Big Chemical Encyclopedia

Chemical substances, components, reactions, process design ...

Articles Figures Tables About

Phosphorus—arsenic bonds elemental halogens

The magnetic criterion is particularly valuable because it provides a basis for differentiating sharply between essentially ionic and essentially electron-pair bonds Experimental data have as yet been obtained for only a few of the interesting compounds, but these indicate that oxides and fluorides of most metals are ionic. Electron-pair bonds are formed by most of the transition elements with sulfur, selenium, tellurium, phosphorus, arsenic and antimony, as in the sulfide minerals (pyrite, molybdenite, skutterudite, etc.). The halogens other than fluorine form electron-pair bonds with metals of the palladium and platinum groups and sometimes, but not always, with iron-group metals. [Pg.313]


See other pages where Phosphorus—arsenic bonds elemental halogens is mentioned: [Pg.258]    [Pg.249]    [Pg.397]    [Pg.125]    [Pg.66]    [Pg.67]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.2 , Pg.3 , Pg.4 , Pg.10 ]




SEARCH



Arsenic element

Arsenic elemental halogens

Arsenic-phosphorus

Arsenic—phosphorus bonds

Bonded elements

Bonding elements

Bonds arsenic-halogen

Elemental Bonds

Elemental halogen

Elements bonds)

Halogen bonding

Halogen bonds/bonding

Phosphorus bonding

Phosphorus element

Phosphorus, elemental

Phosphorus-halogen bond

© 2024 chempedia.info