Dictionary Definition
sodium n : a silvery soft waxy metallic element
of the alkali metal group; occurs abundantly in natural compounds
(especially in salt water); burns with a yellow flame and reacts
violently in water; occurs in sea water and in the mineral halite
(rock salt) [syn: Na,
atomic
number 11]
User Contributed Dictionary
Noun
- A soft, waxy, silvery reactive metal that is never found unbound in nature, and a chemical element (symbol Na) with an atomic number of 11 and atomic weight of 22.989770.
Synonyms
- natrium (rare)
Derived terms
- disodium
- hydrogen sodium arsenate
- monosodium
- Pentothal sodium
- sodian
- sodic
- sodio-
- sodium-23
- sodium aluminium fluoride, sodium aluminum fluoride
- sodium amalgam
- sodium Amytal
- sodium antimonate
- sodium arsenate
- sodium arsenide
- sodium aurate
- sodium benzoate
- sodium bicarbonate
- sodium bisulfite, sodium bisulphite
- sodium borohydride
- sodium bromate
- sodium bromide
- sodium carbide
- sodium carbonate
- sodium carbonate peroxyhydrate
- sodium chlorate
- sodium chloride
- sodium chlorite
- sodium chromate
- sodium-cooled
- sodium dithiophosphate
- sodium monofluorophosphate
- sodium fluoride
- sodium hexafluoroantimonate
- sodium hexametaphosphate
- sodium hydride
- sodium hydrogen carbonate
- sodium hydrogen sulfite, sodium hydrogen sulphite
- sodium hydroxide
- sodium iodide
- sodium lamp
- sodium manganate
- sodium metaphosphate
- sodium nitrate
- sodium orthophosphate
- sodium oxide
- sodium Pentothal
- sodium perborate
- sodium peroxide
- sodium perxenate
- sodium phosphate
- sodium phosphomolybdate
- sodium plumbate
- sodium polysulfide, sodium polysulphide
- sodium pump
- sodium pyrophosphate
- sodium selenide
- sodium selenite
- sodium soap
- sodium stannate
- sodium sulfate, sodium sulphate
- sodium sulfide, sodium sulphide
- sodium terbium borate
- sodium tetraborate decahydrate
- sodium tetraborate pentahydrate
- sodium thiosulfate, sodium thiosulphate
- sodium trimetaphosphate
- sodium tripolyphosphate
- sodium tungstate
- sodium vapor lamp, sodium vapour lamp
- sodium zircofluoride
- stannide of sodium
- telluret of sodium
- trisodium
Related terms
Translations
a reactive metal
- Afrikaans: natrium
- Albanian: natrium
- Arabic:
- Armenian: նատրիում (natrium)
- Basque: sodioa
- Belarusian: натрый (nátryj)
- Bosnian: natrij
- Breton: natriom , sodiom
- Bulgarian: натрий (nátrij)
- Catalan: sodi
- Chinese: 鈉 / 钠 (nà)
- Cornish: sodyum
- Croatian: natrij
- Czech: sodík
- Danish: natrium
- Dutch: natrium
- Esperanto: natrio
- Estonian: naatrium
- Faroese: natrium
- Finnish: natrium
- French: sodium
- Friulian: sodi
- Gallegan: sodio
- Georgian: ნატრიუმი (natriumi)
- German: Natrium
- Greek, Modern: νάτριο (nátrio)
- Hebrew: נתרן (natran)
- Hungarian: nátrium
- Icelandic: natur
- Indonesian: natrium
- Interlingua: sodium, natrium
- Irish: sóidiam
- Italian: sodio
- Japanese: ナトリウム (natoriumu)
- Kashmiri: natrijô
- Kazakh: натрий (nátrii)
- Korean: 나트륨 (nateuryum), 소듐 (sodyum)
- Latin: natrium
- Latvian: nātrijs
- Lithuanian: natris
- Luxembourgish: natrium
- Macedonian: натриум (nátrium)
- Malay: natrium
- Maltese: sodju
- Manx: sodjum
- Mongolian: натри (natri)
- Norwegian: natrium
- Polish: sód
- Portuguese: sódio
- Romanian: sodiu , natriu
- Russian: натрий (nátrij)
- Scottish Gaelic: sòidiam
- Serbian: натриjум (natrijum)
- Slovak: sodík
- Slovene: natrij
- Spanish: sodio
- Swedish: natrium
- Tajik: natri'
- Tamil: உவர்மம் (uvarmam)
- Thai: (sōdiam)
