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What substance has the lowest $K_\mathrm{sp}$ and what is its value? The lowest I could find is $2.6\cdot 10^{-124}$ for cobalt(III) sulfide $\ce{Co2S3}$.

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    Could you add a reference for this extreme value of the solubility product of cobalt(III) sulfide? –  Jul 18 '17 at 16:46
  • This is somewhatartificial. The $K_ {sp}$ value for mercury (II) sulfide involves two ion terms and the one for cobalt (III) sulfide has five. On a per-ion basis, assuming (not really accurate) a simple dissociation reaction when the solid dissolves, mercury (II) sulfide beats cobalt (III) sulfide. – Oscar Lanzi Mar 18 '19 at 11:21

1 Answers1

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The $K_\mathrm{sp}(\ce{Co2S3})$ value of magnitude of $10^{-124}$ appears in paper by Goates et al. [1]. The refined "thermodynamic" value of $\pu{2.6E-124}$ that you've listed and is used by numerous textbook up to these days has been proposed by Waggoner [2].

However, thirty years later (late 1980s) there's been another study by Licht [3], which showed significant deviation from the previous studies due to two factors:

  1. A new value of the free energy of sulfide ion formation for aqueous solutions has been used:

    $$Δ_\mathrm{f}G^\circ(\ce{S^2-(aq)}) = \pu{(111 ± 2) kJ mol-1}$$

    Previous value [1] was

    $$Δ_\mathrm{f}G^\circ(\ce{S^2-(aq)}) = \pu{20.64 kcal mol-1} \approx \pu{83.68 kJ mol-1}$$

  2. Free sulfide activity $a(\ce{S^2-})$ used for $K_\mathrm{sp}$ determination

    $$ \begin{align} \ce{M_xS_y &<=> x M^{$2y/x$+} + y S^2-} &\qquad K_\mathrm{sp} &= a(\ce{M^{$2y/x$+}})^x \cdot a(\ce{S^2-})^y \\ \ce{HS- &<=> H+ + S^2-} &\qquad K_2 &= \frac{a(\ce{H+})\cdot a(\ce{S^2-})}{a(\ce{HS-})} \end{align} $$

    has also been misinterpreted in early studies by acidification of hydroxyl $\ce{OH-}$ instead, erroneously substituting $K_2$ by $K_\mathrm{w}.$

Table I from [3] lists more recent $\mathrm{p}K_\mathrm{sp}$ values, among which the one for $\ce{Co2S3}$ that has increased significantly $(\mathrm{p}K_\mathrm{sp}(\ce{Co2S3}) = 49.9,$ $K_\mathrm{sp}(\ce{Co2S3}) \approx \pu{1.26E-50}).$ Five least soluble sulfides from that table are:

$$ \begin{array}{lrc} \hline \ce{M_xS_y} & \mathrm{p}K_\mathrm{sp} & K_\mathrm{sp} \\ \hline \ce{Ir2S3} & 196.3 & \pu{5.0E-197} \\ \ce{Bi2S3} & 115.1 & \pu{7.9E-116} \\ \ce{Mo2S3} & 107.8 & \pu{1.6E-108} \\ \ce{Ni3S4} & 104.5 & \pu{3.2E-105} \\ \ce{In2S3} & 96.3 & \pu{5.0E-97} \\ \hline \end{array} $$

So that it seems like the new champion (at least among sulfides) is iridium(III) sulfide $\ce{Ir2S3}$ with $K_\mathrm{sp} = \pu{5.0E-197}$.

References

  1. Goates, J. R.; Gordon, M. B.; Faux, N. D. Calculated Values for the Solubility Product Constants of the Metallic Sulfides. Journal of the American Chemical Society 1952, 74 (3), 835–836. DOI: 10.1021/ja01123a510.
  2. Waggoner, W. H. Textbook Errors: Guest Column. The Solubility Product Constants of the Metallic Sulfides. Journal of Chemical Education 1958, 35 (7), 339. DOI: 10.1021/ed035p339.
  3. Licht, S. Aqueous Solubilities, Solubility Products and Standard Oxidation-Reduction Potentials of the Metal Sulfides. Journal of The Electrochemical Society 1988, 135 (12), 2971. DOI: 10.1149/1.2095471.
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