|
General |
|
|---|---|
| Name | Calcium fluoride |
| Chemical formula | CaF2 |
| Solid state structure (note that this is the same as uranium dioxide) | |
| SMILES | |
| CAS registry number | 7789-75-5 |
| Appearance | White (or colored by impurities) crystalline solid. |
|
Physical properties |
|
| Formula weight | 78.07 amu |
| Melting point | 1675 K (1402 °C) |
| Boiling point | 2770 K (2500 °C) |
| Density | 3.18 ×103 kg/m3 (solid) |
| Solubility | virtually none in water |
| SI units were used where possible. Unless otherwise stated, standard conditions were used. | |
Calcium fluoride (CaF2) is an insoluble ionic compound of calcium and fluorine. It occurs naturally as the mineral fluorite (also called fluorspar), and it is the source of most of the world's fluorine. It reacts with concentrated sulfuric acid to produce hydrogen fluoride:
CaF2(s) + H2SO4(l) → CaSO4(s) + 2 HF(g)
Uranium-doped calcium fluoride was the second type of solid state laser invented, in the 1960s. Peter Sorokin and Mirek Stevenson at IBM's laboratories in Yorktown Heights, New York, achieved lasing at 2.5 µm shortly after Maiman's ruby laser.
Fluorides | Calcium compounds | Metal halides | Optical materials
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"Calcium fluoride".
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