Part A: The Essentials
In this first section we summarize the key features of the chemistry of the Group 2 elements.
The elements calcium, strontium, barium, and radium are known as the alkaline earth metals, but the term is often applied to the whole of Group 2. All the elements are silvery white metals and the bonding in their compounds is normally described in terms of the ionic model.
Some aspects of the chemical properties of beryllium are more like those of a metalloid with a degree of covalence in its bonding. The elements are denser, harder, and less reactive than the elements of Group 1 but are still more reactive than many typical metals.
12.1 The Elements
Selected Properties
| Property | Be | Mg | Ca | Sr | Ba | Ra |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Metallic radius/pm | 112 | 150 | 197 | 215 | 217 | 220 |
| Ionic radius r(M²⁺)/pm | 27(4) | 72(6) | 100(6) | 126(8) | 142(8) | 170(12) |
| First ionization energy/kJ mol⁻¹ | 900 | 736 | 590 | 548 | 502 | 510 |
| E°(M²⁺, M)/V | −1.85 | −2.38 | −2.87 | −2.89 | −2.90 | −2.92 |
| Density ρ/g cm⁻³ | 1.85 | 1.74 | 1.54 | 2.62 | 3.51 | 5.00 |
| Melting point/°C | 1280 | 650 | 850 | 768 | 714 | 700 |
| ΔhydH°(M²⁺)/kJ mol⁻¹ | −2500 | −1920 | −1650 | −1480 | −1360 | – |
Ionization Energy Trends
Natural Occurrence
- Beryllium: Semiprecious mineral beryl, Be₃Al₂(SiO₃)₆
- Magnesium: 8th most abundant in Earth's crust; extracted from seawater and dolomite
- Calcium: 5th most abundant; occurs as limestone, marble, chalk, and biominerals
- Sr, Ba: Extracted by electrolysis of molten chlorides
- Radium: All isotopes radioactive; extracted from uranium-bearing minerals
Reactivity with Water
Ca, Sr, Ba, Ra react readily with cold water; Mg reacts only with hot water.
Flame Test Colors
12.2 Simple Compounds
All elements occur as M(II) with ns² valence configuration. Apart from Be, compounds are predominantly ionic.
Hydrides
Group 2 elements (except Be) form ionic hydrides containing H⁻. BeH₂ has a 3D network of linked BeH₄ tetrahedra. MgH₂ is studied as a hydrogen storage material.
Halides
Formed by direct combination. Fluorides of larger cations adopt the fluorite structure (8:4), MgF₂ has rutile structure (6:3). Be halides form covalent networks.
Oxides & Hydroxides
BeO has wurtzite structure (4:4); others adopt rock-salt (6:6). BaO dissolves in water forming strongly basic solution:
Be(OH)₂ is amphoteric; forms [Be(OH)₄]²⁻ in strong base.
Carbides
Be₂C contains C⁴⁻ (methide); MC₂ (others) contains C₂²⁻ (acetylide):
12.3 The Anomalous Properties of Beryllium
Small Be²⁺ (27 pm) has high charge density → largely covalent compounds, strong Lewis acid. Coordination number typically 4, tetrahedral geometry.
Consequences of Small Size
- Covalent bonding in halides and hydride
- Complex formation (e.g., Be₄O(O₂CCH₃)₆)
- Hydrolysis forming [Be(OH₂)₃OH]⁺ and acidic solutions
- 4:4-coordination structures for oxide/chalcogenides
- Stable organometallic compounds
Be ↔ Al Diagonal Relationship
- Both form covalent hydrides and halides
- Both oxides are amphoteric
- Both form [M(OH)₄]ⁿ⁻ complexes
- Both form structures based on linked tetrahedra
- Both carbides contain C⁴⁻ and produce methane with water
- Both alkyl compounds are electron-deficient with M–C–M bridges
12.4 Occurrence and Extraction
Magnesium from Seawater
A litre of seawater contains >1 g Mg²⁺. Extraction relies on Mg(OH)₂ being less soluble than Ca(OH)₂:
Then electrolysis of molten MgCl₂.
Calcium
5th most abundant element. The name comes from Latin calx meaning 'lime'. Average adult human contains ~1 kg calcium. Central to biominerals and cell signalling.
Radium
Discovered by Pierre and Marie Curie in 1898. Pitchblende contains ~1 g Ra in 10 t of ore. The Curies took 3 years to isolate 0.1 g RaCl₂.
12.5 Uses of the Elements and Their Compounds
Beryllium Uses
- Light alloys for precision instruments, aircraft, missiles
- X-ray tube windows (transparent to X-rays)
- Nuclear moderator
BeO is extremely toxic and carcinogenic by inhalation, causing chronic beryllosis.
Magnesium Uses
- Light alloys with aluminium for construction/aircraft
- Fireworks and flares (intense white flame)
- Milk of Magnesia Mg(OH)₂—indigestion remedy
- Epsom Salts MgSO₄·7H₂O—constipation, sprains
- MgO—refractory furnace lining
- Grignard reagents in organic synthesis
Calcium Uses
- CaO (lime)—mortar, cement, steelmaking
- CaSO₄·2H₂O (gypsum)—plasterboard
- CaSO₄—drying agent
- CaCO₃—Solvay process
- CaF₂—IR/UV spectrometer windows
Strontium, Barium, Radium
- Sr—pyrotechnics (red), phosphors
- Ba—X-ray imaging (BaSO₄ barium meals)
- BaCO₃—glassmaking, rat poison
- BaSO₄—drilling muds, spectroscopy standard
- Ra—cancer treatment (historically)
Limestone + aluminosilicates heated to 1500°C → clinker → Portland cement.
