In chemistry, oxohalides or oxyhalides are a group of chemical compounds with the chemical formula , where X is a halogen, and A is an element different than O and X. Oxohalides are numerous. Molecular oxohalides are , whereas nonmolecular oxohalides are . Some oxohalides of particular practical significance are phosgene (COCl2), thionyl chloride (SOCl2), and sulfuryl fluoride (SO2F2).
Oxohalides of elements in high oxidation states can be strong , with oxidizing power similar to the corresponding oxide or halide. Most oxohalides are easily hydrolysis. For example, chromyl chloride is hydrolyzed to chromate in the reverse of the synthetic reaction, above. The driving force for this reaction is the formation of A-O bonds which are stronger than A-Cl bonds. This gives a favourable enthalpy contribution to the Gibbs free energy change for the reactionGreenwood & Earnshaw, p. 1023
Many oxohalides can act as . This is particularly so with oxohalides of coordination number 3 or 4 which, in accepting one or more electron pairs from a Lewis base, become 5- or 6-coordinate. Oxohalide anions such as can be seen as acid-base complexes of the oxohalide () with more halide ions acting as Lewis bases. Another example is which forms the trigonal bipyramidal complex with the base trimethylamine.Greenwood & Earnshaw, p. 996.
The vibrational spectra of many oxohalides have been assigned in detail. They give useful information on relative bond strengths. For example, in , the Cr–O stretching vibrations are at 1006 cm−1 and 1016 cm−1 and the Cr–F stretching vibrations are at 727 cm−1 and 789 cm−1. The difference is much too large to be due to the different masses of O and F atoms. Rather, it shows that the Cr–O bond is much stronger than the Cr–F bond. M–O bonds are generally considered to be and this is backed up by measurements of M–O bond lengths. It implies that the elements A and O are chemical bond together by a σ bond and a π bond.K. Nakamoto Infrared and Raman spectra of inorganic and coordination compounds, 5th. edition, Part A, Wiley, 1997 , Tables II-4c, II-6g, II-6h, II-7b, II-8c
Oxohalides of elements in high oxidation states are intensely coloured owing to ligand to metal charge transfer (LMCT) transitions.Shriver & Atkins, Figure 13.8, p. 447
[[File:Boron-teflate-3D-balls.png|thumb|170px|Boron teflate.
]]
Silicon tetrafluoride reacts with water to yield poorly-characterized oxyfluoride polymers, but slow and careful reaction at liquid nitrogen yields the oxyfluoride hexafluorodisiloxane as well.
]]
A selection of known oxohalides of is shown below, and more detailed lists are available in the literature.Greenwood & Earnshaw, Chapters 22–25, section halides and oxohalides X indicates various halides, most often F and Cl.
VOCl, VOBr,Greenwood & Earnshaw p. 993. FeOCl |
, , , |
, , , , , , , , |
, , , , , , , , , , , , , , |
, , , , , |
, |
High oxidation states of the metal are dictated by the fact that oxygen is a strong oxidizing agent, as is fluorine. Bromine and iodine are relatively weak oxidizing agents, so fewer oxobromides and oxoiodides are known. Structures for compounds with d0 configuration are predicted by VSEPR theory. Thus, is tetrahedral, is trigonal bipyramidal, is and is octahedral.Housectroft & Sharpe, Chapters 21 and 22 illustrate many structures, including M-O and M-Cl bond lengths. The d1 complex is square pyramidal.
The compounds and (M = W, Ru, Os) have two groups joined by a bridging oxygen atom.. The structure is illustrated in Housectroft & Sharpe, Figure 22.5. Each metal has an octahedral environment. The unusual linear structure can be rationalized in terms of molecular orbital theory, indicating the presence of dπ — pπ bonding between the metal and oxygen atoms.Housectroft & Sharpe, Figure 22.15. Oxygen bridges are present in more complex configurations like (M = Ti, Zr, Hf, Mo or W; cp = cyclopentadienyl, ) or .
In the actinide series, uranyl compounds such as uranyl chloride () and are well known and contain the linear moiety. Similar species exist for neptunium and plutonium. The species uranyl fluoride is a complicating contaminant in samples uranium hexafluoride.
The elements iron, antimony, bismuth and lanthanum form oxochlorides of general formula MOCl. MOBr and MOI are also known for Sb and Bi. Many of their crystal structures have been determined.Wells, pp. 390–392
Minerals and ionic compounds
See also
Bibliography
|
|