Abstract

AbstractThe precipitation of barium, strontium, calcium, magnesium, zinc, cadmium, lead, cobalt, nickel and copper 8‐quinolinolates (‘oxinates’) was studied in buffer solutions (pHs from 10 to 4.5) at 22 °C: the metal cation and overall ‘oxinate’ with ‘oxine’ concentrations were varied from 0.0005 to 0.010 M (and saturation rations varied from 3 to 3.000). The induction periods, before the main growth surge, were measured at different metal oxinate concentrations (C) and saturation ratios S = (C)/S · Pr1/3.Nucleation rates were determined from combined measurements of induction periods and final crystal numbers. Nucleation rates varied with saturation ratios according to the relation \documentclass{article}\pagestyle{empty}\begin{document}$ R_n = k_1 \cdot S^8 {\rm\ nuclei cm}^{ - {\rm 3}} {\rm sec}^{ - {\rm 1}} $\end{document}Induction periods decreased with increasing concentration and supersaturation; over the range t > 3.000 to < 1 sec, .Where t and t were factors that depended on nucleation rates and metal salt solubility. t values decreased and t values increased with decreasing solubility. Precipitation occurred through homogeneous nucleation. Low nucleation rates and prolonged induction periods in solutions of medium to high supersaturation were related to slow rate‐determining stages in nucleus formation and to complex formation between metal cation and oxinate anion.

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