Tantalum(V) bromide
Tantalum(V) bromide
Names
Other names
tantalum pentabromide
Identifiers
ChemSpider
ECHA InfoCard
100.033.276
EC Number
Key: GCPVYIPZZUPXPB-UHFFFAOYSA-I
InChI=1S/5BrH.Ta/h5*1H;/q;;;;;+5/p-5
Properties
Ta2 Br10
Molar mass
580.468 g/mol
Appearance
yellow solid
Density
4.99 g/cm3 , solid
Melting point
265 °C (509 °F; 538 K)
Boiling point
349 °C (660 °F; 622 K)
hydrolysis
Hazards
GHS labelling :[ 1]
Danger
H302 , H312 , H314 , H332
P260 , P261 , P264 , P270 , P271 , P280 , P301+P312 , P301+P330+P331 , P302+P352 , P303+P361+P353 , P304+P312 , P304+P340 , P305+P351+P338 , P310 , P311 , P312 , P321 , P322 , P330 , P361 , P363 , P403+P233 , P405 , P501
Except where otherwise noted, data are given for materials in their
standard state (at 25 °C [77 °F], 100 kPa).
Chemical compound
Tantalum(V) bromide is the inorganic compound with the formula Ta2 Br10 . Its name comes from the compound's empirical formula , TaBr5 .[ 2] It is a diamagnetic, orange solid that hydrolyses readily. The compound adopts an edge-shared bioctahedral structure, which means that two TaBr5 units are joined by a pair of bromide bridges . There is no bond between the Ta centres.[ 3] Niobium(V) chloride , niobium(V) bromide , niobium(V) iodide , tantalum(V) chloride , and tantalum(V) iodide all share this structural motif.
Preparation and handling
The material is usually prepared by the reaction of bromine with tantalum metal (or tantalum carbide ) at elevated temperatures in a tube furnace . The bromides of the early metals are sometimes preferred to the chlorides because of the relative ease of handling liquid bromine vs gaseous chlorine . Like other molecular halides, it is soluble in nonpolar solvents such as carbon tetrachloride (1.465 g/100 mL at 30 °C), but it reacts with some solvents.[ 4]
It can also be produced from the more accessible oxide by metathesis using aluminium tribromide :
Ta2 O5 + 3.3 AlBr3 → 2 TaBr5 + 3.3 Al2 O3
Carbothermal reduction of the oxide in the presence of bromine has also been employed, the byproduct being COBr2 .[ 5]
References
^ "Tantalum(V) bromide" . pubchem.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov . Retrieved 16 December 2021 .
^ Greenwood, N. N.; & Earnshaw, A. (1997). Chemistry of the Elements (2nd Edn.), Oxford:Butterworth-Heinemann. ISBN 0-7506-3365-4 .
^ Habermehl, Katja; Pantenburg, Ingo; Meyer, Gerd (2010). "Redetermination of tantalum pentabromide, (TaBr5)2" . Acta Crystallographica Section E . 66 (9): i67. doi :10.1107/S1600536810032538 . PMC 3007875 . PMID 21588474 .
^ Nowicki, D. H.; Campbell, I. E. (1953). "Tantalum(V) Bromide". Inorganic Syntheses . Vol. 4. p. 130. doi :10.1002/9780470132357.ch44 . ISBN 9780470132357 .
^ G. Braurer (1963). "Niobium(V) and Tantalum(V) Bromides". In G. Brauer (ed.). Handbook of Preparative Inorganic Chemistry, 2nd Ed . Vol. 1. NY, NY: Academic Press. p. 1311.
Tantalum(II) Tantalum(III)
Tantalum(IV) Tantalum(V)
Salts and covalent derivatives of the
bromide ion
Br(−I) Br(−I,I) Br(I) Br(II) Br(I,V) Br(III) Br(IV) Br(V) Br(VII)