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  2. Phosphorus tribromide - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Phosphorus_tribromide

    Phosphorus tribromide, like PCl 3 and PF 3, has both properties of a Lewis base and a Lewis acid. For example, with a Lewis acid such as boron tribromide it forms stable 1 :1 adducts such as Br 3 B · PBr 3. At the same time PBr 3 can react as an electrophile or Lewis acid in many of its reactions, for example with amines.

  3. Phosphorus tribromide (data page) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Phosphorus_tribromide...

    2 Structure and properties. 3 Thermodynamic properties. 4 Spectral ... This page provides supplementary chemical data on phosphorus tribromide. Material Safety Data Sheet

  4. Phosphoryl bromide - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Phosphoryl_bromide

    Phosphoryl bromide is prepared by the reaction between phosphorus pentabromide and phosphorus pentoxide: [4] [5]. 3 PBr 5 + P 2 O 5 → 5 POBr 3. It can also be prepared via the slow addition of liquid bromine to phosphorus tribromide at 0 °C, followed by the slow addition of water and vacuum distillation of the resulting slurry.

  5. Tribromide - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tribromide

    Tribromide is the anion with the chemical formula Br 3 −, or salts containing it: . Tetrabutylammonium tribromide; Tetrabromophosphonium tribromide; Pyridinium perbromide; Sodium and potassium tribromides can be prepared by reacting NaBr or KBr with aqueous bromine.

  6. Phosphorus halide - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Phosphorus_halide

    Phosphorus trichloride is a major industrial chemical and widely used starting material for phosphorus chemistry. Phosphorus tribromide is used in organic chemistry to convert alcohols to alkyl bromides and carboxylic acids to acyl bromides ( e.g. in the Hell-Volhard-Zelinsky reaction ).

  7. Chemical polarity - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chemical_polarity

    The hydrogen fluoride, HF, molecule is polar by virtue of polar covalent bonds – in the covalent bond electrons are displaced toward the more electronegative fluorine atom. The ammonia molecule, NH 3, is polar as a result of its molecular geometry. The red represents partially negatively charged regions.

  8. Thiophosphoryl bromide - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thiophosphoryl_bromide

    Thiophosphoryl bromide can be prepared by heating phosphorus tribromide with phosphorus pentasulfide, or with elemental sulfur in an inert atmosphere at 130 °C. [4] Thiophosphoryl bromide is one product of the bromination of P 4 S 7 in cold carbon disulfide: [1] 3 P 4 S 7 + 12 Br 2 → 2 PBr 3 + 2 PSBr 3 + 2 P 2 S 6 Br 2 + 2 P 2 S 5 Br 4

  9. Phosphorus triiodide - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Phosphorus_triiodide

    Phosphorus triiodide (PI 3) is an inorganic compound with the formula PI 3. A red solid, it is too unstable to be stored for long periods of time; it is, nevertheless, commercially available. [ 2 ] It is widely used in organic chemistry for converting alcohols to alkyl iodides and also serves as a powerful reducing agent.