- Turkish: sodyum
- Ukrainian: натрiй (nátrij)
- Uzbek: натрий (natriy)
- Vietnamese: natri
- Welsh: sodiwm
- West Frisian: natrium
External links
For etymology and more information refer to: http://elements.vanderkrogt.net/elem/na.html (A lot of the translations were taken from that site with permission from the author, who has spent a tremendous effort to get them encoded in Unicode)Extensive Definition
Sodium () is a chemical
element which has the symbol Na (Latin: natrium), atomic number
11, atomic mass 22.9898 g/mol, common oxidation
number +1. Sodium is a soft, silvery white, highly reactive element and
is a member of the alkali
metals within "group 1" (formerly known as ‘group IA’). It has
only one stable isotope,
23Na. Sodium was first isolated by Sir Humphry Davy
in 1807 by passing an electric current through molten sodium
hydroxide. Sodium quickly oxidizes in air and is violently reactive with
water, so it must be
stored in an inert medium, such as kerosene. Sodium is present in
great quantities in the earth's oceans as sodium
chloride (common salt). It is also a component of many
minerals, and it is an essential
element for animal life. As such, it is classified as a
“dietary inorganic macro-mineral.”
Characteristics
At room temperature, sodium metal is so soft that it can be easily cut with a knife. In air, the bright silvery luster of freshly exposed sodium will rapidly tarnish. The density of alkali metals generally increases with increasing atomic number, but sodium is denser than potassium.Chemical properties
Compared with other alkali metals, sodium is
generally less reactive than potassium and more reactive than
lithium, in accordance
with "periodic
law": for example, their reaction in water, chlorine gas, etc.;
the reactivity of their nitrates, chlorates, perchlorates, etc.
Sodium reacts exothermically
with water: small pea-sized pieces will bounce across the surface
of the water until they are consumed by it, whereas large pieces
will explode. While sodium reacts with water at room temperature,
the sodium piece melts with the heat of the reaction to form a
sphere, if the reacting sodium piece is large enough. The reaction
with water produces very caustic sodium
hydroxide (lye) and highly flammable hydrogen gas. These are
extreme hazards (see Precautions section below). When burned in
air, sodium forms sodium
peroxide Na2O2, or with limited oxygen, the oxide Na2O (unlike
lithium, the nitride is not formed). If
burned in oxygen under pressure, sodium
superoxide NaO2 will be produced.
In chemistry, most sodium compounds are
considered soluble but nature provides examples of many insoluble
sodium compounds such as the feldspars. There are other insoluble
sodium salts such as sodium
bismuthate NaBiO3, sodium
octamolybdate Na2Mo8O25• 4H2O, sodium
thioplatinate Na4Pt3S6, sodium uranate Na2UO4. Sodium
meta-antimonate's 2NaSbO3•7H2O solubility is 0.3g/L as is the
pyro
form Na2H2Sb2O7• H2O of this salt. Sodium
metaphosphate NaPO3 has a soluble and an insoluble form.
Isotopes
There are thirteen isotopes of sodium that have been recognized. The only stable isotope is 23Na. Sodium has two radioactive cosmogenic isotopes (22Na, half-life = 2.605 years; and 24Na, half-life ≈ 15 hours).Acute neutron radiation exposure (e.g., from a
nuclear criticality
accident) converts some of the stable 23Na in human blood
plasma to 24Na. By measuring the concentration of this isotope, the
neutron radiation dosage to the victim can be computed.