Hydration produces Ca₃Si₂O₇·H₂O and Ca(OH)₂. Alkali silicate reaction causes cracking in ageing structures.
Green: BaCl⁺ | Red: SrCl⁺ | White: Mg
Distress flares use Sr(NO₃)₂ with sawdust, waxes, sulfur, KClO₄.
12.6 Hydrides
Ionic hydrides react with water:
Hydrogen Storage
MgH₂ contains 7.7 wt% H. The process Mg + H₂ ⇌ MgH₂ is reversible above 250°C. Research focuses on reducing decomposition temperature through doping with transition metals and nanoparticle formation.
ΔrH = +74.4 kJ/mol due to high MgH₂ lattice enthalpy (2718 kJ/mol).
Subnanometer clusters show reduced decomposition temperature (~200°C for small clusters).
12.7 Halides
BeCl₂ Structures
- Solid: Polymeric chain (sp³, tetrahedral)
- Vapour: Dimer (sp²)
- >900°C: Linear monomer (sp)
Fluoride Structures
| Compound | Structure | Coordination |
|---|---|---|
| BeF₂ | Quartz-like | 4:2 |
| MgF₂ | Rutile | 6:3 |
| CaF₂, SrF₂, BaF₂ | Fluorite | 8:4 |
Road De-icing
CaCl₂ more effective than NaCl: exothermic dissolution (−82 kJ/mol), minimum freezing point −55°C, less toxic to plants.
12.8 Oxides, Sulfides, and Hydroxides
Oxides
BeO: wurtzite, m.p. 2570°C, highest thermal conductivity, toxic.
Others: rock-salt structure. CaO thermoluminescent ("limelight").
Peroxides decompose: MO₂ → MO + ½O₂ (stability increases down group).
Complex Oxides
- Perovskite: BaTiO₃ (ferroelectric)
- Spinel: MgAl₂O₄
- Superconductors: YBa₂Cu₃O₇
Hydroxides
Solubility increases down the group: Mg(OH)₂ sparingly soluble → Ba(OH)₂ soluble (strongly basic).
Limewater test:
12.9 Nitrides and Carbides
Calcium carbide was widely used in vehicle lights (enabling safe night driving) and miners' lamps in the late 19th century.
12.10 Salts of Oxoacids
Carbonates
Decomposition temperature: Mg (350°C) → Ba (1360°C)
CaCO₃ occurs as limestone, chalk, marble; used in construction and as agricultural lime.
Solubility in CO₂-containing water forms stalactites/stalagmites:
Sulfates
Gypsum CaSO₄·2H₂O used in fireproof wallboard.
Plaster of Paris CaSO₄·½H₂O expands when mixed with water.
BaSO₄ for X-ray imaging, drilling muds, spectroscopy standard.
Water Hardness
Temporary: Ca/Mg hydrogencarbonates (removed by boiling)
Permanent: Ca/Mg sulfates (removed by ion exchange)
12.11 Solubility, Hydration, and Beryllates
BeF₂ exception: very high hydration enthalpy of small Be²⁺:
Beryllates
Amphoteric Be forms [Be(OH)₄]²⁻. Beryllates built from BeO₄ tetrahedra:
- Beryl family: Be₃Al₂(SiO₃)₆ (emerald, aquamarine)
- Chrysoberyl: BeAl₂O₄ (alexandrite changes color)
12.12 Coordination Compounds
Basic Beryllium Acetate
Be₄O(O₂CCH₃)₆: Central O surrounded by tetrahedron of Be atoms, bridged by ethanoate ions.
EDTA Complexes
Formation constants: Ca²⁺ > Mg²⁺ > Sr²⁺ > Ba²⁺
Biological Complexes
- Chlorophylls: Mg porphyrin complexes (photosynthesis)
- Mg: Phosphate transfer, carbohydrate metabolism
- Ca: Biominerals, cell signalling, muscle action
12.13 Organometallic Compounds
Beryllium Organometallics
Pyrophoric in air, unstable in water. Be(CH₃)₂ is monomer in vapour (linear), polymer in solid (3c,2e bridging).
Grignard Reagents
Used as R⁻ sources in organic synthesis. Schlenk equilibria: R₂Mg, RMgX, MgX₂ all present.
Mg(I) Compound
LMg−MgL with Mg−Mg bond (285 pm)—shorter than in Mg metal (320 pm)!
Exercises & Further Reading
- Explain why Be compounds are mainly covalent while others are ionic.
- Why is Be more similar to Al and Zn than to Mg?
- Why does BeF₂ form a glass when cooled from melt?
- Calculate H wt% in Group 2 hydrides. Why is MgH₂ studied for H₂ storage?
- Which is more soluble: MgSeO₄ or BaSeO₄?
- How can Ra be separated from other Group 2 cations?
Further Reading
- R.B. King, Inorganic chemistry of the main group elements (1994)
- P. Enghag, Encyclopedia of the elements (2004)
- D.M.P. Mingos, Essential trends in inorganic chemistry (1998)
- N.C. Norman, Periodicity and the s- and p-block elements (1997)