Lead oxychloride


Lead oxychlorides are halide compounds of lead with the general formula PbClO.

Occurrence in nature

Lead oxychlorides are found naturally in the minerals hereroite as Pb32O212Cl10, in rickturnerite as Pb7O4Cl3, in vladkrivovichevite as Pb32O18Cl14, in asisite as Pb7SiO4O4Cl2, in damaraite as Pb3ClO2, in hereroite as Pb3ClO2, in Mendipite as Pb3Cl2O2, and in the dimorph minerals laurionite and paralaurionite, which are PbCl members of the matlockite group.

Usage

Historically, the primary use of lead oxychlorides was in a mixture with other lead compounds as a pigment in lead paints. The lead compounds were first fused, and the product then ground to fine powder. The powder was then suspended in drying oils, to produce e.g. Pattinson's white or Turner's yellow. Turner's yellow is also known as Patent yellow, Cassel yellow, Montpelier yellow, Kassler yellow, mineral yellow, and Verona yellow.
In the late 19th century, lead oxychlorides were briefly used in the manufacture of electrodes for lead-acid batteries. Patented by Charles Francis Brush in 1876, the depressions in a ribbed or grooved sheet of lead were filled with pulverized lead oxychloride. In a second step, the grooved sheet was covered with paper and horizontally suspended in a salt or acid solution, to which a zinc plate was then also added. The mixture in the grooved sheet's depressions was then electrolytically reduced to sponge lead, forming a functional lead-acid cell electrode. Brush's technique was superseded by the now standard Faure pasting method in 1880.