Atomic spectral lines
When sodium or its compounds are introduced into a flame, they turn the flame a bright yellow color.One notable atomic
spectral line of sodium vapor
is the so-called D-line, which may be observed directly as the
sodium flame-test line (see Applications) and also the major light
output of low-pressure sodium lamps
(these produce an unnatural yellow, rather than the peach-colored
glow of high pressure lamps). The D-line is one of the classified
Fraunhofer
lines observed in the visible spectrum of the sun's electromagnetic
radiation. Sodium vapor in the upper layers of the sun creates
a dark line in the emitted spectrum of electromagnetic radiation by
absorbing visible light in a band of wavelengths around
589.5 nm. This wavelength corresponds to transitions in
atomic sodium in which the valence-electron transitions from a 3p
to 3s electronic
state. Closer examination of the visible spectrum of atomic
sodium reveals that the D-line actually consists of two lines
called the D1 and D2 lines at 589.6 nm and
589.0 nm, respectively. This fine
structure results from a spin-orbit
interaction of the valence electron in the 3p electronic
state. The spin-orbit interaction couples the spin
angular momentum and orbital
angular momentum of a 3p electron to form two states that are
respectively notated as 3p(^2P^o_) and 3p(^2P^o_) in the LS coupling
scheme. The 3s state of the electron gives rise to a single state
which is notated as 3s(^2S_) in the LS coupling scheme. The D1-line
results from an electronic transition between 3s(^2S_) lower state
and 3p(^2P^o_) upper state. The D2-line results from an electronic
transition between 3s(^2S_) lower state and 3p(^2P^o_) upper state.
Even closer examination of the visible spectrum of atomic sodium
would reveal that the D-line actually consists of a lot more than
two lines. These lines are associated with hyperfine
structure of the 3p upper states and 3s lower states. Many
different transitions involving visible light near
589.5 nm may occur between the different upper and lower
hyperfine levels.
Phase behavior under pressure
Under extreme pressure, sodium departs from common melting behavior. Most materials require higher temperatures to melt under pressure than they do at normal atmospheric pressure. This is because they expand on melting due to looser molecular packing in the liquid, and thus pressure forces equilibrium in the direction of the denser solid phase.At a pressure of 30 gigapascals (300,000 times
sea level atmospheric pressure), the melting temperature of sodium
begins to drop. At around 100 gigapascals, sodium will melt at near
room temperature. A possible explanation for the aberrant behavior
of sodium is that this element has one free electron that is pushed closer
to the other 10 electrons when placed under pressure, forcing
interactions that are not normally present. While under pressure,
solid sodium assumes several odd crystal
structures suggesting that the liquid might have unusual
properties such as superconduction
or superfluidity.
Occurrence
Owing to its high reactivity, sodium is found in nature only as a compound and never as the free element. Sodium makes up about 2.6% by weight of the Earth's crust, making it the sixth most abundant element overall and the most abundant alkali metal. Sodium is found in many different minerals, of which the commonest is ordinary salt (sodium chloride), which occurs in vast quantities dissolved in seawater, as well as in solid deposits (halite). Others include amphibole, cryolite, soda niter and zeolite.Sodium is relatively abundant in stars and the D spectral
lines of this element are among the most prominent in star
light. Though elemental sodium has a rather high vaporization
temperature, its relatively high abundance and very intense
spectral lines have allowed its presence to be detected by ground
telescopes and confirmed by spacecraft (Mariner 10 and
MESSENGER) in the
thin atmosphere of the planet Mercury.
