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  2. Vanadium - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vanadium

    Similar in size and charge to phosphorus(V), vanadium(V) also parallels its chemistry and crystallography. Orthovanadate V O 3− 4 is used in protein crystallography [30] to study the biochemistry of phosphate. [31] Besides that, this anion also has been shown to interact with the activity of some specific enzymes.

  3. Vanadium compounds - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vanadium_compounds

    Vanadium compounds are compounds formed by the element vanadium (V). The chemistry of vanadium is noteworthy for the accessibility of the four adjacent oxidation states 2–5, whereas the chemistry of the other group 5 elements , niobium and tantalum , are somewhat more limited to the +5 oxidation state. [ 1 ]

  4. Vanadium redox battery - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vanadium_redox_battery

    The UNSW All-Vanadium Redox Flow Battery patents and technology were licensed to Mitsubishi Chemical Corporation and Kashima-Kita Electric Power Corporation in the mid-1990s and subsequently acquired by Sumitomo Electric Industries where extensive field testing was conducted in a wide range of applications in the late 1990s and early 2000s. [20]

  5. Vanadium(II) oxide - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vanadium(II)_oxide

    Vanadium(II) oxide is the inorganic compound with the idealized formula VO. It is one of the several binary vanadium oxides. It adopts a distorted NaCl structure and contains weak V−V metal to metal bonds. VO is a semiconductor owing to delocalisation of electrons in the t 2g orbitals.

  6. Vanadate - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vanadate

    In chemistry, a vanadate is an anionic coordination complex of vanadium. Often vanadate refers to oxoanions of vanadium, most of which exist in its highest oxidation state of +5. The complexes [V(CN) 6] 3− and [V 2 Cl 9] 3− are referred to as hexacyanovanadate(III) and nonachlorodivanadate(III), respectively.

  7. Vanadium(IV) oxide - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vanadium(IV)_oxide

    Vanadium(IV) oxide or vanadium dioxide is an inorganic compound with the formula VO 2. It is a dark blue solid. It is a dark blue solid. Vanadium (IV) dioxide is amphoteric , dissolving in non-oxidising acids to give the blue vanadyl ion , [VO] 2+ and in alkali to give the brown [V 4 O 9 ] 2− ion, or at high pH [VO 4 ] 4− . [ 4 ]

  8. Group 5 element - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Group_5_element

    Similar in size and charge to phosphorus(V), vanadium(V) also parallels its chemistry and crystallography. Orthovanadate V O 3− 4 is used in protein crystallography [35] to study the biochemistry of phosphate. [36] Beside that, this anion also has been shown to interact with activity of some specific enzymes.

  9. Vanadyl ion - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vanadyl_ion

    The vanadyl or oxovanadium(IV) cation, VO 2+, [1] is a functional group that is common in the coordination chemistry of vanadium. Complexes containing this functional group are characteristically blue and paramagnetic. A triple bond is proposed to exist between the V 4+ and O 2− centers. [2]