Cadmium hydroxide explained

Cadmium hydroxide is an inorganic compound with the formula Cd(OH)2. It is a white crystalline ionic compound that is a key component of nickel–cadmium battery.[1]

Structure, preparation, and reactions

Cadmium hydroxide adopts the same structure as Mg(OH)2, consisting of slabs of octahedral metal centers surrounded by octahedral of hydroxide ligands.[2]

It is produced by treating cadmium nitrate with sodium hydroxide:

Cd(NO3)2 + 2 NaOH → Cd(OH)2 + 2 NaNO3Preparation has been achieved from some other cadmium salts,[3] [1]

Cd(OH)2 and cadmium oxide react equivalently. Cadmium hydroxide is more basic than zinc hydroxide. It forms the anionic complex [Cd(OH)<sub>4</sub>]2− when treated with concentrated base. It forms complexes with cyanide, thiocyanate, and ammonia.

Cadmium hydroxide loses water on heating, producing cadmium oxide. Decomposition commences at 130 °C and is complete at 300 °C. Reactions with mineral acids (HX) produce the corresponding cadmium salts (CdX2). With hydrochloric acid, sulfuric acid, and nitric acid, the products are cadmium chloride, cadmium sulfate, and cadmium nitrate, respectively.

Uses

It is generated in storage battery anodes, in nickel-cadmium and silver-cadmium storage batteries in its discharge:

2 NiO(OH) + 2 H2O + Cd → Cd(OH)2 + 2 Ni(OH)2

Notes and References

  1. Karl-Heinz Schulte-Schrepping, Magnus Piscator "Cadmium and Cadmium Compounds" in Ullmann's Encyclopedia of Industrial Chemistry, 2007 Wiley-VCH, Weinheim. .
  2. Hemmingsen, L.; Bauer, R.; Bjerrum, M. J.; Schwarz, K.; Blaha, P.; Andersen, P., "Structure, Chemical Bonding, and Nuclear Quadrupole Interactions of β-Cd(OH)2:  Experiment and First Principles Calculations", Inorganic Chemistry 1999, volume 38, 2860-2867.
  3. Book: F. Wagenknecht. R. Juza. Cadmium hydroxide. Handbook of Preparative Inorganic Chemistry, 2nd Ed. . G. Brauer. Academic Press. 1963. NY, NY. 2. 1096.