Compounds
Sodium compounds are important to the chemical, glass, metal, paper, petroleum, soap, and textile industries. Hard soaps are generally sodium salt of certain fatty acids (potassium produces softer or liquid soaps). The sodium compounds that are the most important to industries are common salt (NaCl), soda ash (Na2CO3), baking soda (NaHCO3), caustic soda (NaOH), sodium nitrate (NaNO3), di- and tri-sodium phosphates, sodium thiosulfate (hypo, Na2S2O3 · 5H2O), and borax (Na2B4O7 · 10H2O).Biological role
Physiology and sodium ions
Sodium ions (often referred to as just "sodium")
are necessary for regulation of blood and body fluids, transmission
of nerve impulses, heart activity, and certain metabolic functions.
Interestingly, although sodium is needed by animals, which maintain
high concentrations in their blood and extracellular fluids, the
ion is not needed by plants, and is generally phytotoxic. A
completely plant-based diet, therefore, will be very low in sodium.
This requires some herbivores to obtain their sodium from salt licks and
other mineral sources. The animal need for sodium is probably the
reason for the highly-conserved ability to taste the sodium ion as "salty."
Receptors for the pure salty taste respond best to sodium,
otherwise only to a few other small monovalent cations (Li+, NH4+,
and somewhat to K+). Calcium ion (Ca2+)
also tastes salty and sometimes bitter to some people but like
potassium, can trigger other tastes.
Sodium ions play a diverse and important role in
many physiological processes. Excitable animal cells, for example,
rely on the entry of Na+ to cause a depolarization. An
example of this is signal
transduction in the human central
nervous system, which depends on sodium ion motion across the
nerve cell membrane, in all nerves.
Some potent neurotoxins, such as batrachotoxin, increase
the sodium ion permeability of the cell
membranes in nerves and muscles, causing a massive and
irreversible depolarization of the
membranes, with potentially fatal consequences. However, drugs with
smaller effects on sodium ion motion in nerves may have diverse
pharmacological effects which range from anti-depressant to
anti-seizure actions.
Sodium is the primary cation (positive ion) in
extracellular fluids in animals and humans. These fluids, such as
blood plasma and extracellular fluids in other tissues, bathe cells
and carry out transport functions for nutrients and wastes. Sodium
is also the principal cation in seawater, although the
concentration there is about 3.8 times what it is normally in
extracellular body fluids.
Although the system for maintaining optimal salt
and water balance in the body is a complex one, one of the primary
ways in which the human body keeps track of loss of body water is
that osmoreceptors
in the hypothalamus
sense a balance of sodium and water concentration in extracellular
fluids. Relative loss of body water will cause sodium concentration
to rise higher than normal, a condition known as hypernatremia. This
ordinarily results in thirst. Conversely, an excess of body water
caused by drinking will result in too little sodium in the blood
(hyponatremia), a
condition which is again sensed by the hypothalamus, causing a
decrease in vasopressin hormone
secretion from the posterior
pituitary, and a consequent loss of water in the urine, which
acts to restore blood sodium concentrations to normal.
Severely dehydrated persons, such as people
rescued from ocean or desert survival situations, usually have very
high blood sodium concentrations. These must be very carefully and
slowly returned to normal, since too-rapid correction of
hypernatremia may result in brain damage from cellular swelling, as
water moves suddenly into cells with high osmolar content.
Because the hypothalamus/osmoreceptor system
ordinarily works well to cause drinking or urination to restore the
body's sodium concentrations to normal, this system can be used in
medical treatment to regulate the body's total fluid content, by
first controlling the body's sodium content. Thus, when a powerful
diuretic drug is given
which causes the kidneys to excrete sodium, the effect is
accompanied by an excretion of body water (water loss accompanies
sodium loss). This happens because the kidney is unable to
efficiently retain water while excreting large amounts of sodium.
In addition, after sodium excretion, the osmoreceptor system may
sense lowered sodium concentration in the blood and then direct
compensatory urinary water loss in order to correct the hyponatremic (low blood
sodium) state.
