Everybody knows iodine forms triiodide, and bromine probaby forms it too, and the problem is that triiodide is just as well water soluble as the
iodide salt. But... what is the atual equilibrium of the trihalide formation? Nobody seems to know.
http://pubs.acs.org/doi/abs/10.1021/ja02202a004
"The solubility of bromine in aqueous solutions of sodium bromide" - James M. Bell , Melville L. Buckley
J. Am. Chem. Soc., 1912, 34 (1), pp 14–15; DOI: 10.1021/ja02202a004
Solubility of bromine in a distilled water is 34 g/L, which is 0.21 mole/L. At 96 g/L concentration of NaBr (0.932 mole/L) solubility of bromine in
water becomes 1.24 mole/L (397 g/L) (original work mentiones 2.48 gram-ATOM/liter).
As you can see, basically one mole of bromide converts into one mole of tribromide at low concentrations, while at higher concentration, something
happens that makes possible for 1.5 more moles of bromine to be soluble in the same solution.
But anyway, the most important thing for us is to know that if we have not high enough concentration of bromide, then it stochiometrically turns all
the bromide into tribromide. But small amount of bromide won't prevent extractive separation.
Basically, you can use excess of oxidizer, which will result in BrCl and Cl2 formation, but I want to remind you that we have 5:1 proportion of Br:Cl.
The main source of ClO2 is from chlorite (NaClO2) in case of HCl oxidation, ph of the solubtion is another question, because at different ph the
products may be different.
I'd say the major pathways that give stochiometric conversion of chlorite are
2 NaClO2 + 2 HCl + NaOCl → 2 ClO2 + 3 NaCl + H2O
and gas-solid reaction
2 NaClO2 + Cl2 → 2 ClO2 + 2 NaCl
Actually, there's a crazy intermediate http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/13811169950... having formula BrClO2.
And I want to emphasize that bromine is more readily oxidized than chlorine.
Chemistry of halides high oxidation states is very complex, so I'd say it's all about experimental data. The question is: will the ClO2 be formed at
all in this reaction?
I hope I will try soon to experiment with NaOCl+NaBr, but for now I'm pretty much sure the problem is about ph of the solution.
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