Elementymology & Elements Multidict by Peter van der Krogt
Iodium Iodine
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Multilingual dictionary
Language key
Indo-European
Germanic
Iodine en
Iod de
Jod de2 dl da sv no fo
Jood nl af
Joadium fy
Joð is
Italic
Iode fr ca
Yodo es
Iòde oc
Iodo pt gl
Iodio it
Jodi fur
Iod ro
Iodu arm
Slavic
Éîä [jod] ru uk bg
¨ä [ëd] by
Jod pl cs sl hr bos
Jód kas sk
Jîä [jod] sr mk
Baltic
Jodas lt
Jods lv
Jādas sud
Celtic
Ïodin cy
Iaidín ga
Ìodain gd
Eeadeen gv
Eyodyn kw
Iod br
Other Indo-European
Ιωδιο [iōdio] el
Jod sq
Յոդ [yod] hy
Indo-Iranian
Éîä [Jod] oss
Uralic
Jodi fi
Jood et
Jód hu
Йода [joda] mok
Altaic
İyod tr
Éîä [jod] kk uz mn
Iod tg
Other (Europe)
Iodoa eu
იოდი [iodi] ka
East- & South-Asia
youso [youso] ja
[dian3 / din2] zh (mand./cant.)
요오드, 2아이오딘 [yo'odeu, a'i'odin] ko
Iot, Iođ vi
ไอโอดีน [aiōdīn] th
Iodin, Yodium ms
அயடின் [ayaţin] ta
Afro-Asiatic
يود [yūd] ar
Jodju mt
יוד [iod] he
Africa
Iodini, Aidini sw
Artificial
Jodo eo
New names
Iodon (IOD) aen
Bop dms
Appearance, some properties, a memory peg and a summary of discovery and etymology
Deep purple, metallic looking solid which readily gives off a violet colored vapor
m.p. 113.5 ºC; 236.3 ºF
b.p. 184.35 ºC; 363.83 ºF
density (gas) 0.01127; (solid) 4.93 g/cc; (gas) 0.70356; (solid) 307.77 pound/cubic foot
memory peg

1811 Bernard Courtois, France
ιοειδης [ioeidès] = violet coloured (Greek)

History & Etymology

Iodine was discovered in May 1811 by Bernard Courtois (1777-1838) in Dijon. Courtois was manufacturer of salpeter (potassium nitrate, KNO3), a major component of gunpowder. In the early 19th century, France was at war and needed enormous quantities of gunpowder. The manufacture of salpeter requires a plentiful supply of Sodium carbonate (Na2CO3), which is obtained by extraction from wood ashes. Wood ashes was made from seaweed, gathered at the coasts of Normandy and Brittany. After the process, the various Sulphur compounds produced during calcination (burning), were destroyed by adding sulphuric acid. In 1811 Courtois accidentally added excess sulphuric acid resulting in a violet vapor cloud that condensed on colder objects forming dark, lustrous crystals. He observed that the new substance combined with Hydrogen, Phosphorus and certain metals but not readily with Oxygen or Carbon. It did not decompose under red heat, but formed an explosive with ammonia. (note)

Courtois suspected it was a new element, but because of lack of money he had to turned over further investigation to his friends, the French physicist and chemist Charles-Bernard Désormes (1777-1862), who did almost all his scientific work in collaboration with his son-in-law Nicolas Clément (1779-1841). They announced the discovery on 29 November 1813 at a meeting of the Imperial Institute of France.

Other specimens were given by Courtois to Louis-Joseph Gay-Lussac (1778-1850) and André M. Ampère (1775–1836). On 6 December 1813 he suggested that the new substance was either an element or a compound of oxygen.

In the mean time, Ampère had given his sample to the English chemist Sir Humpry Davy (1778-1829), who visited Paris travelling to Italy. Davy always carried a compact chest of laboratory apparatus when he traveled and did some experiments with this samples. He sent off a paper to the Royal Society of London, dated 10 December 1813 (note), describing his experiments and recognizing the similarities between the new substance and Chlorine. He named it Iodine, after the Greek ιοειδης [ioeidès] = violet coloured (from ιον [ion] = violin), which was analogous to Chlorine and Fluorine. Although a quarrel over priority rights followed, Gay-Lussac and Davy both acknowledged Courtois as the discoverer of Iodine. Gay-Lussac’s major publication on Iodine was read on 1 August 1814. He named the new element Iode.

Chemistianity 1873
GTYAN
IODINE, a true caustic to diseased flesh,
Is a violet-colour'd solid metalloid,
Of dull metallic, plumbago lustre;
It exists in scales, plates, and splendid crystals,
It is volatile at common temp'rature.
J. Carrington Sellars, Chemistianity, 1873, p.108-109
Further reading
  • Mary Elvira Weeks, Discovery of the Elements, comp. rev. by Heny M. Leicester (Easton, Pa.: Journal of Chemical Education, 1968), pp. 708-719.
  • Louis Rosenfeld, "Discovery and Early Uses of Iodine." Chemistry for everyone. Journal of Chemical Education, Vol. 77 No. 8 August 2000 (pdf-file on-line)

Sources Index of Persons Index of Alleged Elements

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© Peter van der Krogt