In humans, a high-salt intake was demonstrated to
attenuate nitric oxide
production. Nitric oxide (NO) contributes to vessel homeostasis by
inhibiting vascular smooth muscle contraction and growth, platelet
aggregation, and leukocyte adhesion to the endothelium
Dietary uses
The most common sodium salt, sodium chloride
(table
salt), is used for seasoning (for example the English word
"salad" refers to salt) and warm-climate food preservation, such as
pickling and making
jerky (the
high osmotic content of salt inhibits bacterial and fungal growth).
The human requirement for sodium in the diet is about
500 mg per day, which is typically less than a tenth as
much as many diets "seasoned to taste." Most people consume far
more sodium than is physiologically needed. For certain people with
salt-sensitive blood pressure, this extra intake may cause a
negative effect on health.
Applications
Sodium in its metallic form can be used to refine some reactive metals, such as zirconium and potassium, from their compounds. This alkali metal as the Na+ ion is vital to animal life. Other uses:- In certain alloys to improve their structure.
- In soap, in combination with fatty acids. Sodium soaps are harder (higher melting) soaps than potassium soaps.
- To descale metal (make its surface smooth).
- To purify molten metals.
- In sodium vapor lamps, an efficient means of producing light from electricity (see the picture), often used for street lighting in cities. Low-pressure sodium lamps give a distinctive yellow-orange light which consists primarily of the twin sodium D lines. High-pressure sodium lamps give a more natural peach-colored light, composed of wavelengths spread much more widely across the spectrum.
- As a heat transfer fluid in some types of nuclear reactors and inside the hollow valves of high-performance internal combustion engines.
- NaCl, a compound of sodium ions and chloride ions, is an important heat transfer material.
- In organic synthesis, sodium is used as a reducing agent, for example in the Birch reduction.
- In chemistry, sodium is often used either alone or with potassium in an alloy, NaK as a desiccant for drying solvents. Used with benzophenone, it forms an intense blue coloration when the solvent is dry and oxygen-free.
Commercial production
Sodium was first produced commercially in 1855 by
thermal reduction of sodium
carbonate with carbon
at 1100 °C, in what is known as the Deville process. A
process based on the reduction of sodium hydroxide was developed in
1886. This is done in a Downs Cell in
which the NaCl is mixed with calcium
chloride to lower the melting
point below 700 °C. As calcium is less electropositive than
sodium, no calcium will be formed at the anode. This method is less
expensive than the previous Castner
process of electrolyzing sodium
hydroxide.
Very pure sodium can be isolated by the thermal
decomposition of sodium
azide.
Metallic sodium costs about 15 to 20 US cents per
pound
(US$0.30/kg to US$0.45/kg) in 1997 but reagent grade
(ACS) sodium cost about US$35 per pound (US$75/kg) in 1990.
History
Salt has been an important commodity in human
activities, as testified by the English word salary, referring to
salarium, the wafers of salt sometimes given to Roman soldiers
along with their other wages.
Sodium (sometimes called "soda" in English)
has long been recognized in compounds, but was not isolated until
1807 by Sir
Humphry
Davy through the electrolysis of caustic
soda. In medieval
Europe a
compound of sodium with the Latin name of sodanum
was used as a headache
remedy. The name sodium probably originates from the Arabic word
suda meaning headache as the headache curing properties of sodium
carbonate or soda were well known in early times.
Sodium's chemical abbreviation Na was first
published by Jöns
Jakob Berzelius in his system of atomic symbols (Thomas
Thomson's Annals of Philosophy) and is a contraction of the
element's new Latin name natrium
which refers to the Egyptian natron word for a natural mineral
salt whose primary ingredient is hydrated sodium carbonate. Which
historically had several important industrial and household uses
later eclipsed by soda ash,
baking
soda and other sodium compounds.
Sodium imparts an intense yellow color to flames.
As early as 1860, Kirchhoff
and Bunsen
noted the high sensitivity that a flame test for sodium could give.
