Nickel double salts
Nickel can form various double salts.
Tutton's salts
Nickel is one of the metals that can form Tutton's salts. The singly charged ion can be any of the full range of potassium, rubidium, cesium, ammonium, or thallium.Mineral forms
As a mineral the ammonium nickel salt, 2Ni2, can be called nickelboussingaultite. With sodium, the double sulfate is nickelblödite Na2Ni2 from the blödite family. Nickel can be substituted by other divalent metals of similar sized to make mixtures that crystallise in the same form.Langbeinites
Anhydrous salts of the formula M2Ni23, which can be termed metal nickel trisulfates, belong to the family of langbeinites. The known salts include 2Ni23, K2Ni23 and Rb2Ni23, and those of Tl and Cs are predicted to exist.Double halides
Fluorides
Double fluorides include the fluoroanion salts, and those fluoronickelates such as NiF4 and NiF6:- KNiF3·H2O and NaNiF3·H2O – apple green coloured
- aluminium nickel pentafluoride
- ceric nickelous decafluoride
- niobium nickel fluoride
- vanadium nickel pentafluoride
- vanadyl nickel tetrafluoride
- chromic nickelous pentafluoride
- molybdenum nickel dioxytetrafluoride
- tungsten nickel dioxytetrafluoride hexahydrate and decahydrate
- manganic nickel pentafluoride
- nickelous ferric fluoride
Chlorides
Trichlorides
Nickel trichloride double salts exist which are polymers. Nickel is in octahedral coordination, with double halogen bridges. Examples of this include RbNiCl3, pinkish tan coloured H2NN3NiCl3.Other double trichlorides include:
- potassium nickel trichloride
- yellow cesium nickel trichloride
- lithium nickel trichloride
- nickel ammonium chloride hexahydrate
Tetrachlorides
The tetrachloronickelates contain a tetrahedral NiCl42− and are dark blue. Some salts of organic bases are ionic liquids at standard conditions. Tetramethylammonium nickel trichloride is pink and very insoluble.Other tetrachlorides include:
- hyrdrazinium nickel tetrachloride
- lithium nickel tetrachloride – stable from 23 to 60°
- rubidium nickel tetrachloride
- stannous nickel tetrachloride
Hexachlorides
Double hexachlorides include:- cadmium dinickel hexachloride – crystallises in hexagonal system
- dicadmium dinickel hexachloride – rhombic crystals, pleochroic varying from light to dark green.
- lithium nickel hexachloride Li4NiCl6·10H2O – stable from 0 to 23°
- stannic nickel hexachloride – tetragonal
Octochlorides
Thallic nickel octochloride 2TlCl3·NiCl2·8H2O is bright green.Oxychlorides
Copper nickel dioxychloride 2CuO·NiCl2·6H2O and copper nickel trioxychloride 3CuO·NiCl2·4H2O exist.Bromides
Double bromides include the tetrabromonickelates. Other salts include:- caesium nickel tribromide
- copper nickel trioxybromide
- didymium nickel bromide – reddish brown, mixture of praseodymium and neodymium
- lanthanum nickel bromide
- mercuric nickel bromides and
- mercuric nickel oxybromide – prepared by reacting nickel bromide with mercuric oxide
- nickel stannic bromide or nickel bromostannate – apple green
Iodides
The tetraiodonickelates are blood-red coloured salts of the NiI4 ion with large cations. The diperiodatonickelates of nickel are strong oxidisers, and akali monoperiodatonickelates also are known.Double iodides include:
- mercuric nickel hexaiodide
- mercuric nickel tetraiodide
- lead nickel hexaiodide
Double nitrates
Lanthanides
Nickel forms double nitrates with the lighter rare-earth elements. The solid crystals have the formula Ni3Me212•24H2O. The metals include La, Ce, Pr, Nd, Sm, Gd and the non rare earth Bi. Nickel can also be replaced by similar divalent ions Mg, Mn, Co, and Zn. For the nickel salts melting temperatures range from 110.5° for La, 108.5° for Ce, 108° for Pr, 105.6° for Nd, 92.2° for Sm and down to 72.5° for Gd, the Bi salt melting at 69°. Crystal structure is hexagonal with Z=3. Ni3La212•24H2O becomes ferromagnetic below 0.393 K. These double nickel nitrates have been used to separate the rare earth elements by fractional crystallization.Actinides
Nickel thorium nitrate has formula NiTh6. Nickel atoms can be substituted by other ions with radius 0.69 to 0.83 Å. The nitrates are coordinated on the thorium atom and the water to the nickel. Enthalpy of solution of the octahydrate is 7 kJ/mol. Enthalpy of formation is -4360 kJ/mol. At 109° the octahydrate becomes NiTh6•6H2O, and at 190° NiTh6•3H2O and anhydrous at 215°.The hexahydrate has Pa cubic structure.
Double amides
Various double amides containing nickel clusters have been made using liquid ammonia as a solvent. These are called amidonickel compounds.These include:
- Li3Ni411·NH3 Å; b = 12.310 Å; c = 8.113 – red
- Li4Ni412·NH3, Na2Ni4
- Na2Ni4•NH3
- Na2Ni4•2NH3 – orange red
- K2Ni4•0.23KNH2
- Rb2Ni4•0.23RbNH2
- Cs2Ni4•NH3 Å; b = 8.734 Å; c = 14.243 Å; β = 129.96