Bismuth iodate explained
Bismuth iodate is an inorganic compound with the chemical formula Bi(IO3)3. Its anhydrate can be obtained by reacting bismuth nitrate and iodic acid, dissolving the resulting precipitate in 7.8 mol/L nitric acid, and heating to volatilize and crystallize at 70 °C;[1] The dihydrate can be obtained by reacting bismuth nitrate and potassium iodate or sodium iodate. It is obtained by evaporation and crystallization in 7 mol/L nitric acid at 50 °C.[2] Its basic salt BiOIO3 is known.[3]
Notes and References
- Bentria . Bachir . Benbertal . Djamal . Bagieu-Beucher . Muriel . Masse . René . Mosset . Alain . 2003 . [No title found] ]. Journal of Chemical Crystallography . 33 . 11 . 867–873 . 10.1023/A:1027409929990.
- Phanon . D. . Gautier-Luneau . I. . Sep 2006 . Crystal structure of bismuth triiodate dihydrate, Bi[IO3]3 · 2H2O . Zeitschrift für Kristallographie - New Crystal Structures . 221 . 3 . 243–244 . 10.1524/ncrs.2006.0056 . 2197-4578. free .
- Huang . Hongwei . Chen . Fang . Reshak . Ali Hussain . Auluck . Sushil . Zhang . Yihe . Nov 2018 . Insight into crystal-structure dependent charge separation and photo-redox catalysis: A combined experimental and theoretical study on Bi(IO3)3 and BiOIO3 . Applied Surface Science . en . 458 . 129–138 . 10.1016/j.apsusc.2018.07.054.