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Chromium(II) fluoride

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Density
  
3.79 g/cm³

Chromium(II) fluoride

Appearance
  
blue-green iridescent crystals; hygroscopic, turns to Cr2O3 when heated in air

Chromium(II) fluoride is an inorganic compound with the formula CrF2. It exists as a blue-green iridescent solid. Chromium(II) fluoride is sparingly soluble in water, almost insoluble in alcohol, and is soluble in boiling hydrochloric acid, but is not attacked by hot distilled sulfuric acid or nitric acid. Like other chromous compounds, chromium(II) fluoride is oxidized to chromium(III) oxide in air.

Preparation and structure

The compound is prepared by passing anhydrous hydrogen fluoride over anhydrous chromium(II) chloride. The reaction will proceed at room temperature but is typically heated to 100-200 °C to ensure completion:

CrCl2 + 2 HF → CrF2 + 2 HCl

Like many difluorides, CrF2 adopts a structure like rutile with octahedral molecular geometry about Cr(II) and trigonal geometry at F. Two of the six Cr-F bonds are long at 2.43 Å, and four are short near 2.00 Å.

References

Chromium(II) fluoride Wikipedia


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