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Selenium nitride halide

A new selenium nitride halide (115) with a Se chemical shift of 3= 1294... [Pg.127]

In spite of the hazardous nature of Sc4N4, this binary selenium nitride has been used for the synthesis of other Se-N compounds, all of which have sulfur analogues (Scheme 5.2). " However, safer alternatives to the use of Sc4N4, e.g., selenium-nitrogen halides and silicon-nitrogen-selenium reagents, are available for the development of Se-N chemistry. ... [Pg.88]

Nitrogen and sodium do not react at any temperature under ordinary circumstances, but are reported to form the nitride or azide under the influence of an electric discharge (14,35). Sodium siHcide, NaSi, has been synthesized from the elements (36,37). When heated together, sodium and phosphoms form sodium phosphide, but in the presence of air with ignition sodium phosphate is formed. Sulfur, selenium, and tellurium form the sulfide, selenide, and teUuride, respectively. In vapor phase, sodium forms haHdes with all halogens (14). At room temperature, chlorine and bromine react rapidly with thin films of sodium (38), whereas fluorine and sodium ignite. Molten sodium ignites in chlorine and bums to sodium chloride (see Sodium COMPOUNDS, SODIUM HALIDES). [Pg.163]

See Trimethylsilyl azide Selenium halides See also Poly (sulfur nitride) See other nitrides See related N-S COMPOUNDS... [Pg.1785]

Hydrides of variable composition are not only formed with pure metals as solvents. A large number of the binary metal hydrides are non-stoichiometric compounds. Non-stoichiometric compounds are in general common for d,f and some p block metals in combination with soft anions such as sulfur, selenium and hydrogen, and also for somewhat harder anions like oxygen. Hard anions such as the halides, sulfates and nitrides form few non-stoichiometric compounds. Two factors are important the crystal structures must allow changes in composition, and the transition metal must have accessible oxidation states. These factors are partly related. FeO,... [Pg.221]

Aside from these three classes (species with unfilled inner subshells, with unpaired electrons, or with two different oxidation states of the same element), there are a number of colored inorganic substances about which generalizations may be set up only with difficulty. Among these are many of the elementary nonmetals, a large number of covalent salts (such as mercuric iodide, cadmium sulfide, silver phosphate and lithium nitride), a number of nonmetal halides (iodine monochloride, selenium tetrachloride, antimony tri-iodide, etc.), and the colored ions, chromate, permanganate, and Ce(H20) v, whose central atoms presumably have rare-gas structures. [Pg.122]


See other pages where Selenium nitride halide is mentioned: [Pg.336]    [Pg.316]    [Pg.1265]    [Pg.336]    [Pg.924]    [Pg.9]    [Pg.921]    [Pg.1118]    [Pg.153]    [Pg.153]    [Pg.268]    [Pg.871]    [Pg.940]    [Pg.1042]    [Pg.567]    [Pg.568]    [Pg.571]    [Pg.572]    [Pg.984]    [Pg.1051]    [Pg.1057]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.127 ]




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