IC 6579 Sodium and Potasium Metals

- Organization:
- The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
- Pages:
- 10
- File Size:
- 551 KB
- Publication Date:
- Apr 1, 1932
Abstract
The alkali metals , sodium and potassium , and more particularly sodium ,
occur abundantly in chemical combination with other elements . The elements
themselves are available in metallic form but are so active chemically that they
oxidize rapidly in contact merely with the air . Potassium will even catch
fire spontaneously in air , and both the metals will decompose water with explosive
violence .
Inasmuch as they are almost as soft as wax they are not
suitable for the structural or other mechanical uses characteristic of ordinary
metals , and consequently the uses of these elements even in the metallic condition
are based upon chemical rather than physical qualities . Sodium metal
is used largely as a commercial reducing agent , but potassium metal is rarely
found outside of chemical laboratories . Numerous salts and other compounds of
these elements enter largely into world trade and are commercially very important
, but none of these compounds except sodium peroxide and sodium cyanide
are made economically from the metals . Sodium is generally considered as
rather an uncommon metal , but in point of annual tonnage produced it is far
more important than mercury , magnesium , molybdenum , bismuth, cadmium, cobalt ,
gold , silver , or the various rarer metals .
Citation
APA:
(1932) IC 6579 Sodium and Potasium MetalsMLA: IC 6579 Sodium and Potasium Metals. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1932.