Thionyl fluoride

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Thionyl fluoride is the inorganic compound with the formula Template:Chem2. This colourless gas is mainly of theoretical interest, but it is a product of the degradation of sulfur hexafluoride, an insulator in electrical equipment. The molecule adopts a distorted pyramidal structure, with Cs symmetry. The S-O and S-F distances are 1.42 and 1.58 Å, respectively. The O-S-F and F-S-F angles are 106.2 and 92.2°, respectively.[1]Script error: No such module "Unsubst".

Synthesis and reactions

Thionyl fluoride can be produced by the reaction of thionyl chloride with fluoride sources such as antimony trifluoride.[2][1]Template:Rp

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Alternatively, it arises via the fluorination of sulfur dioxide:[1]Template:Rp

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Thionyl fluoride arises as a fleeting intermediate from the decomposition of sulfur hexafluoride as the result of electrical discharges which generate sulfur tetrafluoride. SF4 hydrolyzes to give thionyl fluoride, which in turn hydrolyzes further as described below.[3]

As expected from the behavior of the other thionyl halides, this compound hydrolyzes readily, giving hydrogen fluoride and sulfur dioxide:[1]Template:Rp

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In contrast to thionyl chloride and bromide, thionyl fluoride is not useful for halogenation. The related derivative, sulfur tetrafluoride is however useful for that purpose.Script error: No such module "Unsubst".

References

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External links

Template:Sister project Template:Sulfur compounds Template:Fluorine compounds