Tellurates

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Tellurates are the salts of telluric acid (orthotelluric acid H 6 TeO 6 and metatelluric acid H 2 TeO 4 ) and contain the orthotellurate (VI) anion TeO 6 6− or the metatellurate (VI) anion TeO 4 2− . The salts of telluric acid (H 2 TeO 3 ) called tellurites are now also called tellurates (IV) with the anion TeO 3 2− according to the IUPAC nomenclature rules .

Tellurates (VI) are good oxidizing agents because they can be easily reduced to tellurates (IV) .

Occurrence

With magnolite ( mercury tellurate Hg 2 ТеО 4 ), ferrotellurite ( iron tellurate , FeTeO 4 ) and montanite ((BiO) 2 (TeO 4 ) -2H 2 O.) some tellurates occur naturally as minerals.

presentation

In addition to precipitation from aqueous solution, tellurates can be obtained , for example, via:

can also be obtained by extraction from cooled alkali melts:

Tellurates can also be produced by reacting metal oxides with the anhydrides of orthotelluric acid ( tellurium trioxide TeO 3 ) and telluric acid ( tellurium dioxide TeO 2 ) in molten salts at temperatures above 700 ° C.

Individual evidence

  1. ^ AF Holleman , E. Wiberg , N. Wiberg : Textbook of Inorganic Chemistry . 101st edition. Walter de Gruyter, Berlin 1995, ISBN 3-11-012641-9 , p. 634.
  2. ^ Helmut Schrätze, Karl-Ludwig Weiner: Mineralogie A textbook on a systematic basis . Walter de Gruyter, 2011, ISBN 978-3-11-083686-8 , pp. 598 ( limited preview in Google Book search).
  3. Georg Brauer: Sodium tellurate and sodium orthotellurate . In: Handbook of Preparative Inorganic Chemistry . Ferdinand Enke Verlag Stuttgart, 1954, p. 350 .