Barium Nitrate is an inorganic chemical compound with the formula Ba(NO₃)₂. It consists of one barium cation (Ba²⁺) and two nitrate anions (NO₃⁻).
It occurs naturally as the rare mineral nitrobarite.
Barium nitrate is a strong oxidizer. It does not burn on its own but intensifies combustion of other materials and can cause fires or explosions when mixed with combustibles, reducing agents, or finely divided metals. Upon heating, it decomposes as follows:
2 Ba(NO₃)₂ → 2 BaO + 4 NO₂ + O₂
It produces a characteristic bright green flame when burned, due to barium emission (often enhanced by chlorine donors forming BaCl species in the flame)
It is commonly manufactured by reacting barium carbonate (BaCO₃) with nitric acid, followed by filtration, evaporation, and crystallization. Another route involves barium sulfide with nitric acid or double displacement between barium chloride and sodium nitrate.