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Fluorine nitrate

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Fluorine nitrate

Fluorine nitrate is an unstable derivative of nitric acid with the formula FNO
3
. It is shock-sensitive. Due to its instability, it is often produced from chlorine nitrate as needed[citation needed]. Fluorine nitrate is an inert molecule thought to play a significant role in atmospheric chemistry.

In 1935, professor George H. Cady was first to synthesize fluorine nitrate and has since maintained a long and controversial history. In 1937, American chemist and biochemist Linus Pauling and one of his first graduate students, Lawrence O. Brockway, utilized electron diffraction intensities to determine the structure of the oxygen and fluorine bond perpendicular to the NO2 plane to be a non-planar structure. This would later be confirmed in 1963 and 1966 utilizing infrared spectra.

In a 1995 study performed by Universität Tubingen in Germany, found through electron diffraction that the nitrogen–oxygen bond is surprisingly long at about a length of 150.7 ppm. This length is likely the result of the presence of electronegative atoms compared to other similar structures such as nitric acid.

Whilst not fully understood, it is thought that FNO
3
forms as a result of termolecular recombination of FO and NO
2
radicals. Fluorine Nitrate is prepared through the agitation of fluorine in its gaseous form, which will bubble through nitric acid or solid KNO3. Due to the shock sensitive nature of the compound, it is necessary to handle it with extreme caution:

It decomposes in water to form oxygen gas, oxygen difluoride, hydrofluoric acid, and nitric acid.

In fluorine nitrate, the oxygen atom bridging nitrogen and fluorine is in a rare oxidation state of 0 due to its electronegativity being lower than that of fluorine but higher than that of nitrogen. The role of electronegativity also is significant in the structure of fluorine nitrate. Through electron diffraction analysis, FNO
3
was determined to have a planar structure with a particularly long nitrogen-oxygen bond length.

Fluorine nitrate has been linked to higher ionization potential due to the centrality of fluorine. This higher ionization potential is indicative of electron ionization of deeper shell orbitals.

Since the 1990s, fluorine nitrate has been studied as a critical factor of atmospheric chemistry. It was in this period that fluorine nitrate began to be labeled as a reservoir species in the atmosphere.

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