Argon fluorohydride
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| General | |||||||
| Surname | Argon fluorohydride | ||||||
| other names |
Argon hydrogen fluoride |
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| Molecular formula | HArF | ||||||
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| properties | |||||||
| Molar mass | 59.954 g mol −1 | ||||||
| Melting point |
−246 ° C (decomposition) |
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| As far as possible and customary, SI units are used. Unless otherwise noted, the data given apply to standard conditions . | |||||||
Argon fluorohydride is the only known and experimentally proven chemical compound of the noble gas argon . It is very unstable and decomposes at temperatures above 27 K (−246.15 ° C) to form hydrogen fluoride and elemental argon.
history
Argon fluorohydride was first discovered in 2000 by a group led by the Finnish chemist Markku Räsänen at the University of Helsinki .
Extraction and presentation
In order to synthesize argon fluorohydride, hydrogen fluoride was first frozen in an argon matrix on a cesium iodide surface at 7.5 K. This was treated with a Krypton - gas discharge lamp at wavelengths irradiated nm 127-160. Some of the hydrogen fluoride dissociated and formed argon fluorohydride.
properties
Argon fluorohydride is very unstable. When heated, it decomposes at temperatures from 27 K and under UV radiation at wavelengths of 350 to 400 nm.
According to theoretical calculations, the argon fluorohydride molecule has bond lengths of 133 pm for the H-Ar and 197 pm for the Ar-F bond and a dipole moment of 6.51 D .
proof
The compound could be detected via characteristic bands in the IR spectrum at 435.7, 687 and 1969.5 cm −1 , which did not exist before the reaction .
Individual evidence
- ↑ a b c d e f Leonid Khriachtchev, Mika Pettersson, Nino Runeberg, Jan Lundell, Markku Räsänen: A stable argon compound. In: Nature. 2000, 406, pp. 874-876, doi : 10.1038 / 35022551 .
- ↑ This substance has either not yet been classified with regard to its hazardousness or a reliable and citable source has not yet been found.