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Chlorine and oxygen can bond in a number of ways: chlorine monoxide radical, ClO•, chlorine (II) oxide radical; chloroperoxyl radical, ClOO•, chlorine (II) peroxide radical; chlorine dioxide, ClO 2, chlorine (IV) oxide; chlorine trioxide radical, ClO 3 •, chlorine (VI) oxide radical; chlorine tetroxide radical, ClO 4 •, chlorine (VII ...
Download as PDF; Printable version; ... Chlorine trifluoride dioxide is an inorganic compound of chlorine, fluorine, and oxygen with the chemical formula ClO 2 F 3. [1]
Chlorine dioxide is approximately 10 times more soluble in water than elemental chlorine [1] but its solubility is very temperature-dependent. At partial pressures above 10 kPa (1.5 psi) [1] (or gas-phase concentrations greater than 10% volume in air at STP) of ClO 2 may explosively decompose into chlorine and oxygen. The decomposition can be ...
chlorine trifluoride: 7790-91-2 ClF 5: chlorine pentafluoride: 13637-63-3 ClOClO 3: chlorine perchlorate: 27218-16-2 ClO 2: chlorine dioxide: 10049-04-4 ClO 3 F: chlorine trioxide fluoride: 7616-94-6 Cl 2: chlorine: 7782-50-5 Cl 2 O 3: chlorine trioxide: 17496-59-2 Cl 2 O 6: chlorine hexoxide: 12442-63-6 Cl 2 O 7: chlorine heptoxide: 10294-48-1 ...
Compounds containing oxygen in other oxidation states are very uncommon: − 1 ⁄ 2 (superoxides), − 1 ⁄ 3 , 0 (elemental, hypofluorous acid), + 1 ⁄ 2 , +1 (dioxygen difluoride), and +2 (oxygen difluoride). Oxygen is reactive and will form oxides with all other elements except the noble gases helium, neon, argon and krypton. [1]
Chlorine monoxide is a chemical radical with the chemical formula ClO •. It plays an important role in the process of ozone depletion. In the stratosphere, chlorine atoms react with ozone molecules to form chlorine monoxide and oxygen. Cl • + O 3 → ClO • + O 2. This reaction causes the depletion of the ozone layer. [1]
Fluorine perchlorate, also called perchloryl hypofluorite is the rarely encountered chemical compound of fluorine, chlorine, and oxygen with the chemical formula ClO 4 F or FOClO 3. It is an extremely unstable gas that explodes spontaneously [2] and has a penetrating odor. [3]
Evaporation under reduced pressure allows it to be concentrated further to about 40%, but then it decomposes to perchloric acid, chlorine, oxygen, water, and chlorine dioxide. Its most important salt is sodium chlorate, mostly used to make chlorine dioxide to bleach paper pulp. The decomposition of chlorate to chloride and oxygen is a common ...