Rahul Sharma (Editor)

Xenon dioxide

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Molar mass
  
163.29 g/mol

Appearance
  
yellow solid

Chemical formula
  
XeO2

Molecular shape
  
Square planar

Xenon dioxide httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Related compounds
  
Xenon trioxide Xenon tetroxide

Xenon dioxide, or xenon(IV) oxide, is a compound of xenon and oxygen with formula XeO2, which was synthesized in 2011. It is synthesized at 0 °C by hydrolysis of xenon tetrafluoride (with 2.00 mol/L H2SO4).

Contents

Structure

XeO
2
has an extended (chain or network) structure in which xenon and oxygen have coordination numbers of four and two respectively. The geometry at xenon is square planar, consistent with VSEPR theory for four ligands and two lone pairs (or AX4E2 in the notation of VSEPR theory).

In addition, the existence of an XeO2 molecule was predicted by an ab initio quantum chemistry method several years earlier by Pyykkö and Tamm, but these authors did not consider an extended structure.

Properties

XeO
2
is a yellow-orange solid. It is an unstable compound, with a half-life of about two minutes, disproportionating into XeO
3
and xenon gas. Its structure and identity was confirmed by cooling it to −78 °C so that Raman spectroscopy could be performed before it decomposed.

References

Xenon dioxide Wikipedia