They state in Annalen
der Physik und der Chemie in the paper "Chemical Analysis by
Observation of Spectra":
''In a corner of our 60 cu.m. room farthest away
from the apparatus, we exploded 3 mg. of sodium chlorate
with milk sugar while observing the nonluminous flame before the
slit. After a while, it glowed a bright yellow and showed a strong
sodium line that disappeared only after 10 minutes. From the weight
of the sodium salt and the volume of air in the room, we easily
calculate that one part by weight of air could not contain more
than 1/20 millionth weight of sodium.''
Precautions
Extreme care is required in handling elemental/metallic sodium. Sodium is potentially explosive in water (depending on quantity) and is a caustic poison, since it is rapidly converted to sodium hydroxide on contact with moisture. The powdered form may combust spontaneously in air or oxygen. Sodium must be stored either in an inert (oxygen and moisture free) atmosphere (such as nitrogen or argon), or under a liquid hydrocarbon such as mineral oil or kerosene.The reaction of sodium and water is a familiar
one in chemistry labs, and is reasonably safe if amounts of sodium
smaller than a pencil eraser are used and the reaction is done
behind a plastic shield by people wearing eye protection. However,
the sodium-water reaction does not scale up well, and is
treacherous when larger amounts of sodium are used. Larger pieces
of sodium melt under the heat of the reaction, and the molten ball
of metal is buoyed up by hydrogen and may appear to be
stably reacting
with water, until
splashing covers more of the reaction mass, causing thermal runaway
and an explosion which scatters molten sodium, lye solution, and
sometimes flame. (18.5 g explosion
http://video.google.de/videoplay?docid=-2158222101210607510&q=sodium)
This behavior is unpredictable, and among the alkali metals it is
usually sodium which invites this surprise phenomenon, because
lithium is not reactive
enough to do it, and potassium is so reactive that
chemistry students are not tempted to try the reaction with larger
potassium
pieces.
Sodium is much more reactive than magnesium; a reactivity which can be
further enhanced due to sodium's much lower melting point. When
sodium catches fire in air (as opposed to just the hydrogen gas
generated from water by means of its reaction with sodium) it more
easily produces temperatures high enough to melt the sodium,
exposing more of its surface to the air and spreading the
fire.
Few common fire extinguishers work on sodium
fires. Water,
of course, exacerbates sodium fires, as do water-based foams. CO2
and Halon are
often ineffective on sodium fires, which reignite when the
extinguisher dissipates. Among the very few materials effective on
a sodium fire are Pyromet and Met-L-X. Pyromet is a NaCl/(NH4)2HPO4
mix, with flow/anti-clump agents. It smothers the fire, drains away
heat, and melts to form an impermeable crust. This is the standard
dry-powder canister fire extinguisher for all classes of fires.
Met-L-X is mostly sodium chloride, NaCl, with approximately 5%
Saran
plastic as a crust-former, and flow/anti-clumping agents. It is
most commonly hand-applied, with a scoop. Other extreme fire
extinguishing materials include Lith+, a graphite
based dry powder with an organophosphate flame retardant; and
Na+, a
Na2CO3-based material.
Because of the reaction scale problems discussed
above, disposing of large quantities of sodium (more than 10 to 100
grams) must be done through a licensed hazardous materials
disposer. Smaller quantities may be broken up and neutralized
carefully with ethanol
(which has a much slower reaction than water), or even methanol (where the reaction is
more rapid than ethanol's but still less than in water), but care
should nevertheless be taken, as the caustic products from the
ethanol or methanol reaction are just as hazardous to eyes and skin
as those from water. After the alcohol reaction appears complete,
and all pieces of reaction debris have been broken up or dissolved,
a mixture of alcohol and water, then pure water, may then be
carefully used for a final cleaning. This should be allowed to
stand a few minutes until the reaction products are diluted more
thoroughly and flushed down the drain. The purpose of the final
water soak and wash of any reaction mass which may contain sodium
is to ensure that alcohol does not carry unreacted sodium into the
sink trap, where a water reaction may generate hydrogen in the trap
space which can then be potentially ignited, causing a confined
sink trap explosion.
