Potassium peroxochromate, potassium tetraperoxochromate(V), or simply potassium perchromate, is an inorganic compound having the chemical formulaK3[Cr(O2)4]. It is a red-brown paramagnetic solid. It is the potassium salt of tetraperoxochromate(V), one of the few examples of chromium in the +5 oxidation state and one of the rare examples of a complex stabilized only by peroxide ligands.[2] This compound is used as a source of singlet oxygen.[1]
The compound decomposes spontaneously at higher temperatures.
References
^ abcJohn W. Peters; Paul J. Bekowies; Arthur M. Winer; James N. Pitts Jr. (1975). "Potassium perchromate as a source of singlet oxygen". Journal of the American Chemical Society. 97 (12). ACS Publications: 3299–3306. doi:10.1021/ja00845a003.