Solutions in difluorophosphoric acid

The physical and inorganic chemistry of solutions in difluorophosphoric acid, HPO₂F₂, has been studied, as part of a general study of solutions in non-aqueous protonic solvents. Difluorophosphoric acid is a colourless, associated liquid which might be expected to have solvent properties similar to...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Reed, William
Language:English
Published: University of British Columbia 2011
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2429/37404
id ndltd-UBC-oai-circle.library.ubc.ca-2429-37404
record_format oai_dc
spelling ndltd-UBC-oai-circle.library.ubc.ca-2429-374042018-01-05T17:48:49Z Solutions in difluorophosphoric acid Reed, William Difluorophosphoric acid Solution (Chemistry) Solvents The physical and inorganic chemistry of solutions in difluorophosphoric acid, HPO₂F₂, has been studied, as part of a general study of solutions in non-aqueous protonic solvents. Difluorophosphoric acid is a colourless, associated liquid which might be expected to have solvent properties similar to those of other protonic systems such as H₂O, H₂SO₄ and HSO₃F. However, electrical conductivity studies of solutions of various electrolytes and nuclear magnetic resonance studies of solutions of alkali metal difluorophosphates indicate that the acid is a poor solvent for electrolytes and that ion-pairing is probably extensive. Acid-base behaviour in HPO₂F₂ has been extensively investigated. Compounds which behave as bases in this system include metal difluorophosphates, chlorides, nitrates and carbonates, organic amines, and some organic nitro-compounds and carboxylic acids. Inorganic molecules such as H₂SO₄, HSO₃F and SbF₅ behave as acids. Reaction between an acid and a base in HPO₂F₂ commonly result in the formation of an insoluble salt. The reaction between KPO₂F₂ and SbF₅, for example, has been used to prepare the new compound KSbF₅PO₂F₂. To further investigate the factors affecting acid strengths, cryoscopic and electrical conductivity studies of various inorganic oxy-acids were carried out in nitrobenzene, as solvent. The acids H₂SO₄, HSO₃F and HPO₂F₂ appeared to be virtual non-electrolytes in nitrobenzene, with H₂SO₄ apparently exhibiting some polymerization. Science, Faculty of Chemistry, Department of Graduate 2011-09-15T22:38:27Z 2011-09-15T22:38:27Z 1968 Text Thesis/Dissertation http://hdl.handle.net/2429/37404 eng For non-commercial purposes only, such as research, private study and education. Additional conditions apply, see Terms of Use https://open.library.ubc.ca/terms_of_use. University of British Columbia
collection NDLTD
language English
sources NDLTD
topic Difluorophosphoric acid
Solution (Chemistry)
Solvents
spellingShingle Difluorophosphoric acid
Solution (Chemistry)
Solvents
Reed, William
Solutions in difluorophosphoric acid
description The physical and inorganic chemistry of solutions in difluorophosphoric acid, HPO₂F₂, has been studied, as part of a general study of solutions in non-aqueous protonic solvents. Difluorophosphoric acid is a colourless, associated liquid which might be expected to have solvent properties similar to those of other protonic systems such as H₂O, H₂SO₄ and HSO₃F. However, electrical conductivity studies of solutions of various electrolytes and nuclear magnetic resonance studies of solutions of alkali metal difluorophosphates indicate that the acid is a poor solvent for electrolytes and that ion-pairing is probably extensive. Acid-base behaviour in HPO₂F₂ has been extensively investigated. Compounds which behave as bases in this system include metal difluorophosphates, chlorides, nitrates and carbonates, organic amines, and some organic nitro-compounds and carboxylic acids. Inorganic molecules such as H₂SO₄, HSO₃F and SbF₅ behave as acids. Reaction between an acid and a base in HPO₂F₂ commonly result in the formation of an insoluble salt. The reaction between KPO₂F₂ and SbF₅, for example, has been used to prepare the new compound KSbF₅PO₂F₂. To further investigate the factors affecting acid strengths, cryoscopic and electrical conductivity studies of various inorganic oxy-acids were carried out in nitrobenzene, as solvent. The acids H₂SO₄, HSO₃F and HPO₂F₂ appeared to be virtual non-electrolytes in nitrobenzene, with H₂SO₄ apparently exhibiting some polymerization. === Science, Faculty of === Chemistry, Department of === Graduate
author Reed, William
author_facet Reed, William
author_sort Reed, William
title Solutions in difluorophosphoric acid
title_short Solutions in difluorophosphoric acid
title_full Solutions in difluorophosphoric acid
title_fullStr Solutions in difluorophosphoric acid
title_full_unstemmed Solutions in difluorophosphoric acid
title_sort solutions in difluorophosphoric acid
publisher University of British Columbia
publishDate 2011
url http://hdl.handle.net/2429/37404
work_keys_str_mv AT reedwilliam solutionsindifluorophosphoricacid
_version_ 1718595897580847104