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  2. Curium(III) oxide - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Curium(III)_oxide

    Curium(III) oxide is a compound composed of curium and oxygen with the chemical formula Cm 2 O 3. It is a crystalline solid with a unit cell that contains two curium atoms and three oxygen atoms. The simplest synthesis equation involves the reaction of curium(III) metal with O 2−: 2 Cm 3+ + 3 O 2−---> Cm 2 O 3. [1]

  3. Curium(IV) oxide - Wikipedia

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

    Metallic curium is annealed in air or in an oxygen atmosphere: [1] Cm + O 2 → CmO 2. Curium(III) hydroxide and curium(III) oxalate are also usually used for this purpose: Cm(OH) 4 → CmO 2 + 2H 2 O Cm(C 2 O 4) 2 → CmO 2 + 2CO 2 + 2CO. Another way is the reaction of curium(III) oxide in an oxygen atmosphere at 650 °C: [2] 2Cm 2 O 3 + O 2 ...

  4. Curium compounds - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Curium_compounds

    Curium readily reacts with oxygen forming mostly Cm 2 O 3 and CmO 2 oxides, [1] but the divalent oxide CmO is also known. [2] Black CmO 2 can be obtained by burning curium oxalate (Cm 2 (C 2 O 4) 3), nitrate (Cm(NO 3) 3), or hydroxide in pure oxygen. [3] [4] Upon heating to 600–650 °C in vacuum (about 0.01 Pa), it transforms into the whitish ...

  5. Curium - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Curium

    Curium is not currently used as nuclear fuel due to its low availability and high price. [43] 245 Cm and 247 Cm have very small critical mass and so could be used in tactical nuclear weapons, but none are known to have been made. Curium-243 is not suitable for such, due to its short half-life and strong α emission, which would cause excessive ...

  6. Ellingham diagram - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ellingham_diagram

    The Ellingham diagram plots the Gibbs free energy change (ΔG) for each oxidation reaction as a function of temperature. For comparison of different reactions, all values of ΔG refer to the reaction of the same quantity of oxygen, chosen as one mole O (1 ⁄ 2 mol O 2) by some authors [2] and one mole O 2 by others. [3] The diagram shown ...

  7. Ceria based thermochemical cycles - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cerium(IV)_oxide–cerium...

    The main disadvantage of the stoichiometric ceria cycle lies in the fact that the reduction reaction temperature of cerium(IV) oxide is at the same range of the melting temperature (1,687–2,230 °C) of cerium(IV) oxide (), [5] which in the end results in some melting and sublimation of the material, which can produce reactor failures such as ...

  8. Cerium(IV) oxide - Wikipedia

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

    Cerium(IV) oxide, also known as ceric oxide, ceric dioxide, ceria, cerium oxide or cerium dioxide, is an oxide of the rare-earth metal cerium. It is a pale yellow-white powder with the chemical formula CeO 2. It is an important commercial product and an intermediate in the purification of the element from the ores.

  9. Chlorine oxide - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chlorine_oxide

    Chlorine and oxygen can bond in a number of ways: chlorine monoxide radical, ClO•, chlorine (II) oxide radical; chloroperoxyl radical, ClOO•, chlorine (II) peroxide radical; chlorine dioxide, ClO 2, chlorine (IV) oxide; chlorine trioxide radical, ClO 3 •, chlorine (VI) oxide radical; chlorine tetroxide radical, ClO 4 •, chlorine (VII ...