Jump to content

Talk:Nitrogen monofluoride

Page contents not supported in other languages.
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The sentence "Like boron monofluoride, it has unusual higher than single-bonded fluorine." is missing a word. Joeylawn (talk) 03:33, 16 June 2019 (UTC)[reply]

KemicalInfo

[edit]

I just added a lot of information to the infobox based on https://kemicalinfo.com/chemicals/nitrogen-fluoride/. I don't know how trustworthy this site is; they cite no sources and are a little squirrelly about who's publishing the site (although you can deduce it from the "Contact Us" page).

On the one hand, KemicalInfo are, AFAICT, the only site on the internet to list melting and boiling points for this compound (my raison d'attention). Worse, they quote values less than 5 K different from nitrogen trifluoride's. Maybe there was a translation error in their sources?

On the other hand, the vapor pressure, odor (!), and density are quite different from the trifluoride. Either they're integrating multiple sources, of which only one is afflicted with a translation error, or the similar values are just a cosmic coincidence. Hoping it's the latter, Bernanke's Crossbow (talk) 20:00, 5 April 2024 (UTC)[reply]

Certainly this information is false, and the site is unreliable. The vapour pressure and density are incompatible with the boiling point. The description of the molecule shape also shows it is wrong. Perhaps that page was generated by AI text generator. Graeme Bartlett (talk) 02:59, 9 April 2024 (UTC)[reply]