Nitroxylic acid or hydronitrous acid is an unstable reduced oxonitrogen acid. It has formula H4N2O4 containing nitrogen in the +2 oxidation state.[1] The corresponding anion called nitroxylate is N
2
O4−
4
or NO2−
2
.

The first clue that nitroxylic acid exists was when Edward Bedford Maxted electrolysed sodium nitrite dissolved in liquid ammonia. A bright yellow substance deposited on the cathode. He called this disodium nitrite. The disodium nitrite could also be made by mixing ammonia solutions of sodium and sodium nitrite in the complete absence of water. Disodium nitrite reacts with water to form sodium nitrite, sodium hydroxide and hydrogen.[2] Other ways to make the disodium nitrite include reacting sodium with ammonium nitrate or electrolysing sodium nitrate solution. Note that the disodium nitrite is very explosive, and experimenters often had their apparatus destroyed when making it. Disodium nitrite reacts with oxygen and carbon dioxide explosively.[3] The substance is nowadays called sodium nitroxylate and has CAS number 13968-14-4.

Lithium sodium nitroxylate LiNaNO2 also exists and explodes at 130 °C.[4]

Nitroxylic acid might be produced when nitrous acid is reduced by the Eu2+ ion.[5]

References

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  1. ^ Sahoo, Balaram; Nayak, Nimai Charan; Samantaray, Asutosh; Pujapanda, Prafulla Kumar (2012). Inorganic Chemistry. PHI Learning Pvt. Ltd. p. 353. ISBN 9788120343085.
  2. ^ Maxted, Edward Bradford (1917). "LXXXVII.—Disodium nitrite, an additive compound of sodium nitrite and sodium". J. Chem. Soc., Trans. 111: 1016–1019. doi:10.1039/CT9171101016.
  3. ^ Suekichi, ABE; Taijiro, OKABE (10 February 1953). "On the Electrolysis of Liquid Ammonia Solution of Alkali Nitrates". The Chemical Research Institute of Non-Aqueous Solutions: 189–201. hdl:10097/26573.
  4. ^ Bretherick, L. (27 October 2016). Bretherick's Handbook of Reactive Chemical Hazards. Elsevier. p. 1318. ISBN 9781483162508.
  5. ^ Fraser, R. T. M.; Lee, R. N.; Hayden, K. (1967). "The europium(II) ion reduction of nitrite and nitropenta-amminecobalt(III) ions". Journal of the Chemical Society A: Inorganic, Physical, Theoretical: 741. doi:10.1039/J19670000741.