- Castner-Kellner process
The Castner-Kellner process is a method of
electrolysis on anaqueous alkali chloride solution (usuallysodium chloride solution) to produce the corresponding alkalihydroxide ,Pauling, Linus; "General Chemistry" 1970 ed. pp. 539-541 Dover publishing] invented byHamilton Castner andKarl Kellner in the 1890s. [http://www.saltsense.co.uk/hist-chem12.htm Salt Manufacturers' Association: Salt and the Chemical Revolution] ]Process details
The apparatus shown is divided into two types of cells separated by
slate walls. The first type, shown on the right and left of the diagram, uses an electrolyte of sodium chloride solution, agraphite anode (A), and a mercurycathode (M). The other type of cell, shown in the center of the diagram, uses an electrolyte ofsodium hydroxide solution, a mercury anode (M), and aniron cathode (D). Note that the mercury electrode is shared between the two cells. This is achieved by having the walls separating the cells dip below the level of the electrolytes but still allow the mercury to flow beneath them.Newell, Lyman C.; "Descriptive Chemistry" p. 291; D. C. Heath and company, 1903]The reaction at anode (A) is:
:2Cl– → Cl2 + 2e–
The
chlorine gas that results vents at the top of the outside cells where it is collected as a byproduct of the process. The reaction at the mercury cathode in the outer cells is:2Na+ + 2e– → 2Na (amalgam)
The
sodium metal formed by this reaction dissolves in the mercury to form anamalgam . The mercury conducts the current from the outside cells to the center cell. In addition, a rocking mechanism (B shown by fulcrum on the left and rotating eccentric on the right) agitates the mercury to transport the dissolved sodium metal from the outside cells to the center cell.The anode reaction in the center cell takes place at the interface between the mercury and the sodium hydroxide solution.
:2Na (amalgam) → 2Na+ + 2e–
Finally at the iron cathode (D) of the center cell the reaction is
:2H2O + 2e– → 2OH– + H2
The net effect is that the concentration of sodium chloride in the outside cells decreases and the concentration of sodium hydroxide in the center cell increases. As the process commences some sodium hydroxide solution is withdrawn from center cell as output product and is replaced with water. Sodium chloride is added to the outside cells to replace what has been electrolized.
History
The first patent for electrolyzing brine was granted in
England in 1851 toCharles Watt . His process was not an economically feasible method for producing sodium hydroxide though because it could not prevent the chlorine that formed in the brine solution from reacting with its other constituents.Hamilton Castner solved the mixing problem with the invention of the mercury cell and was granted a U.S. patent in 1892. Austrian chemist,Karl Kellner arrived at a similar solution at about the same time. In order to avoid a legal battle they became partners in 1895, founding the Castner-Kellner Alkali Company, which built plants employing the process throughout Europe. The mercury cell process continues in use to this day. [http://pubs.acs.org/subscribe/journals/tcaw/11/i04/html/04chemistry.html Chemistry Chronicles] ] Current-day mercury cell plant operations are criticized for environmental release of mercury [http://www.oceana.org/index.php?id=1707 Chlorine Plants: Major, Overlooked Source of Mercury Pollution, "Oceana"] ] leading in some cases to severemercury poisoning as occurred inOntario Minamata disease . Due to these concerns, mercury cell plants are being phased out, and a sustained effort is being made to reduce mercury emissions from existing plants. [http://www.chem.unep.ch/Mercury/partnerships/progress-reports/WCC%20Submission.pdf WCC Submission to United Nations Environment Program on Reduction of Mercury in the Chlor-alkali sector] ]References
External links
* [http://www.eurochlor.org/animations/mercury-cell.asp Animated diagram showing electrolysis process]
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