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  2. Oxygen difluoride - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oxygen_difluoride

    Oxygen difluoride is a chemical compound with the formula OF 2. As predicted by VSEPR theory, the molecule adopts a bent molecular geometry. [citation needed] It is a strong oxidizer and has attracted attention in rocketry for this reason. [5] With a boiling point of −144.75 °C, OF 2 is the most volatile (isolable) triatomic compound. [6]

  3. Oxygen fluoride - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oxygen_fluoride

    Oxygen difluoride. A common preparative method involves fluorination of sodium hydroxide: 2 F 2 + 2 NaOH → OF 2 + 2 NaF + H 2 O. OF 2 is a colorless gas at room temperature and a yellow liquid below 128 K. Oxygen difluoride has an irritating odor and is poisonous. [3] It reacts quantitatively with aqueous haloacids to give free halogens:

  4. Bent molecular geometry - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bent_molecular_geometry

    Certain atoms, such as oxygen, will almost always set their two (or more) covalent bonds in non-collinear directions due to their electron configuration. Water (H 2 O) is an example of a bent molecule, as well as its analogues. The bond angle between the two hydrogen atoms is approximately 104.45°. [1]

  5. Bent's rule - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bent's_rule

    Bent's rule can be extended to rationalize the hybridization of nonbonding orbitals as well. On the one hand, a lone pair (an occupied nonbonding orbital) can be thought of as the limiting case of an electropositive substituent, with electron density completely polarized towards the central atom.

  6. Fluorine compounds - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fluorine_compounds

    Oxygen's highest fluoride is oxygen difluoride, [89] but fluorine can theoretically (as of 2012) oxidize it to a uniquely high oxidation state of +4 in the fluorocation: OF + 3. [90] In addition, several chalcogen fluorides occur which have more than one chalcogen (O 2 F 2, [91] S 2 F 10, [92] etc.).

  7. Dioxygen difluoride - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dioxygen_difluoride

    Dioxygen difluoride is a compound of fluorine and oxygen with the molecular formula O 2 F 2. It can exist as an orange-red colored solid which melts into a red liquid at −163 °C (110 K). It can exist as an orange-red colored solid which melts into a red liquid at −163 °C (110 K).

  8. Oxygen compounds - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oxygen_compounds

    Each oxygen atom in its peroxide ion may have a full octet of 4 pairs of electrons. [6] Superoxides are a class of compounds that are very similar to peroxides, but with just one unpaired electron for each pair of oxygen atoms (O − 2). [6] These compounds form by oxidation of alkali metals with larger ionic radii (K, Rb, Cs).

  9. Hypervalent molecule - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hypervalent_molecule

    In the 1940s and 1950s, Rundle and Pimentel popularized the idea of the three-center four-electron bond, which is essentially the same concept which Sugden attempted to advance decades earlier; the three-center four-electron bond can be alternatively viewed as consisting of two collinear two-center one-electron bonds, with the remaining two ...