Magnesium nitride


Magnesium nitride, which possesses the chemical formula, is an inorganic compound of magnesium and nitrogen. At room temperature and pressure it is a greenish yellow powder.

History

When measuring the boiling point of magnesium, Henri Étienne Sainte-Claire Deville and Henri Caron identified that molten magnesium they distilled covered itself by "small colorless and transparent needles which are destroyed fairly quickly by transforming into ammonia and magnesia". In their 1857 publication the chemists interpreted it as a likely nitride similar to those discovered by Friedrich Wöhler and Heinrich Rose.
It was indeed confirmed in 1862 when Friedrich Briegleb and Johann Georg Anton Geuther synthesized the compound on purpose and first studied it.

Preparation

  • By passing dry, very pure nitrogen over heated magnesium at for 90 minutes:
  • By passing dry ammonia over heated magnesium at for 4 hours:
This second method is preferred despite the additional time required due to the difficulty of fully purifying nitrogen gas to prevent the formation of unwanted oxides.

Chemistry

Magnesium nitride reacts with water to produce magnesium hydroxide and ammonia gas, as do many metal nitrides.
In fact, when magnesium is burned in air, some magnesium nitride is formed in addition to the principal product, magnesium oxide.
Thermal decomposition of magnesium nitride gives magnesium and nitrogen gas.
At high pressures, the stability and formation of new nitrogen-rich nitrides were suggested and later discovered. These include the and solids which both become thermodynamically stable near 50 GPa. The is composed of exotic cis-tetranitrogen species with N-N bond orders close to one. This compound was recovered to ambient conditions, along with the units, marking only the fourth polynitrogen entity bulk stabilized at ambient conditions.

Uses and history

When isolating argon, William Ramsay passed dry air over copper to remove oxygen and over magnesium to remove the nitrogen, forming magnesium nitride.
Magnesium nitride was the catalyst in the first practical synthesis of borazon.
Robert H. Wentorf, Jr. was trying to convert the hexagonal form of boron nitride into the cubic form by a combination of heat, pressure, and a catalyst. He had already tried all the logical catalysts, but with no success.
Out of desperation and curiosity, he added some magnesium wire to the hexagonal boron nitride and gave it the same pressure and heat treatment. When he examined the wire under a microscope, he found tiny dark lumps clinging to it. These lumps could scratch a polished block of boron carbide, something only diamond was known to do.
From the smell of ammonia, caused by the reaction of magnesium nitride with the moisture in the air, he deduced that the magnesium metal had reacted with the boron nitride to form magnesium nitride, which was the true catalyst.
Magnesium nitride has also been applied to synthesize aluminum nitride nanocrystals, cubic boron nitride and nitrides of aluminum and Group 3 It has also been proposed as an intermediate in a fossil-fuel-free nitrogen fixation process.