See also
References
- Rebecca J. Donatelle. Health, The Basics. 6th ed. San Francisco: Pearson Education, Inc. 2005.
External links
- WebElements.com – Sodium
- The Wooden Periodic Table Table's Entry on Sodium
- Dietary Sodium
- Sodium isotopes data from The Berkeley Laboratory Isotopes Project's
sodium in Afrikaans: Natrium
sodium in Arabic: صوديوم
sodium in Asturian: Sodiu
sodium in Bengali: সোডিয়াম
sodium in Min Nan: Na (goân-sò͘)
sodium in Belarusian: Натрый
sodium in Bosnian: Natrijum
sodium in Bulgarian: Натрий
sodium in Catalan: Sodi
sodium in Czech: Sodík
sodium in Corsican: Sodiu
sodium in Welsh: Sodiwm
sodium in Danish: Natrium
sodium in German: Natrium
sodium in Dhivehi: ސޯޑިއަމް
sodium in Estonian: Naatrium
sodium in Modern Greek (1453-): Νάτριο
sodium in Spanish: Sodio
sodium in Esperanto: Natrio
sodium in Basque: Sodio
sodium in Persian: سدیم
sodium in French: Sodium
sodium in Friulian: Sodi
sodium in Irish: Sóidiam
sodium in Manx: Sodjum
sodium in Galician: Sodio
sodium in Korean: 나트륨
sodium in Armenian: Նատրիում
sodium in Hindi: सोडियम
sodium in Croatian: Natrij
sodium in Ido: Natro
sodium in Indonesian: Natrium
sodium in Icelandic: Natrín
sodium in Italian: Sodio
sodium in Hebrew: נתרן
sodium in Javanese: Natrium
sodium in Kannada: ಸೋಡಿಯಮ್
sodium in Georgian: ნატრიუმი
sodium in Swahili (macrolanguage): Natiri
sodium in Haitian: Sodyòm
sodium in Kurdish: Natrîyûm
sodium in Latin: Natrium
sodium in Latvian: Nātrijs
sodium in Luxembourgish: Natrium
sodium in Lithuanian: Natris
sodium in Lingala: Sodu
sodium in Lojban: sodna
sodium in Hungarian: Nátrium
sodium in Macedonian: Натриум
sodium in Malayalam: സോഡിയം
sodium in Maori: Konutai
sodium in Marathi: सोडियम
sodium in Dutch: Natrium
sodium in Japanese: ナトリウム
sodium in Norwegian: Natrium
sodium in Norwegian Nynorsk: Natrium
sodium in Narom: Sôdgium
sodium in Novial: Natrium
sodium in Occitan (post 1500): Sòdi
sodium in Uzbek: Natriy
sodium in Low German: Natrium
sodium in Polish: Sód
sodium in Portuguese: Sódio
sodium in Romanian: Sodiu
sodium in Quechua: Natriyu
sodium in Russian: Натрий
sodium in Albanian: Natriumi
sodium in Sicilian: Sodiu
sodium in Simple English: Sodium
sodium in Slovak: Sodík
sodium in Slovenian: Natrij
sodium in Serbian: Натријум
sodium in Serbo-Croatian: Natrij
sodium in Finnish: Natrium
sodium in Swedish: Natrium
sodium in Tamil: சோடியம்
sodium in Telugu: సోడియమ్
sodium in Thai: โซเดียม
sodium in Vietnamese: Natri
sodium in Tajik: Натрий
sodium in Turkish: Sodyum
sodium in Ukrainian: Натрій
sodium in Walloon: Sodiom
sodium in Contenese: 鈉
sodium in Chinese: 钠