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It oxidises readily in air to form arsenic trioxide and water, and analogous reactions take place with sulfur and selenium instead of oxygen. [3] Arsenic forms colorless, odorless, crystalline oxides As 2 O 3 ("white arsenic") and As 2 O 5 which are hygroscopic and readily soluble in water to form acidic solutions.
Nitric oxide (NO) is a part of cell regulation, including cellular metabolism, growth, division and death. [28] Nitric oxide (NO) reacts with reactive oxygen species to form peroxynitrite. [28] In cases of chronic arsenic exposure, the nitric oxide levels are depleted, due to the superoxide reactions. [28]
It burns in oxygen to form arsenic trioxide and arsenic pentoxide, which have the same structure as the more well-known phosphorus compounds, and in fluorine to give arsenic pentafluoride. [31] Arsenic makes arsenic acid with concentrated nitric acid , arsenous acid with dilute nitric acid, and arsenic trioxide with concentrated sulfuric acid ...
Arsenic-arsenic bonds are very weak, and oligomeric arsenic compounds are even more liable to oxidize than their hydrogenated precursors. [6]: 318–320 The following reaction can, however, be prepared through electrochemical reduction in a zinc-sulfate cell. [6]: 473 Oxidation first forms polymeric arsinoxides, e.g.: MeAs + O → MeAsO
In chemistry, an arsenite is a chemical compound containing an arsenic oxyanion where arsenic has oxidation state +3. Note that in fields that commonly deal with groundwater chemistry, arsenite is used generically to identify soluble As III anions. IUPAC have recommended that arsenite compounds are to be named as arsenate(III), for example ...
Despite the well known toxicity of arsenic, arsenic trioxide was used in traditional Chinese medicine, where it is known as pi-shuang (Chinese: 砒霜; pinyin: pīshuāng; lit. 'arsenic frost'). In homeopathy, it is called arsenicum album. Some discredited patent medicines, e.g., Fowler's solution, contained derivatives of arsenic oxide. [20]
An inorganic example is the Bettendorf reaction using tin dichloride (SnCl 2) to prove the presence of arsenite ions in a concentrated HCl extract. When arsenic(III) is present, a brown coloration appears forming a dark precipitate of arsenic, according to the following simplified reaction: 2 As 3+ + 3 Sn 2+ → 2 As 0 + 3 Sn 4+
The two unique forms of potassium arsenite can be attributed to the different number of oxygen atoms. Potassium meta-arsenite (KAsO 2) contains two oxygen atoms one of which is bonded to the arsenic atom via a double bond. Conversely, Potassium ortho-arsenite (K 3 AsO 3) consists of three oxygen atoms all bound to the arsenic atom via single bonds.