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Nitrogen monofluoride


Nitrogen monofluoride (fluoroimidogen) is a metastable species that has been observed in laser studies. It is isoelectronic with O2. Like boron monofluoride, it is an instance of the rare multiply-bonded fluorine atom.{{Cite journal

Nitrogen monofluoride is produced when radical species (H, O, N, CH3) abstracts a fluorine atom from nitrogen difluoride (NF2). Stoichiometrically, the reaction is extremely efficient, regenerating a radical for long-lasting chain propagation. However, radical impurities in the end product also catalyze that product's decomposition. Azide decomposition offers a less-efficient but more pure technique: fluorine azide (which can be formed in situ via reaction of atomic fluorine with hydrazoic acid) decomposes upon shock into NF and N2.

Many NF-producing reactions give the product in an excited state with characteristic chemiluminescence at 870 and 875 nm (infrared), or at 525–530 nm (green). They have thus been investigated for development as a chemical laser.

References

References

  1. (Feb 1989). "Rate coefficient for the H + NF(a1Δ) reaction". [[American Chemical Society]].
  2. Gmelin-lnstitut für Anorganische Chemie der Max-Planck-Gesellschaft zur Förderung der Wissenschaften. (2013). "Gmelin Handbook of Inorganic Chemistry: F Fluorine: Compounds with Oxygen and Nitrogen". Springer Science & Business Media.
  3. (2012). "Gas Flow and Chemical Lasers". Plenum Press.
  4. (1985). "Chemi- and Bioluminescence". Dekker.
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