User:Graeme Bartlett/volatilesubstances
Appearance
- Be(BH4)2 beryllium borohydride sublime 90
- Al(BH4)3 Aluminium borohydride bp 44.5
- N(SiH3)3 Astock 1919
- bis(pentafluorosulfur) oxide SF5OSF5 31.5 mp -118[1]
- SF5OSF4OSF5
- bis(pentafluorosulfur) peroxide SF5OOSF5 bp 49.4° mp -93.4°[2]
- bis(pentafluorosulfur) trioxide SF5OOOSF5
- Chromyl fluoride sub 30°
- permanganyl fluoride mp −38 bp ~60° but decompose >0 green gas[3]
- Pentacarbonylhydridomanganese
- Nickel tetracarbonyl bp 43°
- Cobalt tetracarbonyl hydride bp 47° or 20?
- Iron pentacarbonyl 103°
- dimethyl zinc
- Digallane
- Ga(CH3)3 trimethylgallane mp -15.8 boil 55.7
- Germane -88°
- bis(pentafluoroselenium) oxide SeF5OSeF5 51 mp -85
- Molybdenum hexafluoride 34°
- trimethylindium 180°
- Stannane -52°
- Tungsten hexafluoride 17°
- perrhenyl fluoride ReO3F mp 147 bp 164°[3]
- Uranium hexafluoride 56°
- Methyltrihydroboratotris(tetrahydroborato)uranium U(BH4)3(BH3CH3)
- ^ Oberhammer, Heinz; Seppelt, Konrad (June 1978). "Electron diffraction study of bis(pentafluorosulfur), bis(pentafluoroselenium), and bis(pentafluorotellurium) oxides". Inorganic Chemistry. 17 (6): 1435–1439. doi:10.1021/ic50184a008.
- ^ Merrill, Claude I.; Cady, George H. (January 1961). "Bis-(pentafluorosulfur) Peroxide". Journal of the American Chemical Society. 83 (2): 298–300. doi:10.1021/ja01463a011.
- ^ a b Engelbrecht, Alfred; Grosse, Aristid V. (April 1954). "The Fluorides of Permanganic and Perrhenic Acids, MnO3F and ReO3F". Journal of the American Chemical Society. 76 (8): 2042–2045. doi:10.1021/ja01637a004.