Everything about Iodine totally explained
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Iodine (or /ˈaɪədiːn/; from "violet"), is a
chemical element that has the symbol
I and
atomic number 53. Naturally-occurring iodine is a single isotope with 74 neutrons.
Chemically, iodine is the least reactive of the
halogens, and the most
electropositive halogen after
astatine. However, the element doesn't occur in the free state in nature. As with all other
halogens (members of Group VII in the Periodic Table), when freed from its compounds iodine forms
diatomic molecules (
I2).
Iodine and its compounds are primarily used in
medicine,
photography and in
dyes. Although it's rare in the
solar system and
Earth's crust, the iodides are very soluble in water, and the element is concentrated in seawater. This mechanism helps to explain how the element came to be required in trace amounts by all animals and some plants, being by far the heaviest element known to be necessary to living organisms.
Properties
Iodine under standard conditions is a dark-purple/dark-brown solid. It can be seen apparently
subliming at standard temperatures into a violet-pink gas that has an irritating odor. This halogen forms compounds with many elements, but is less reactive than the other members of its Group VII (halogens) and has some metallic light reflectance.
Elemental iodine dissolves easily in
chloroform and
carbon tetrachloride. The solubility of elementary iodine in water can be vastly increased by the addition of potassium iodide. The molecular iodine reacts reversibly with the negative ion, creating the
triiodide anion, I
3−, which dissolves well in water. This is also the formulation of some types of medicinal (antiseptic) iodine, although
tincture of iodine classically dissolves the element in alcohol. The deep blue color of
starch-iodine complexes is produced only by the free element.
Students who have seen the classroom demonstration in which iodine crystals are gently heated in a test tube to violet vapor, may gain the impression that liquid iodine doesn't exist at atmospheric pressure. This misconception arises because the small amount of vapor produced has such a deep colour that the liquid appears not to form. In fact, if iodine crystals are heated carefully to just above their melting point of 113.7 °C, the crystals melt into a liquid which is present under a dense blanket of the vapor.
History
Iodine was discovered by
Bernard Courtois in 1811. He was born to a manufacturer of
saltpeter (a vital part of gunpowder). At the time of the
Napoleonic Wars,
France was at war and saltpeter was in great demand. Saltpeter produced from French
niter beds required sodium carbonate, which could be isolated from
seaweed washed up on the coasts of
Normandy and
Brittany. To isolate the sodium carbonate, seaweed was burned and the ash then washed with water. The remaining waste was destroyed by adding
sulfuric acid. One day Courtois added too much sulfuric acid and a cloud of purple vapor rose. Courtois noted that the vapor crystallized on cold surfaces making dark crystals. Courtois suspected that this was a new element but lacked the money to pursue his observations.
However he gave samples to his friends,
Charles Bernard Desormes (1777 - 1862) and
Nicolas Clément (1779 - 1841), to continue research. He also gave some of the substance to
Joseph Louis Gay-Lussac (1778 - 1850), a well-known chemist at that time, and to
André-Marie Ampère (1775 - 1836). On
29 November 1813, Dersormes and Clément made public Courtois’ discovery. They described the substance to a meeting of the
Imperial Institute of France. On December 6, Gay-Lussac announced that the new substance was either an element or a compound of oxygen. Ampère had given some of his sample to
Humphry Davy (1778 - 1829). Davy did some experiments on the substance and noted its similarity to
chlorine. Davy sent a letter dated December 10 to the
Royal Society of London stating that he'd identified a new element. A large argument erupted between Davy and Gay-Lussac over who identified iodine first but both scientists acknowledged Courtois as the first to isolate the chemical element.
Applications
Iodine is used in pharmaceuticals, antiseptics, medicine, food supplements, dyes, catalysts, halogen lights, photography, water purifying, and starch detection.
- Tincture of iodine (10% elemental iodine in ethanol base) is an essential component of any emergency survival kit, used both to disinfect wounds and to sanitize surface water for drinking (3 drops per litre, let stand for 30 minutes). Alcohol-free iodine solutions such as Lugol's iodine, as well as other iodophor type antiseptics, are also available as effective elemental iodine sources for this purpose.
- Iodine compounds are important in the field of organic chemistry
- Iodine, as a heavy element, is quite radio-opaque. Organic compounds of a certain type (typically iodine-substituted benzene derivatives) are thus used in medicine as X-ray radiocontrast agents for intravenous injection. This is often in conjunction with advanced X-ray techniques such as angiography and CT scanning
- Silver iodide is used in photography.
- Tungsten iodide is used to stabilize the filaments in light bulbs.
