acid has been added, deposits crystals of composition CdSO4•H2O . It is largely used for the purpose of making standard electric cells, such for example as the Weston cell . Cadmium sulphide, CdS, occurs naturally as greenockite (q.v.), and can be artificially prepared by passing sulphuretted hydrogen through acid solutions of soluble cadmium salts, when it is precipitated as a pale yellow amorphous solid . It is used as a pigment (cadmium yellow), for it retains its colour in an atmosphere containing sulphuretted hydrogen; it melts at a white heat, and on cooling solidifies to a lemon-yellow micaceous mass . Normal cadmium
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carbonates are unknown, a white precipitate of variable composition being obtained on the addition of solutions of the alkaline carbonates to soluble cadmium salts .

Cadmium nitrate, Cd(NO3)2.4H20, is a deliquescent salt, which may be obtained by dissolving either the metal, or its oxide or carbonate in dilute nitric acid . It crystallizes in needles and is soluble in alcohol . Cadmium salts can be recognized by the brown incrustation which is formed when they are heated on

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charcoal in the oxidizing flame of the
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blowpipe; and also by the yellow precipitate formed when sulphuretted hydrogen is passed though their acidified solutions . This precipitate is insoluble in cold dilute acids, in ammonium sulphide, and in solutions of the caustic alkalis, a behaviour which distinguishes it from the yellow sulphides of arsenic and tin . Cadmium is estimated quantitatively by conversion into the oxide, being precipitated from boiling solutions by the addition of sodium carbonate, the carbonate thus formed passing into the oxide on ignition . It can also be determined as sulphide, by precipitation with sulphuretted hydrogen, the precipitated sulphide being dried at too° C. and weighed . The atomic
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weight of cadmium was found by 0 . W . Huntington (Berichte, 1882, 15, p . 8o), from an analysis of the pure bromide, to be 111.9 . H . N .

Morse and H . C . Jones (Amer . Chem . Journ., 1892, 14, p . 261) by conversion of cadmium into the oxalate and then into oxide, obtained values ranging from 111.981 to 112.05, whilst W . S . Lorimer and E . F . Smith (Zeit. fur anorg . Chem., 1891, t, p . 364), by the electrolytic reduction of cadmium oxide in potassium
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cyanide solution, obtained as a mean value 112.055 .

The atomic weight of cadmium has been revised by G . P .

Baxter and M . A . Hines (Journ . Amer . Chem .
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Soc., 1905, 27, p . 222), by determinations of the ratio of cadmium chloride to
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silver chloride, and of the amount of silver required to precipitate cadmium chloride . The mean value obtained was 112.469 (Ag=107.93) . The mean value 112.467 was obtained by Baxter, Hines and Frevert (ibid., 1906, 28, p . 770) by analysing cadmium bromide .

End of Article: CADMIUM (symbol Cd, atomic weight 112.4 (0=16))
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