Uranium hexoxide

Uranium hexoxide is an unusual, theoretically possible compound of uranium in which the uranium atom would be attached to six oxygen atoms.[1][2]

Uranium hexoxide
Identifiers
Properties
UO6
Molar mass 334.0288 g/mol
Except where otherwise noted, data are given for materials in their standard state (at 25 °C [77 °F], 100 kPa).
Infobox references

Structure

Uranium hexoxide is predicted to have octahedral symmetry; however, other forms have been studied. In the 1Oh the oxygen atoms are oxide ions (O2−). In the 1D3 form there are three peroxide ions (O2−
2
). The 3D2h form has two oxo oxygens and two pairs of superoxide (O
2
).[2]

gollark: It is a shame there's no systemd alternative which has the unit files and other nice stuff but no ridiculous amount of daemons and overintegration of everything.
gollark: IRC just doesn't have a mechanism for editing. Discord does and bots can edit their own messages.
gollark: Mostly just running the CPU in low-power mode instead of actually suspending?
gollark: How do existing devices do standby and stuff?
gollark: And a taser to deal with the TSA.

References

  1. Pyykkö, P.; Runeberg, N.; Straka, M.; Dyall, K. G. (2000). "Could uranium(XII)hexoxide, UO6 (Oh) exist?" (PDF). Chemical Physics Letters. 328 (4–6): 415–419. Bibcode:2000CPL...328..415P. doi:10.1016/S0009-2614(00)00958-1.
  2. Xiao, H.; Hu, H. S.; Schwarz, W. H. E.; Li, J. (2010). "Theoretical Investigations of Geometry, Electronic Structure and Stability of UO6: Octahedral Uranium Hexoxide and Its Isomers". The Journal of Physical Chemistry A. 114 (33): 8837–8844. doi:10.1021/jp102107n. PMID 20572656.


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.