Trifluoride
Trifluorides are compounds having three fluorines per formula unit. Many metals form trifluorides, such as iron, the rare earth elements, and the metals in the aluminium and scandium columns of the periodic table. No trifluoride is soluble in water, but several are soluble in other solvents.[1]
List of trifluorides
- Aluminium trifluoride
- Antimony trifluoride, SbF3, sometimes called Swart's reagent
- Arsenic trifluoride, AsF3
- Bismuth trifluoride, BiF3
- Boron trifluoride, BF3, a pungent colourless toxic gas
- Bromotrifluoromethane, (carbon monobromide trifluoride)
- Bromine trifluoride, BrF3
- Chlorine trifluoride, ClF3
- Chromium trifluoride
- Cobalt trifluoride
- Diethylaminosulfur trifluoride (DAST) is the organosulfur compound with the formula Et2NSF3
- Fluoroform, (trifluoromethane)
- Gallium trifluoride
- Gold trifluoride
- Indium trifluoride
- Iodine trifluoride, IF3, a yellow solid which decomposes above −28°C
- Iron trifluoride
- Lanthanum trifluoride
- Manganese trifluoride
- Nitrogen trifluoride, NF3, a colorless, toxic, odourless, nonflammable gas
- Palladium(II,IV) fluoride
- Phosphorus trifluoride, PF3, a colorless and odorless gas
- Plutonium trifluoride
- Rhodium trifluoride
- Samarium trifluoride
- Scandium trifluoride
- Thiazyl trifluoride, NSF3, a stable, colourless gas, and important precursor to other sulfur-nitrogen-fluorine compounds
- Thiophosphoryl trifluoride PSF3 colourless gas spontaneously burning with a very cool flame
- Titanium trifluoride
- Uranium trifluoride
- Vanadium trifluoride
- Vanadium(V) oxytrifluoride
- Ytterbium trifluoride
- Yttrium trifluoride
References
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