Potassium oxide (PotassiumOxide) is an ionic compound of potassium and oxygen. It is a base. This pale yellow solid is the simplest oxide of potassium. It is a highly reactive compound that is rarely encountered. Some industrial materials, such as fertilizers and cements, are assayed assuming the percent composition that would be equivalent to K2O.
Alternatively and more conveniently, K2O is synthesized by heating potassium nitrate with metallic potassium:
Other possibility is to heat potassium peroxide at 500 °C which decomposes at that temperature giving pure potassium oxide and oxygen.
Potassium hydroxide cannot be further dehydrated to the oxide but it can react with molten potassium to produce it, releasing hydrogen as a byproduct.
antifluorite structure. In this motif the positions of the [[anion]]s and [[cation]]s are reversed relative to their positions in [[CaF2|calcium fluoride]], with potassium ions coordinated to 4 oxide ions and oxide ions coordinated to 8 potassium.Wells, A.F. (1984) Structural Inorganic Chemistry, Oxford: Clarendon Press. . K2O is a basic oxide and reacts with water violently to produce the caustic potassium hydroxide. It is [[deliquescent]] and will absorb water from the atmosphere, initiating this vigorous reaction.
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