Molecule structure of Dichlorine oxide (CAS NO.7791-21-1):
IUPAC Name: Chloro hypochlorite
Molecular Weight: 86.9054 g/mol
Molecular Formula: Cl2O
Density: 1.507 g/cm3
Index of Refraction: 1.384
Molar Refractivity: 13.49 cm3
Molar Volume: 57.6 cm3
Polarizability: 5.34×10-24 cm3
Surface Tension: 24.8 dyne/cm
XLogP3-AA: 1.6
H-Bond Acceptor: 1
Exact Mass: 85.93262
MonoIsotopic Mass: 85.93262
Topological Polar Surface Area: 9.2
Heavy Atom Count: 3
Complexity: 2.8
Canonical SMILES: O(Cl)Cl
InChI: InChI=1S/Cl2O/c1-3-2
InChIKey: RCJVRSBWZCNNQT-UHFFFAOYSA-N
EINECS: 232-243-5
Dichlorine oxide (CAS NO.7791-21-1) is used as a wood bleach, biocide and swimming pool treatment.
The liquid at 2 °C is an unstable spark- and touch-sensitive explosive. The gas may explode when heated above 42 °C. A powerful oxidizing agent. Explodes on contact with alcohols, ammonia, antimony, antimony sulfide, arsenic, barium sulfide, calcium phosphide, carbon, carbon disulfide vapor, charcoal, cork, dicyanogen, ethers, hydrogen sulfide, mercury sulfide, nitrogen oxide, paper, phosphine, phosphorus, potassium, rubber, sulfur, tin sulfide, turpentine, and other oxidizable materials. Self-explodes. Incompatible with carbon, dicyanogen, diphenylmercury, nitrogen oxide, oxidizable materials, and potassium. Explosive reaction when heated above 50 °C with many hydrocarbons (e.g., butadiene, ethane, ethylene, methane, propane).
Dichlorine oxide (CAS NO.7791-21-1) is also named as Chlorine monoxide ; Chlorine oxide (Cl2O) . Dichlorine oxide (CAS NO.7791-21-1) is red-yellow gas. It is very reactive and unstable. So it unusually stored as hydrate in frozen form. Dichlorine oxide can form chlorine and oxygen gases when decomposes in water. It can dissolve in alkalis, forming a mixture of chlorite and chlorate. It also explodes when heated or by reaction with organic materials, including: carbon, carbon disulfide, ethers, hydrocarbons, dicyanogen, any readily oxidizable materials (ammonia, potassium, arsenic, antimony, sulfur, mercury sulfide, calcium phosphide, phosphine, phosphorus, hydrogen sulfide, antimony sulfide, barium sulfide, mercury sulfide, and tin sulfide). Concentration of gas should be limited to less than 10% to reduce explosion hazard. Alcohols are oxidized explosively.
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