Xenon dioxide

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Xenon dioxide
Structure
Molecular shape Square planar
Properties
Molecular formula XeO2
Molar mass 163.29 g/mol
Appearance yellow solid[1]
Related compounds
Related compounds Xenon trioxide
Xenon tetroxide
Except where noted otherwise, data are given for materials in their standard state (at 25 °C (77 °F), 100 kPa)
Infobox references

Xenon dioxide, or xenon(IV) oxide, is a compound of xenon and oxygen with formula XeO2, which was synthesized in 2011. It is synthesized at 0 °C by hydrolysis of xenon tetrafluoride in water (with 2.00 mol/L H2SO4).[2]

Structure

XeO
2
has an extended (chain or network) structure in which xenon and oxygen have coordination numbers of four and two respectively. The geometry at xenon is square planar, consistent with VSEPR theory for four ligands and two lone pairs (or AX4E2 in the notation of VSEPR theory).

In addition, the existence of an XeO2 molecule was predicted by an ab initio quantum chemistry method several years earlier by Pyykkö and Tamm, but these authors did not consider an extended structure.[3]

Properties

XeO
2
is a yellow-orange solid.[4] It is an unstable compound, with a half-life of about two minutes, disproportionating into XeO
3
and xenon gas. Its structure and identity was confirmed by cooling it to −78 °C so that Raman spectroscopy could be performed before it decomposed.[1]

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 Tyler Irving (May 2011). "Xenon Dioxide May Solve One of Earth's Mysteries". L’Actualité chimique canadienne (Canadian Chemical News). Retrieved 2012-05-18. 
  2. Brock, David S.; Schrobilgen, Gary J. (2011). "Synthesis of the Missing Oxide of Xenon, XeO
    2
    , and Its Implications for Earth’s Missing Xenon". Journal of the American Chemical Society 133 (16): 6265–6269. doi:10.1021/ja110618g. PMID 21341650.
     
  3. Pyykkö, Pekka; Tamm, Toomas (1 April 2000). "Calculations for XeOn(n = 2−4): Could the Xenon Dioxide Molecule Exist?". The Journal of Physical Chemistry A 104 (16): 3826–3828. doi:10.1021/jp994038d. 
  4. Simon Cotton (May 2011). "Soundbite Molecules". Royal Society of Chemistry. Retrieved 2012-05-18. 
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike; additional terms may apply for the media files.