Chromium pentafluoride is the inorganic compound with the chemical formula CrF5.[3] It is a red volatile solid that melts at 34 °C.[1] It is the highest known chromium fluoride, since the hypothetical chromium hexafluoride has not yet been synthesized.[4]
Chromium pentafluoride is one of the products of the action of fluorine on a mixture of potassium and chromic chlorides.[5]
Chromium pentafluoride is strongly oxidizing, able to fluorinate the noble gas xenon and oxidize dioxygen to dioxygenyl.[2] Due to this property, it decomposes readily in the presence of reducing agents, and easily hydrolyses to chromium(III) and chromium(VI).[7]
Chromium pentafluoride can also react with the Lewis acid antimony pentafluoride to give the CrF5·2SbF5adduct. The adduct was found to be a strong oxidizing agent, liquid at room temperature with a melting point of −23 °C.[8]
^Jacques Guertin; James A. Jacobs; Cynthia P. Avakian, eds. (2004). Chromium(VI) Handbook. CRC Press. p. 30. ISBN9780203487969.
^Riedel, Sebastian; Kaupp, Martin (2009). "The highest oxidation states of the transition metal elements". Coordination Chemistry Reviews. 253 (5–6): 606–624. doi:10.1016/j.ccr.2008.07.014.
^A. G. Sharpe (2012). J.H. Simons (ed.). Fluorine Chemistry. Vol. 2. Elsevier. p. 24. ISBN9780323145435.
^A. G. Sharpe (1983). Advances in Inorganic Chemistry. Vol. 27. Academic Press. p. 103. ISBN9780080578767.
^Amit Aora (2005). Text Book Of Inorganic Chemistry. Discovery Publishing House. p. 649.