Monday, 5 May 2014

How can water act as catalyst for reaction between iodine and aluminium?


It is very difficult to have a solid react with another solid due to the low contact area and the inability of the molecules to obtain the activation energy. Even though there is little iodine dissolved in the water, the contact area is greatly increased.
Once the reaction starts, the heat of the reaction provides the activation energy and the gaseous iodine 

A naked aluminum surface (freshly sanded) in air immediately grows about 4 nm of adherent aluminum oxide that passivated the surface. Iodine slightly dissolves in water and disproportionates
I2(l)+H2O(l)HOI(aq)+I(aq)+H+(aq)
Iodine is strongly solubilized by forming triiodide.
I2+I[I3]
The acids chew through the alumina surface barrier. When bare metal and triiodide meet, everything takes off, also igniting the bare metal in air.


AlI3(s)ΔGof=3008kJ/mol
Al2O3(s)ΔGof=15824kJ/mol
Absent water the iodine must diffuse through the intact alumina barrier, react with naked aluminum, then swell and disrupt the surface passivation from underneath.

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