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  2. Selenium fluoride - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Selenium_fluoride

    Selenium fluoride may refer to: Selenium tetrafluoride (selenium(IV) fluoride), SeF 4; Selenium hexafluoride (selenium(VI) fluoride), SeF 6 This page was last edited ...

  3. Selenium tetrafluoride - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Selenium_tetrafluoride

    Selenium tetrafluoride (Se F 4) is an inorganic compound.It is a colourless liquid that reacts readily with water. It can be used as a fluorinating reagent in organic syntheses (fluorination of alcohols, carboxylic acids or carbonyl compounds) and has advantages over sulfur tetrafluoride in that milder conditions can be employed and it is a liquid rather than a gas.

  4. Selenoyl fluoride - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Selenoyl_fluoride

    Selenoyl fluoride, selenoyl difluoride, selenium oxyfluoride, or selenium dioxydifluoride is a chemical compound with the formula SeO 2 F 2. Structure

  5. Selenium hexafluoride - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Selenium_hexafluoride

    Although selenium hexafluoride is quite inert and slow to hydrolyze, it is toxic even at low concentrations, [9] especially by longer exposure. In the U.S., OSHA and ACGIH standards for selenium hexafluoride exposure is an upper limit of 0.05 ppm in air averaged over an eight-hour work shift.

  6. Selenite fluoride - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Selenite_fluoride

    A selenite fluoride is a chemical compound or salt that contains fluoride and selenite ... with a rare earth fluoride and selenium dioxide with a caesium bromide flux ...

  7. Selenium - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Selenium

    Selenium is found in metal sulfide ores, where it substitutes for sulfur. Commercially, selenium is produced as a byproduct in the refining of these ores. Minerals that are pure selenide or selenate compounds are rare. The chief commercial uses for selenium today are glassmaking and pigments. Selenium is a semiconductor and is used in photocells.

  8. Seleninyl fluoride - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Seleninyl_fluoride

    Seleninyl fluoride can be produced by the reaction of selenium oxychloride and potassium fluoride. [3]2 KF + SeOCl 2 → 2 KCl + SeOF 2. It can also be produced by the reaction of selenium tetrafluoride with water or selenium dioxide.

  9. Fluorine compounds - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fluorine_compounds

    Sodium fluoride: yellow is fluorine, purple is sodium. They are isoelectronic, but fluorine is bigger because its nuclear charge is lower. The alkali metals form monofluorides. All are soluble and have the sodium chloride (rock salt) structure, [47] Because the fluoride anion is basic, many alkali metal fluorides form bifluorides with the ...