- Iodine crystals are used in the process to make NI3 or nitrogen triiodide. This compound is a shock-sensitive explosive when dry. It has commonly been used for pranks, but because of its extreme touch sensitivity, isn't useful commercially.
Occurrence on earth
Iodine naturally occurs in the environment chiefly as dissolved
iodide in
seawater, although it's also found in some minerals and soils. The element may be prepared in an ultrapure form through the reaction of
potassium iodide with
copper(II) sulfate. There are also a few other methods of isolating this element in the laboratory-- for example the method used to isolate other halogens: oxidation of the iodide in
hydroiodic acid (often made in situ with an iodide and sulfuric acid) by
manganese dioxide (see below in
Descriptive chemistry). Although the element is actually quite rare,
kelp and certain plants and
algae have some ability to concentrate iodine, which helps introduce the element into the
food chain.
Sources
Iodine is found in the mineral
caliche, found in
Chile, between the
Andes and the sea. It can also be found in some seaweeds as well as extracted from seawater.
Extraction from seawater involves electrolysis. The brine is first purified and acidified using sulphuric acid and is then reacted with chlorine. An iodine solution is produced but it's yet too dilute and has to be concentrated. To do this air is blown into the solution which causes the iodine to evaporate, then it's passed into an absorbing tower containing acid where sulfur dioxide is added to reduce the iodine. The solution is then added to chlorine again to concentrate the solution more, and the final solution is at a level of about 99%.
Another source is from
kelp. This source was used in the 18th and 19th centuries but is no longer economically viable.
In 2005, Chile was the top producer of iodine with almost two-thirds world share followed by Japan and the USA, reports the
British Geological Survey.
Descriptive chemistry
Elemental iodine is poorly soluble in water, with one gram dissolving in 3450 ml at 20 °C and 1280 ml at 50 °C. By contrast with
chlorine, the formation of the hypohalite ion (IO
–) in neutral aqueous solutions of iodine is negligible.
» :I
2+ H
2O ↔ H
+ + I
– + HIO (
K = 2.0×10
−13)
Solubility in water is greatly improved if the solution contains dissolved
iodides such as
hydroiodic acid,
potassium iodide, or
sodium iodide; this extra solubility results from the high solubility of the I
3- ion. Dissolved
bromides also improve water solubility of iodine. Iodine is soluble in a number of organic solvents, including
ethanol (20.5 g/100 ml at 15 °C, 21.43 g/100 ml at 25 °C),
diethyl ether (20.6 g/100 ml at 17 °C, 25.20 g/100 ml at 25 °C),
chloroform,
acetic acid,
glycerol,
benzene (14.09 g/100 ml at 25 °C),
carbon tetrachloride (2.603 g/100 ml at 35 °C), and
carbon disulfide (16.47 g/100 ml at 25 °C). Aqueous and ethanol solutions are brown. Solutions in chloroform, carbon tetrachloride, and carbon disulfide are violet.
Elemental iodine can be prepared by oxidizing
iodides with chlorine:
» :2I
– + Cl
2 → I
2 + 2Cl
–
or with
manganese dioxide in acid solution:
» :I
2 + H
2S → 2HI + S↓
or by
hydrazine:
» :2I
2 + N
2H
4 → 4HI + N
2
Iodine is oxidized to
iodate by
nitric acid:
» :I
2 + 10HNO
3 → 2HIO
3 + 10NO
2 + 4H
2O
or by
chlorates: This is necessary for proper production of thyroid hormone. Natural sources of iodine include sea life, such as kelp and certain seafood, as well as plants grown on iodine-rich soil. Salt for human consumption is often fortified with iodine and is referred to as
iodized salt.
Iodine deficiency
In areas where there's little iodine in the diet—typically remote inland areas and semi-arid equatorial climates where no marine foods are eaten—
iodine deficiency gives rise to hypothyroidism, symptoms of which are extreme fatigue,
goitre, mental slowing, depression, weight gain, and low basal body temperatures.
Iodine deficiency is also the leading cause of preventable
mental retardation, an effect which happens primarily when babies and small children are made
hypothyroid by lack of the element. The addition of iodine to table salt has largely eliminated this problem in the wealthier nations, but as of March 2006, iodine deficiency remained a serious public health problem in the developing world.
Radioiodine and biology
Radioiodine and the thyroid
Human exposure to radioactive iodine will cause thyroid uptake, as with all iodine, leading to elevated chances of thyroid cancer. Isotopes with shorter half-lives such as I
131 present a greater risk than those with longer half-lives since they generate more radiation per unit of time. Taking large amounts of regular iodine will saturate the thyroid and prevent uptake. Iodine pills are sometimes distributed to persons living close to nuclear establishments, for use in case of accidents that could lead to releases of radioactive iodine.
