Potassium superoxide
Potassium superoxide is an inorganic compound with the formula. It is a yellow paramagnetic solid that decomposes in moist air. It is a rare example of a stable salt of the superoxide anion. It is used as a [carbon dioxide|] scrubber, [water|] dehumidifier, and [oxygen|] generator in rebreathers, spacecraft, submarines, and spacesuits.
Production and reactions
Potassium superoxide is produced by burning molten potassium in an atmosphere of excess oxygen.The salt consists of and ions, linked by ionic bonding. The O–O distance is 1.28 Å.
Reactivity
Potassium superoxide is a source of superoxide, which is an oxidant and a nucleophile, depending on its reaction partner.Upon contact with water, it undergoes disproportionation to potassium hydroxide, oxygen, and hydrogen peroxide:
It reacts with carbon dioxide, releasing oxygen:
Theoretically, 1 kg of absorbs 0.310 kg of while releasing 0.338 kg of. One mole of absorbs 0.5 moles of and releases 0.75 moles of oxygen.
As a laboratory reagent, potassium superoxide only finds niche uses. Because it reacts with water, is often studied in organic solvents. Since the salt is poorly soluble in nonpolar solvents, crown ethers are typically used. The tetraethylammonium salt is also known. Representative reactions of these salts involve using superoxide as a nucleophile, e.g., in converting alkyl bromides to alcohols and acyl chlorides to diacyl peroxides.
Ion exchange with tetramethylammonium hydroxide gives tetramethylammonium superoxide, a yellow solid.
Applications
The Russian Space Agency has successfully used potassium superoxide in chemical oxygen generators for its spacesuits and Soyuz spacecraft. Potassium superoxide was also used in a rudimentary life support system for five mice as part of the Biological Cosmic Ray Experiment on Apollo 17.has also been used in canisters for rebreathers for firefighting and mine rescue, and in cartridges for chemical oxygen generators on submarines. A flash fire caused by dropping such a cartridge into seawater contributed to the Kursk disaster. This highly exothermic reaction with water is also the reason why potassium superoxide has had only limited use in scuba rebreathers.