Chemistry, asked by indusvalue8786, 11 months ago

Electro donation capacity of fluride and azide anion

Answers

Answered by smookyqueen
3

Answer:

Fluorine azide or triazadienyl fluoride (FN3) is a yellow green gas composed of nitrogen and fluorine with formula FN3.[1] It is counted as an interhalogen compound, as the azide functional group is termed a pseudohalogen. It resembles ClN3, BrN3, and IN3 in this respect.[2] The bond between the fluorine atom and the nitrogen is very weak, leading to this substance being very unstable and prone to explosion.[3] Calculations show the F–N–N angle to be around 102° with a straight line of 3 nitrogen atoms.

Answered by ams68
2

Answer:

Electro donation capacity of fluride and azide anion

Azide is the anion with the formula N−

3. It is the conjugate base of hydrazoic acid (HN3). N−

3 is a linear anion that is isoelectronic with CO2, NCO−, N2O, NO+

2 and NCF. Per valence bond theory, azide can be described by several resonance structures; an important one being {\displaystyle {\ce {^{-}N={\overset {+}{N}}=N^{-}}}} {\displaystyle {\ce {^{-}N={\overset {+}{N}}=N^{-}}}}. Azide is also a functional group in organic chemistry, RN3.[1]

Similar questions