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Cadmium: The Luminous Pollutant | Chemca.in

Cadmium: The Luminous Pollutant | Chemca.in
Element #48

Cadmium ($Cd$)

The artistic impostor of the periodic table—a heavy metal that gave us the world's most vibrant yellows while posing a silent challenge to global health.

Cadmium was discovered in 1817 by Friedrich Stromeyer while he was inspecting pharmacies in Germany. He noticed that some samples of zinc carbonate turned yellow when heated, despite having no iron or arsenic impurities. He eventually isolated a new metal and named it Cadmium, from the Greek kadmeia, the ancient name for calamine (zinc ore).

Occupying Group 12 and Period 5, cadmium is a soft, bluish-white transition metal. It is chemically very similar to its Group 12 neighbor, zinc, and is almost always found in nature as a minor component of zinc ores. While it provided the brilliant pigments that defined the Impressionist art movement, its high toxicity has led to its gradual phase-out in favor of safer alternatives.

Atomic & Physical Properties

Cadmium is a soft metal—it can be cut with a knife. It has a relatively low melting point for a metal and is an excellent conductor of electricity.

Property Value
Atomic Number 48
Standard Atomic Weight 112.41
Electron Configuration $[Kr] 4d^{10} 5s^2$
Common Oxidation State +2 (Most stable)
Melting Point 594.22 K (321.07 °C)
Boiling Point 1040 K (767 °C)
Density 8.65 g/cm³

The Impressionist Palette: Cadmium Yellow

Before the mid-19th century, stable and vibrant yellow pigments were rare. The discovery of Cadmium Sulfide ($CdS$) changed art history. Known as "Cadmium Yellow," it was incredibly lightfast and brilliant. Claude Monet and Vincent van Gogh used it extensively to capture the intensity of sunlight. Over time, however, these pigments can react with air to form white cadmium sulfate, causing some famous paintings to lose their luster.

Chemical Reactivity

Cadmium is a reactive metal, though less so than zinc. It tarnishes slowly in air and is easily attacked by acids.

1. Reaction with Oxygen

When heated in air, cadmium burns with a bright light to form Cadmium Oxide ($CdO$), a brown or black powder depending on its crystalline form.

2Cd(s) + O2(g) → 2CdO(s)

2. Reaction with Acids

Cadmium dissolves slowly in dilute hydrochloric or sulfuric acid to produce hydrogen gas and $Cd^{2+}$ salts.

Cd(s) + 2HCl(aq) → CdCl2(aq) + H2(g)

3. Resistance to Corrosion

Like zinc, cadmium is often used as a protective coating for other metals (electroplating), especially for steel parts in marine environments, as it resists seawater corrosion better than zinc.

Powering the Past: Ni-Cd Batteries

For decades, the Nickel-Cadmium ($NiCd$) battery was the king of rechargeable technology. It used cadmium as the negative electrode and nickel oxide hydroxide as the positive electrode. While robust and capable of high discharge rates, $NiCd$ batteries have largely been replaced by Lithium-ion and Nickel-Metal Hydride ($NiMH$) batteries due to the "memory effect" and the environmental hazard of cadmium disposal.

The Nuclear Guard: Control Rods

In nuclear reactors, maintaining a steady chain reaction is critical. Cadmium is a powerful neutron absorber. For this reason, it is used to manufacture control rods. When inserted into a reactor core, the cadmium rods "soak up" excess neutrons, slowing down or stopping the fission process instantly in an emergency.

Toxicity & The Itai-Itai Tragedy

Cadmium is a highly toxic heavy metal. It is a cumulative poison, meaning it builds up in the body over time, primarily in the kidneys and liver. It is a Group 1 carcinogen.

  • Itai-Itai Disease: In the early 20th century, mining in Japan contaminated local rivers with cadmium. People who ate rice grown in this water suffered from severe bone softening and kidney failure. The name "Itai-Itai" translates to "It hurts, it hurts," describing the intense pain caused by the disease.
  • Biological Half-life: Cadmium has a biological half-life of 10 to 30 years in humans, making environmental contamination a long-term disaster.

This is the forty-eighth part of our "Elements and Their Properties" series. We have explored the transition metals of the 4d row! To deepen your knowledge of electrochemistry and environmental toxicology, follow our Success Blueprint.

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