Monofluoride

A monofluoride is a chemical compound with one fluoride per formula unit. For a binary compound, this is the formula XF.

Organofluorine compounds

Common monofluoride are organofluorine compounds such as methyl fluoride and fluorobenzene.

Inorganic compounds

All the alkali metals form monofluorides. All have the sodium chloride (rock salt) structure and are soluble in water and even some alcohols.[1] Because the fluoride anion is highly basic, many alkali metal fluorides form bifluorides with the formula MHF2. Sodium and potassium bifluorides are significant to the chemical industry.[2] Among other monofluorides, only silver(I)[3] and thallium(I)[4] fluorides are well-characterized. Both are very soluble, unlike the other halides of those metals.

Selected inorganic monofluorides

Examples of the monofluorides include:

Metal monofluorides

Nonmetal monofluorides

gollark: I *could* just write SVGs by hand.
gollark: The alternative would probably be working out how to use SDL or something and writing it utterly in Nim.
gollark: Meaning that I could do undo/redo quite nicely by representing images as a SVG DOM tree.
gollark: Browsers are quite big, but I have one open *anyway* and they include many useful rendering capabilities for this.
gollark: That's what I'm saying, yes.

References

  1. Aigueperse et al. 2005, "Fluorine Compounds, Inorganic," pp. 25–27.
  2. Aigueperse et al. 2005, "Fluorine Compounds, Inorganic," pp. 26–27.
  3. Milne, George W. A. (2005). Gardner's commercially important chemicals. John Wiley and Sons. p. 553. ISBN 978-0-471-73518-2.
  4. Arora, M. G. (2003). P-block Elements. Anmol Publications. p. 35. ISBN 81-7488-563-3.

Bibliography

  • Aigueperse, Jean; Mollard, Paul; Devilliers, Didier; Chemla, Marius; Faron, Robert; Romano, Renée; Cuer, Jean Pierre (2005). Ullmann (ed.). Encyclopedia of Industrial Chemistry. Wiley-VCH. p. 35. doi:10.1002/14356007. ISBN 978-3-527-30673-2.
  • Greenwood, N. N.; Earnshaw, A. (1998). Chemistry of the Elements (second edition). Butterworth Heinemann. ISBN 0-7506-3365-4.CS1 maint: ref=harv (link)
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.