Monofluoride
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Monofluoride
A monofluoride is a chemical compound with one fluoride per formula unit. For a binary compound, this is the formula XF. Organofluorine compounds Common monofluoride are organofluorine compounds such as methyl fluoride and fluorobenzene. Inorganic compounds All the alkali metals form monofluorides. All have the sodium chloride (rock salt) structure and are soluble in water and even some alcohols. Because the fluoride anion is highly basic, many alkali metal fluorides form bifluorides with the formula MHF2. Sodium and potassium bifluorides are significant to the chemical industry. Among other monofluorides, only silver(I) and thallium(I) fluorides are well-characterized. Both are very soluble, unlike the other halides of those metals. Selected inorganic monofluorides Examples of the monofluorides include: Metal monofluorides *Aluminium monofluoride, an elusive species with the formula AlF * Caesium fluoride * Copper monofluoride *Lithium fluoride * Mercury monofluoride *P ...
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Boron Monofluoride
Boron monofluoride or fluoroborylene is a chemical compound with formula BF, one atom of boron and one of fluorine. It was discovered as an unstable gas and only in 2009 found to be a stable ligand combining with transition metals, in the same way as carbon monoxide. It is a subhalide, containing fewer than the normal number of fluorine atoms, compared with boron trifluoride. It can also be called a borylene, as it contains boron with two unshared electrons. BF is isoelectronic with carbon monoxide and dinitrogen; each molecule has 14 electrons. Structure The experimental B–F bond length is 1.26267  Å. Despite being isoelectronic to the triple-bonded species CO and N2, computational studies generally agree that the true bond order is much lower than 3. One reported computed bond order for the molecule is 1.4, compared with 2.6 for CO and 3.0 for N2. BF is unusual in that the dipole moment is inverted with fluorine having a positive charge even though it is the ...
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Iodine Monofluoride
Iodine monofluoride is an interhalogen compound of iodine and fluorine with formula IF. It is a chocolate-brown solid that decomposes at 0 °C, disproportionating to elemental iodine and iodine pentafluoride: :5 IF → 2 I2 + IF5 However, its molecular properties can still be precisely determined by spectroscopy: the iodine-fluorine distance is 190.9 pm and the I−F bond dissociation energy is around 277 kJ mol−1. At 298  K, its standard enthalpy change of formation is Δ''H''f° = −95.4 kJ mol−1, and its Gibbs free energy is Δ''G''f° = −117.6 kJ mol−1. It can be generated, albeit only fleetingly, by the reaction of the elements at −45 °C in CCl3F: :I2 + F2 → 2 IF It can also be generated by the reaction of iodine with iodine trifluoride at −78 °C in CCl3F: :I2 + IF3 → 3 IF The reaction of iodine with silver(I) fluoride Silver(I) fluoride is the inorganic compound with the formula AgF. It ...
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Carbon Monofluoride
Carbon monofluoride (CF, CFx, or (CF)n), also called polycarbon monofluoride (PMF), polycarbon fluoride, poly(carbon monofluoride), and graphite fluoride, is a material formed by high-temperature reaction of fluorine gas with graphite, charcoal, or pyrolytic carbon powder. It is a highly hydrophobic microcrystalline powder. Its CAS number is . In contrast to graphite intercalation compounds it is a covalent graphite compound. Carbon is stable in a fluorine atmosphere up to about 400 °C, but between 420-600 °C a reaction takes place to give substoichiometric carbon monofluoride, CF0.68 appearing dark grey. With increasing temperature and fluorine pressure stoichiometries up to CF1.12 are formed. With increasing fluorine content the colour changes from dark grey to cream white indicating the loss of the aromatic character. The fluorine atoms are located in an alternating fashion above and under the former graphene plane, which is now buckled due to formation of covalent ...
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Interhalogen Compound
In chemistry, an interhalogen compound is a molecule which contains two or more different halogen atoms ( fluorine, chlorine, bromine, iodine, or astatine) and no atoms of elements from any other group. Most interhalogen compounds known are binary (composed of only two distinct elements). Their formulae are generally , where ''n'' = 1, 3, 5 or 7, and X is the less electronegative of the two halogens. The value of ''n'' in interhalogens is always odd, because of the odd valence of halogens. They are all prone to hydrolysis, and ionize to give rise to polyhalogen ions. Those formed with astatine have a very short half-life due to astatine being intensely radioactive. No interhalogen compounds containing three or more different halogens are definitely known, although a few books claim that and have been obtained, and theoretical studies seem to indicate that some compounds in the series are barely stable. Some interhalogens, such as , , and , are good halogenating agents. i ...
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Chlorine Monofluoride
Chlorine monofluoride is a volatile interhalogen compound with the chemical formula ClF. It is a colourless gas at room temperature and is stable even at high temperatures. When cooled to −100 °C, ClF condenses as a pale yellow liquid. Many of its properties are intermediate between its parent halogens, Cl2 and F2. Reactivity Chlorine monofluoride is a versatile fluorinating agent, converting metals and non-metals to their fluorides and releasing Cl2 in the process. For example, it converts tungsten to tungsten hexafluoride and selenium to selenium tetrafluoride: :W + 6 ClF → WF6 + 3 Cl2 :Se + 4 ClF → SeF4 + 2 Cl2 FCl can also chlorofluorinate compounds, either by addition across a multiple bond or via oxidation. For example, it adds fluorine and chlorine to the carbon of carbon monoxide, yielding carbonyl chloride fluoride: :CO + ClF → See also *Chlorine fluoride A chlorine fluoride is an interhalogen compound containing only chlorine and fluorine. {, class= ...
