Tetraperchloratoaluminates are salts of the tetraperchloratoaluminate anion, [Al(ClO4)4]−. The anion contains aluminium tetrahedrally surrounded by four perchlorate groups. The perchlorate is covalently bonded to the aluminium, but perchlorate is much more well known as an ion. The covalent bond to aluminium distorts the perchlorate and renders it unstable.[1]
Related chemicals are the haloperchloroatoaluminates, where there is one perchloro group attached to aluminium, and three halogens such as chlorine (chloroperchloroatoaluminates) or bromine (bromoperchloroatoaluminates).[2]
Formation
editNitronium tetraperchloratoaluminate is made from exact amounts of nitronium perchlorate and anhydrous aluminium chloride combined in liquid sulfur dioxide.[1]
Ammonium tetraperchloratoaluminate can be formed by three moles of nitronium perchlorate, one mole of anhydrous aluminium chloride, and one mole of ammonium perchlorate combined in liquid sulfur dioxide.[1]
Properties
editThe tetraperchloratoaluminates are yellowish crystalline solids. They are stable up to 50 °C.[1]
Above this temperature they decompose to hexaperchloratoaluminates which are more temperature stable.[3]
References
edit- ^ a b c d Guibert, C. R.; H. F. Klodowski; M. D. Marshall; A. D. McElroy (1 June 1966). "Complex Light Metal Perchlorates - Tetraperchloratoaluminates". Studies of Complex Perchlorates. Callery Chemical Company. pp. 14–27. Archived from the original on April 28, 2014. Retrieved 1 February 2014.
- ^ Titova, K. V.; E. I. Kolmakova (1977). "Tetraalkylammonium haloperchloratoaluminates". Bulletin of the Academy of Sciences of the USSR Division of Chemical Science. 26 (2): 229–231. doi:10.1007/BF00921820. ISSN 0568-5230.
- ^ Guibert, C. R.; H. F. Klodowski; M. D. Marshall; A. D. McElroy (1 June 1966). "Complex Perchlorates - Hexaperchloratoaluminates". Studies of Complex Perchlorates. Callery Chemical Company. pp. 28–44. Archived from the original on April 28, 2014. Retrieved 1 February 2014.