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  2. Mercury(II) oxide - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mercury(II)_oxide

    The red form of HgO can be made by heating Hg in oxygen at roughly 350 °C, or by pyrolysis of Hg(NO 3) 2. [8] The yellow form can be obtained by precipitation of aqueous Hg 2+ with alkali. [ 8 ] The difference in color is due to particle size; both forms have the same structure consisting of near linear O-Hg-O units linked in zigzag chains ...

  3. Mercury oxide - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mercury_oxide

    Mercury(II) oxide (mercuric oxide), HgO; See also. Montroydite, the mineral form of mercury(II) oxide This page was last edited on 2 August 2024, at ...

  4. Mercury(II) hydroxide - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mercury(II)_hydroxide

    Attempts to isolate Hg(OH) 2 yield yellow solid HgO. The solid has produced it by irradiating a frozen mixture of mercury, oxygen and hydrogen. The mixture had been produced by evaporating mercury atoms at 50 °C into a gas consisting of neon, argon or deuterium (in separate experiments) plus 2 to 8% hydrogen and 0.2 to 2.0% oxygen.

  5. Table of specific heat capacities - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Table_of_specific_heat...

    Note that the especially high molar values, as for paraffin, gasoline, water and ammonia, result from calculating specific heats in terms of moles of molecules. If specific heat is expressed per mole of atoms for these substances, none of the constant-volume values exceed, to any large extent, the theoretical Dulong–Petit limit of 25 J⋅mol ...

  6. Mercury(II) sulfate - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mercury(II)_sulfate

    The anhydrous compound features Hg 2+ in a highly distorted tetrahedral HgO 4 environment. Two Hg-O distances are 2.22 Å and the others are 2.28 and 2.42 Å. [5] In the monohydrate, Hg 2+ adopts a linear coordination geometry with Hg-O (sulfate) and Hg-O (water) bond lengths of 2.179 and 2.228 Å, respectively. Four weaker bonds are also ...

  7. Molar mass - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Molar_mass

    Molecular weight (M.W.) (for molecular compounds) and formula weight (F.W.) (for non-molecular compounds), are older terms for what is now more correctly called the relative molar mass (M r). [8] This is a dimensionless quantity (i.e., a pure number, without units) equal to the molar mass divided by the molar mass constant. [notes 1]

  8. Mercury(II) fluoride - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mercury(II)_fluoride

    Molar mass: 238.587 g/mol ... fluoride has the molecular formula HgF 2 as a chemical compound of one atom of mercury with 2 atoms of ... HgO + 2 HF → HgF 2 + H 2 O. ...

  9. Mercury(I) oxide - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mercury(I)_oxide

    Mercury(I) oxide, also known as mercurous oxide, is an inorganic metal oxide with the chemical formula Hg 2 O. . It is a brown/black powder, insoluble in water but soluble in nitric acid.