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Xenon fluoride nitrate
Identifiers
3D model (JSmol)
  • InChI=1S/FNO3Xe/c1-6-5-2(3)4
    Key: YCLGDVQFVLWCLS-UHFFFAOYSA-N
  • [O-][N+](=O)O[Xe]F
Properties
FNO3Xe
Molar mass 212.295 g·mol−1
Except where otherwise noted, data are given for materials in their standard state (at 25 °C [77 °F], 100 kPa).

Xenon fluoride nitrate, also known as fluoroxenonium nitrate, is the chemical compound with formula FXeONO2.[1][2]

Synthesis

This compound is formed via the reaction:[3]

[FXeOXeFXeF][AsF6] + 2NO2F → FXeONO2 + NO2AsF6.

Purification of FXeONO2 can then take place by dissolving in SO2ClF, which leaves the nitronium arsenic hexafluoride behind as a solid.[3]

An alternate low yield method to make FXeONO2 is to dissolve xenon difluoride in liquid dinitrogen tetroxide at 0 °C.[3]

XeF2 + NO+ + NO3 → FXeONO2 + NOF

This method is inefficient as not much nitrate ion exists in the liquid and the xenon fluoride nitrate decomposes.[3]

Another method claimed to make this substance is:[3]

XeF2 + HNO3 → FXeONO2 + HF

Properties

FXeONO2 is a white crystalline material.[3] The space group of the crystals is P21/c, which is monoclinic. The unit cell contains four molecules with a total volume of 386.6 Å3. The unit cell dimensions are a = 4.6663 Å, b = 8.799 Å c = 9.415 Å, with non-perpendicular angle β = 90.325°.[3] With a molecular weight of 212.3, the crystal has density 3.648. (These measurements at -173 °C.)[3] The bond lengths in the molecule are 1.992 Å for Xe–F, 2.126 Å for Xe–O, 1.36 Å for O–NO2, 1.199 for N–Ocis and 1.224 Å for N–Otrans.[3] The bond angles are 177.6° for F–Xe–O, 114.7° for Xe-O-N, 114.5° for (Xe)O–N–Ocis, 118.4° for (Xe)O–N–Otrans and 127.1° for Ocis–N–Otrans.[3] The bond lengths and angles on the xenon atom are similar to that in FXeOSO2F and FXeOTeF5, indicating a polar oxygen bond. The Xe–O–N angle is larger than those in halogen nitrates, which indicates a lower bond density for the Xe–O bond. The N–Ocis bond length is longer than the N–Otrans bond length, opposite to other halogen nitrates.[3]

FXeONO2 is not particularly stable and slowly breaks down at -78 °C, yielding XeF2·N2O4. This happens on a timescale of several days.[3] At 0 °C, FXeONO2 has a half life of seven hours, decomposing to XeF2.[3]

References

  1. ^ Moran, Matthew D.; David S. Brock; Hélène P. A. Mercier; Gary J. Schrobilgen (2010). "Xe3OF3+, a Precursor to a Noble-Gas Nitrate; Syntheses and Structural Characterizations of FXeONO2, XeF2·HNO3, and XeF2·N2O4". Journal of the American Chemical Society. 132 (39): 13823–13839. doi:10.1021/ja105618w. ISSN 0002-7863. PMID 20843046.
  2. ^ Atta-ur-Rahman (2006-01-01). Advances in Organic Synthesis: Modern Organofluorine Chemistry-Synthetic Aspects. Bentham Science Publishers. p. 78. ISBN 9781608051984. Retrieved 5 October 2014.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m Moran, Matthew D. (2007). Synthesis and Structural Characterization of new Xenon(II) Compounds and the Use of a Xenon(II) Cation as an Oxidant for the Preparation of Halogenated Hydrocarbons (PDF). McMaster University. pp. 42, 99–145. Retrieved 4 Oct 2014.