Supriya Ghosh (Editor)

Cobalt(II) oxide

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Formula
  
CoO

Density
  
6.44 g/cm³

Molar mass
  
74.9326 g/mol

Appearance
  
black powder

Cobalt(II) oxide wwwsigmaaldrichcomcontentdamsigmaaldrichstr

Related compounds
  
Cobalt(II,III) oxide Cobalt(III) oxide

Cobalt(II) oxide or cobalt monoxide is an inorganic compound that appears as olive-green to red crystals, or as a greyish or black powder. It is used extensively in the ceramics industry as an additive to create blue colored glazes and enamels as well as in the chemical industry for producing cobalt(II) salts.

Contents

Structure and properties

CoO crystals adopt the periclase (rock salt) structure with a lattice constant of 4.2615 Å.

It is antiferromagnetic below 16 °C.

Preparation

Cobalt(II,III) oxide decomposes to cobalt(II) oxide at 950 °C:

2 Co3O4 → 6 CoO + O2

Though commercially available, cobalt(II) oxide may be prepared in the laboratory by electrolyzing a solution of cobalt(II) chloride.

CoCl2 + H2O → CoO + H2 + Cl2

It may also be prepared by precipitating the hydroxide, followed by thermal dehydration:

CoX + 2 KOH → Co(OH)2 + K2X Co(OH)2 → CoO + H2O

Reactions

As can be expected, cobalt(II) oxide reacts with mineral acids to form the corresponding cobalt salts:

CoO + 2 HX → CoX2 + H2O

Applications

Cobalt(II) oxide has for centuries used as a coloring agent on kiln fired pottery. The additive provides a deep shade of blue named cobalt blue. The band gap (CoO) is around 2.4 eV. It also is used in cobalt blue glass.

References

Cobalt(II) oxide Wikipedia