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Hypohalous acid
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A hypohalous acid is an oxyacid consisting of a hydroxyl group single-bonded to any halogen. Examples include hypofluorous acid, hypochlorous acid, hypobromous acid, and hypoiodous acid. The conjugate base is a hypohalite. They can be formed by reacting the corresponding diatomic halogen molecule (F2, Cl2, Br2, I2) with water in the reaction:

X2 + H2O ⇌ HXO + HX

This also results in the corresponding hydrogen halide, which is also acidic.

Stability

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Hypohalous acids tend to be unstable. Only hypofluorous acid has been isolated as a solid, and even it is explosive at room temperature.[1] Hypochlorous acid cannot be prepared in anhydrous form.[2] Hypobromous acid, hypoiodous acid, and their conjugate bases (hypobromite and hypoiodite) are also unstable, undergoing disproportionation reactions like

3 BrO(aq) → 2 Br(aq) + BrO3(aq)

and

3 HIO → 2 HI + HIO3

that result in the corresponding hydrogen halides/halide ions and halic acids/halates.[3]

Uses

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Hypochlorous acid and hypobromous acid are each dissolved in water to sanitize it, hypochlorous acid in swimming pools and hypobromous acid in hot tubs and spas.[4]

Acidity

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Hypohalous acids tend to be weak acids, and they typically get weaker as the halogen progresses further down the periodic table. Hypochlorous acid has a pKa of 7.53.[5] The pKa values of hypobromous acid is higher (meaning that it is an even weaker acid),[6] at 8.65. The pKa of hypoiodous acid is even higher, at 10.6.[7]

References

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