Inorganic nonaqueous solvent
An inorganic nonaqueous solvent is a solvent other than water, that is not an organic compound. These solvents are used in chemical research and industry for reactions that cannot occur in aqueous solutions or require a special environment. Inorganic nonaqueous solvents can be classified into two groups, protic solvents and aprotic solvents. Early studies on inorganic nonaqueous solvents evaluated ammonia, hydrogen fluoride, sulfuric acid, as well as more specialized solvents, hydrazine, and selenium oxychloride.[1]
Protic inorganic nonaqueous solvents
Prominent members include ammonia, hydrogen fluoride, sulfuric acid, hydrogen cyanide. Ammonia (and several amines as well) are useful for the generating solutions of highly reducing species because the N-H bond resists reduction. The chemistry of electrides and alkalides relies on amine solvents.
The combination of HF and SbF5 is the basis of a superacid solution. Using this mixture, the conjugate acid of hydrogen sulfide can be isolated:[2]
- H2S + HF + SbF5 → [H3S]SbF6
Autoionization
The limiting acid in a given solvent is the solvonium ion, such as H3O+ (hydronium) ion in water. An acid which has more of a tendency to donate a hydrogen ion than the limiting acid will be a strong acid in the solvent considered, and will exist mostly or entirely in its dissociated form. Likewise, the limiting base in a given solvent is the solvate ion, such as OH− (hydroxide) ion, in water. A base which has more affinity for protons than the limiting base cannot exist in solution, as it will react with the solvent.
For example, the limiting acid in liquid ammonia is the ammonium ion, which has a pKa value in water of 9.25. The limiting base is the amide ion, NH2−. NH2− is a stronger base than the hydroxide ion and so cannot exist in aqueous solution. The pKa value of ammonia is estimated to be approximately 34 (c.f. water, 14[3][4]).
Aprotic inorganic nonaqueous solvents
Prominent members include sulfur dioxide, sulfuryl chloride fluoride, dinitrogen tetroxide, antimony trichloride, and bromine trifluoride. These solvents have proven useful for study highly electrophilic or highly oxidizing compounds or ions. Several (SO2, SO2ClF, N2O4) are gases near room temperature, so they are handled using vacuum-line techniques.
The generation of [IS7]+ and [BrS7]+ are illustrative. These highly electrophilic salts are prepared in SO2 solution.[5] The preparation of [SBr3]+ salts also calls for a mixed solvent composed of SO2 and SO2FCl.[6] Sulfuryl chloride fluoride is often used for the synthesis of noble gas compounds.[7]
Autoionization
Many inorganic solvents participate in autoionization reactions. In the solvent system definition of acids and bases, autoionization of solvents affords the equivalent to acids and bases. Relevant autoionizations:
- 2BrF3 BrF2+ + BrF4−
- N2O4 ⇌ NO+ (nitrosonium) + NO3− (nitrate)
- 2SbCl3 ⇌ SbCl2+ + SbCl4−
- 2POCl3 ⇌ POCl2+ + POCl4−
According to the solvent-system definition, acids are the compounds that increase the concentration of the solvonium (positive) ions, and bases are the compounds that result in the increase of the solvate (negative) ions, where solvonium and solvate are the ions found in the pure solvent in equilibrium with its neutral molecules:
The solvent SO2 is relatively uncomplicated, it does not autoionize.
References
- ^ Audrieth, Ludwig Frederick (1953). Non-aqueous Solvents; Applications as Media for Chemical Reactions. Wiley.
- ^ Greenwood, Norman N.; Earnshaw, Alan (1997). Chemistry of the Elements (2nd ed.). Butterworth-Heinemann. p. 682. ISBN 978-0-08-037941-8.
- ^ Meister, Erich C.; Willeke, Martin; Angst, Werner; Togni, Antonio; Walde, Peter (2014). "Confusing Quantitative Descriptions of Brønsted-Lowry Acid-Base Equilibria in Chemistry Textbooks – A Critical Review and Clarifications for Chemical Educators". Helvetica Chimica Acta. 97 (1): 1–31. doi:10.1002/hlca.201300321. ISSN 1522-2675.
- ^ Silverstein, Todd P.; Heller, Stephen T. (2017-06-13). "pKa Values in the Undergraduate Curriculum: What Is the Real pKa of Water?". Journal of Chemical Education. 94 (6): 690–695. Bibcode:2017JChEd..94..690S. doi:10.1021/acs.jchemed.6b00623. ISSN 0021-9584.
- ^ Murchie, M. P.; Passmore, J.; Wong, C.-M. (1990). "Iodine and Bromine Polysulfur Hexafluoroarsenate(V) and Hexafluoroantimonate(V)". Inorganic Syntheses. Inorganic Syntheses. Vol. 27. pp. 332–339. doi:10.1002/9780470132586.ch67. ISBN 9780470132586.
- ^ Murchie, Mike; Passmore, Jack (1986). "Tribromosulfur(IV) Hexafluoroarsenate(V)". Inorganic Syntheses. Inorganic Syntheses. Vol. 24. pp. 76–79. doi:10.1002/9780470132555.ch23. ISBN 9780470132555.
- ^ Koppe, Karsten; Bilir, Vural; Frohn, Hermann-J.; Mercier, Hélène P. A.; Schrobilgen, Gary J. (2007). "Syntheses, Solution Multi-NMR Characterization, and Reactivities of [C6F5Xe]+Salts of Weakly Coordinating Borate Anions, [BY4]− (Y = CF3, C6F5, CN, or OTeF5)". Inorganic Chemistry. 46 (22): 9425–9437. doi:10.1021/ic7010138. PMID 17902647.
See also
External links
- Media related to Inorganic solvents at Wikimedia Commons