enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Beryllium fluoride - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Beryllium_fluoride

    Beryllium fluoride has distinctive optical properties. In the form of fluoroberyllate glass, it has the lowest refractive index for a solid at room temperature of 1.275. Its dispersive power is the lowest for a solid at 0.0093, and the nonlinear coefficient is also the lowest at 2 × 10 −14.

  3. Tetrafluoroberyllate - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tetrafluoroberyllate

    The Be–F bond length is between 145 and 153 pm.The beryllium is sp 3 hybridized, leading to a longer bond than in BeF 2, where beryllium is sp hybridized. [11] In trifluoroberyllates, there are actually BeF 4 tetrahedra arranged in a triangle, so that three fluorine atoms are shared on two tetrahedra each, resulting in a formula of Be 3 F 9.

  4. Fluorine compounds - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fluorine_compounds

    The fluorine–fluorine bond of the difluorine molecule is relatively weak when compared to the bonds of heavier dihalogen molecules. The bond energy is significantly weaker than those of Cl 2 or Br 2 molecules and similar to the easily cleaved oxygen–oxygen bonds of peroxides or nitrogen–nitrogen bonds of hydrazines. [8]

  5. Talk:Beryllium fluoride - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Talk:Beryllium_fluoride

    The image captioned "Structure of solid BeF2" is wrong in several respects: It shows only an amorphous network, when BeF2 also has a quartz-like crystalline phase. The network is shown as two dimensional, when the solid has three-dimensional bonding. The network shows tri-coordinate Be ions, when they are in reality tetracoordinate.

  6. Bonding in solids - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bonding_in_solids

    The covalent bonds in this material form extended structures, but do not form a continuous network. With cross-linking, however, polymer networks can become continuous, and a series of materials spans the range from Cross-linked polyethylene , to rigid thermosetting resins, to hydrogen-rich amorphous solids, to vitreous carbon, diamond-like ...

  7. Network covalent bonding - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Network_covalent_bonding

    Melting point: High, since melting means breaking covalent bonds (rather than merely overcoming weaker intermolecular forces). [ 5 ] Solid-phase electrical conductivity : Variable, [ 6 ] depending on the nature of the bonding: network solids in which all electrons are used for sigma bonds (e.g. diamond, quartz) are poor conductors, as there are ...

  8. Pi backbonding - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pi_backbonding

    In chemistry, π backbonding is a π-bonding interaction between a filled (or half filled) orbital of a transition metal atom and a vacant orbital on an adjacent ion or molecule.

  9. Carbon–fluorine bond - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carbon–fluorine_bond

    The carbon–fluorine bond is a polar covalent bond between carbon and fluorine that is a component of all organofluorine compounds. It is one of the strongest single bonds in chemistry (after the B–F single bond, Si–F single bond, and H–F single bond), and relatively short, due to its partial ionic character.