Iodine-123 and iodine-125 are used in medicine as tracers for imaging and evaluating the function of the thyroid.
Uncombined (elemental) iodine is mildly toxic to all living things.
The artificial radioisotope 131I (a beta emitter), has a half-life of 8.0207 days. Also known as radioiodine, 131I has been used in treating cancer and other pathologies of the thyroid glands. 123I is the radioisotope most often used in nuclear imaging of the kidney and thyroid as well as thyroid uptake scans (used for the evaluation of Graves' Disease). The most common compounds of iodine are the iodides of sodium and potassium (KI) and the iodates (KIO3).
Potassium iodide (KI tablets, or "SSKI" = "Saturated Solution of KI" liquid drops) can be given to people in a nuclear disaster area when fission has taken place, to block the uptake of iodine-131 by the thyroid. The protective effect of KI lasts approximately 24 hours, so it should be dosed daily until a risk of significant exposure to radioiodines no longer exists. The exposure can be reduced by evacuation, sheltering, and by control of the food supply. Iodine-131 also decays rapidly, with a half-life of 8 days, so that 99.95% of the original radioiodine is gone after three months.
Iodine-129 129I (half-life 15.7 million years) is a product of cosmic ray spallation on various isotopes of xenon in the atmosphere, in cosmic ray muon interaction with tellurium-130, and also and uranium and plutonium fission, both in subsurface rocks and nuclear reactors. Nuclear processes, in particular nuclear fuel reprocessing and atmospheric nuclear weapons tests have now swamped the natural signal for this isotope. 129I was used in rainwater studies following the Chernobyl accident. It also has been used as a ground-water tracer and as an indicator of nuclear waste dispersion into the natural environment.
Radioiodine and the kidney
In the 1970s imaging techniques were developed in California to utilize radioiodine in diagnostics for renal hypertension.
Isotopes
There are 37 isotopes of iodine and only one, 127I, is stable.
In many ways, 129I is similar to 36Cl. It is a soluble halogen, fairly non-reactive, exists mainly as a non-sorbing anion, and is produced by cosmogenic, thermonuclear, and in-situ reactions. In hydrologic studies, 129I concentrations are usually reported as the ratio of 129I to total I (which is virtually all 127I). As is the case with 36Cl/Cl, 129I/I ratios in nature are quite small, 10−14 to 10−10 (peak thermonuclear 129I/I during the 1960s and 1970s reached about 10−7). 129I differs from 36Cl in that its half-life is longer (15.7 vs. 0.301 million years), it's highly biophilic, and occurs in multiple ionic forms (commonly, I− and IO3−) which have different chemical behaviors. This makes it fairly easy for 129I to enter the biosphere as it becomes incorporated into vegetation, soil, milk, animal tissue, etc.
Excesses of stable 129Xe in meteorites have been shown to result from decay of "primordial" Iodine-129 produced newly by the supernovas which created the dust and gas from which the solar system formed. 129I was the first extinct radionuclide to be identified as present in the early solar system. Its decay is the basis of the I-Xe Iodine-xenon radiometric dating scheme, which covers the first 83 million years of solar system evolution.
Effects of various radioiodine isotopes in biology are discussed above.
Toxicity of iodine
Excess iodine has symptoms similar to those of iodine deficiency. Commonly encountered symptoms are abnormal growth of the thyroid gland and disorders in functioning and growth of the organism as a whole. Elemental iodine, I2, is a deadly poison if taken in larger amounts; if 2-3 grams of it's consumed, it's fatal to humans. Iodides are similar in toxicity to bromides.
Precautions for stable iodine
Direct contact with skin can cause lesions, so it should be handled with care. Iodine vapor is very irritating to the eye and to mucous membranes. Concentration of iodine in the air shouldn't exceed 1 mg/m³ (eight-hour time-weighted average). When mixed with ammonia, it can form nitrogen triiodide which is extremely sensitive and can explode unexpectedly.
Clandestine use
In the United States, the Drug Enforcement Agency (DEA) regards iodine and compounds containing iodine (ionic iodides, iodoform, ethyl iodide, and so on) as reagents useful for the clandestine manufacture of methamphetamine. Persons who attempt to purchase significant quantities of such chemicals without establishing a legitimate use are likely to find themselves the target of a DEA investigation. Persons selling such compounds without doing due diligence to establish that the materials are not being diverted to clandestine use may be subject to stiff penalties, such as expensive fines or even imprisonment.
Further Information
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