| Dinitrogen pentoxide | |
|---|---|
| General | |
| Systematic name | nitrogen(V) oxide |
| Other names | dinitrogen pentoxide, dnpo |
| Molecular formula | N2O5 |
| Molar mass | 108.01 g/mol |
| Appearance | white solid |
| CAS number | |
| Properties | |
| Density and phase | ??? g/cm3, solid |
| Solubility in water | decomp. to HNO3 |
| in chloroform | soluble |
| Melting point | 41 °C (under pressure to suppress sublimation) |
| Boiling point | decomposes |
| Structure | |
| Coordination geometry | linear at NO2 and planar at NO3 |
| Crystal structure | ?? |
| Dipole moment | ? D |
| Hazards | |
| MSDS | External MSDS |
| Main hazards | strong oxidizer, creates strong acid in contact with water |
| NFPA 704 | nfpa_f1.pngnfpa_r2.png|
| Flash point | n/a |
| R/S statement | ?? |
| RTECS number | ?? |
| Supplementary data page | |
| Structure & properties | n, εr, etc. |
| Thermodynamic data | Phase behaviour Solid |
| UV-vis data | UV, 204, 213, 258 nm (pi-->pi*) 378 and 384 nm |
| IR data | IR, 1428, 1266, 1249, 1206, 1044, 822, 750, 546, and 454 cm-1 |
| Except where noted otherwise, data are given for materials in their standard state (at 25°C, 100 kPa) Chemical infobox | |
Dinitrogen pentoxide is the binary nitrogen oxide N2O5, also known as nitrogen pentoxide. This unstable and potentially dangerous oxidizer was once of interest as a reagent for nitrations but it has largely been superseded by NO2BF4, which is more stable and effects the same reactions.
N2O5 exists as colorless crystals that sublime at 32.4 °C. The salt decomposes at room temperature into NO2 and O2.
The recommended laboratory synthesis entails the dehydration of nitric acid (HNO3) with phosphorus(V) oxide:
The intact molecule O2N-O-NO2 does exist in the gas phase (obtained by subliming N2O5) and when the solid is extracted into the nonpolar solvent CCl4. In the gas phase, the O-N-O and N-O-N angles are 133° and 114°, respectively. When gaseous N2O5 is cooled rapidly ("quenched"), one can obtain the metastable molecular form, which exothermically converts to the ionic form above -70 °C.
Dinitrogen pentoxide sometimes used as a source of the NO2 functionality, often using it as a solution in chloroform:
N2O5 is of interest for the preparation of explosives.
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"Dinitrogen pentoxide".
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