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Bromine Monofluoride
Bromine monofluoride is a quite unstable interhalogen compound with the chemical formula BrF. It can be produced through the reaction of bromine trifluoride (or bromine pentafluoride) and bromine. Due to its lability, the compound can be detected but not isolated: :BrF3 + Br2 → 3 BrF :BrF5 + 2 Br2 → 5 BrF :Br2(l) + F2(g) → 2 BrF(g) It is usually generated in the presence of cesium fluoride. Bromine monofluoride decomposes at normal temperature through dismutation to bromine trifluoride, bromine pentafluoride, and free bromine. See also * Bromine trifluoride, BrF3 * Bromine pentafluoride Bromine pentafluoride, Br F5, is an interhalogen compound and a fluoride of bromine. It is a strong fluorinating agent. BrF5 finds use in oxygen isotope analysis. Laser ablation of solid silicates in the presence of BrF5 releases O2 for subsequ ..., BrF5 References Fluorides Bromine(I) compounds Interhalogen compounds {{Inorganic-compound-stub ...
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Nitrogen Monofluoride
Nitrogen monofluoride (fluoroimidogen) is a metastable species that has been observed in laser studies. It is isoelectronic with O2. Like boron monofluoride, it is an instance of the rare multiply-bonded fluorine atom. It is unstable with respect to its formal dimer, dinitrogen difluoride, as well as to its elements, nitrogen and fluorine. Nitrogen monofluoride is produced when radical species (H, O, N, CH3) abstract a fluorine atom from nitrogen difluoride (NF2). Stoichiometrically, the reaction is extremely efficient, regenerating a radical for long-lasting chain propagation. However, radical impurities in the end product also catalyze that product's decomposition. Azide decomposition offers a less-efficient but more pure technique: fluorine azide (which can be formed ''in situ'' via reaction of atomic fluorine with hydrazoic acid) decomposes upon shock into NF and N2. Many NF-producing reactions give the product in an excited state with characteristic chemiluminescence. ...
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Aluminium Monofluoride
Aluminium monofluoride, also known as fluoridoaluminium, is the chemical compound with the formula AlF. This elusive species is formed by the reaction between aluminium trifluoride and metallic aluminium at elevated temperatures but quickly reverts to the reactants when cooled. Clusters derived from related aluminium(I) halides can be stabilized using specialized ligands. This molecule has been detected in the interstellar medium, where molecules are so dilute that intermolecular collisions are unimportant. See also *Aluminium monobromide *Aluminium monochloride *Aluminium monoiodide Aluminium monoiodide is an aluminium(I) compound with the chemical formula AlI. It is unstable at room temperature due to dismutation: :6AlI -> + 4Al It forms a cyclic adduct Al4I4(NEt3)4 with triethylamine. See also *Aluminium monofluoride * A ... References Aluminium(I) compounds Fluorides Metal halides {{inorganic-compound-stub ...
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Silver Fluoride
Silver fluoride can refer to: * Silver subfluoride (disilver monofluoride), Ag2F * Silver(I) fluoride (silver monofluoride, argentous fluoride), AgF * Silver(II) fluoride (silver difluoride, argentic fluoride), AgF2 * Silver(III) fluoride (silver trifluoride), AgF3 * Silver diamine fluoride, a material used to stop dental caries Tooth decay, also known as cavities or caries, is the breakdown of teeth due to acids produced by bacteria. The cavities may be a number of different colors from yellow to black. Symptoms may include pain and difficulty with eating. Complicatio ... (cavities). Gallery

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Silver(I) Fluoride
Silver(I) fluoride is the inorganic compound with the formula AgF. It is one of the three main fluorides of silver, the others being silver subfluoride and silver(II) fluoride. AgF has relatively few niche applications; it has been employed as a fluorination and desilylation reagent in organic synthesis and in aqueous solution as a topical caries treatment in dentistry. The hydrates of AgF present as colourless, while pure anhydrous samples are yellow. Preparation High-purity silver(I) fluoride can be produced by the heating of silver carbonate to under a hydrogen fluoride environment, in a platinum tube: :Ag2CO3 + 2 HF -> 2 AgF + H2O + CO2 Laboratory routes to the compound typically avoid the use of gaseous hydrogen fluoride. One method is the thermal decomposition of silver tetrafluoroborate: :AgBF4 -> AgF + BF3 In an alternative route, silver(I) oxide is dissolved in concentrated aqueous hydrofluoric acid, and the silver fluoride is precipitated out of the resulti ...
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Thallium(I) Fluoride
Thallium(I) fluoride is the inorganic compound with the chemical formula, formula TlF. It is a white solid, forming orthorhombic crystals. The solid slightly deliquescence, deliquescent. It has a distorted sodium chloride (rock salt) crystal structure, due to the 6s2 Inert pair effect, inert pair on Tl+. This salt is unusual among the thallium halides, thallium(I) halides in that it is very soluble in water. Reactions Thallium(I) fluoride can be prepared by the reaction of thallium(I) carbonate with hydrofluoric acid. References

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Thallium Monofluoride
Thallium(I) fluoride is the inorganic compound with the formula TlF. It is a white solid, forming orthorhombic crystals. The solid slightly deliquescent. It has a distorted sodium chloride (rock salt) crystal structure, due to the 6s2 inert pair on Tl+. This salt is unusual among the thallium(I) halides in that it is very soluble in water. Reactions Thallium(I) fluoride can be prepared by the reaction of thallium(I) carbonate with hydrofluoric acid Hydrofluoric acid is a Solution (chemistry), solution of hydrogen fluoride (HF) in water. Solutions of HF are colourless, acidic and highly Corrosive substance, corrosive. It is used to make most fluorine-containing compounds; examples include th .... References {{fluorine compounds Thallium(I) compounds Fluorides Metal halides ...
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