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Description of experiment
Below follows a plain text transcript of the selected
experiment.
Needed compounds: ----------------- acetyl chloride : CH3COCl thionyl chloride : OSCl2 vanadium pentoxide : V2O5
Class: ------ elem=C,Cl,V coordination
Summary: -------- Vanadium pentoxide does not dissolve in thionyl chloride, but when a small amount of water is added, then it reacts. Vanadium pentoxide dissolves in acetyl chloride, giving a dark red/brown solution.
Description: ------------ Add a small amount of vanadium pentoxide to a ml of thionyl chloride: The solid does not dissolve, not even the finest particles of the solid go into solution.
Add a drop of water: The water reacts with the thionyl chloride, giving HCl and SO2, but now there also is a reaction with the vanadium pentoxide. A very dark brown solution is obtained. Is this VOCl2 (or VCl4)? It seems that the vanadium is reduced and that a deep brown vanadium(IV) species is formed. On strong dilution, the liquid becomes blue, with a somewhat green tinge. The blue color is from aqueous vanadyl ion, VO(2+), and the green tinge most likely is because there also still is some vanadium in the +5 oxidation state, which is present as yellow VO2(+) ion.
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Add a small amount of vanadium pentoxide to a ml of acetyl chloride: The solid partially dissolves, giving a deep brown solution.
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