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Iron(III) fluoride

Iron(III) fluoride
Aluminium-trifluoride-3D-polyhedra.png
FeF3structure.jpg
Names
Other names
iron trifluoride, ferric fluoride
Identifiers
3D model (Jmol)
ChemSpider
ECHA InfoCard 100.029.093
PubChem CID
RTECS number NO6865000
Properties
FeF3
Molar mass 112.840 g/mol (anhydrous)
166.89 g/mol (trihydrate)
Appearance pale green crystals
Density 3.87 g/cm3 (anhydrous)
2.3 g/cm3 (trihydrate)
Melting point > 1,000 °C (1,830 °F; 1,270 K)
slightly soluble (anhydrous)
49.5 g/100 mL (trihydrate)
Solubility negligible in alcohol, ether, benzene
+13,760·10−6 cm3/mol
Structure
Rhombohedral, hR24
R-3c, No. 167
Related compounds
Other anions
iron(III) oxide, iron(III) chloride
Other cations
manganese trifluoride, cobalt trifluoride, ruthenium(III) fluoride
Related compounds
iron(II) fluoride
Except where otherwise noted, data are given for materials in their standard state (at 25 °C [77 °F], 100 kPa).
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Infobox references

Iron(III) fluoride, also known as ferric fluoride, is an inorganic compound. It exists in an anhydrous form (formula FeF3) as well as two hydrated forms (both formula FeF3·3H2O). It is produced commercially mostly for laboratory work and is not as useful as the related compound iron(III) chloride. Anhydrous iron(III) fluoride is white while the hydrated forms are light pink.

Iron(III) fluoride is a thermally robust, paramagnetic solid, consisting of high spin Fe(III) centers, which is consistent with the pale colors of all forms of this material. Both anhydrous iron(III) fluoride as well as its hydrates are hygroscopic.

The anhydrous form is adopts a simple structure with octahedral Fe(III)F6 centres interconnected by linear Fe-F-Fe linkages. In the language of crystallography, the crystals are classified as rhombohedral with an R-3c space group. The structural motif is similar to that seen in ReO3. Although the solid is nonvolatile, it evaporates at high temperatures, the gas at 987 °C consists of FeF3, a planar molecule of D3hsymmetry with three equal Fe-F bonds, each of length 176.3 pm. At very high temperatures, it decomposes to give FeF2 and F2.

Two crystalline forms—or more technically, polymorphs—of FeF3·3H2O are known, the α and β forms. These are prepared by evaporation of an HF solution containing Fe3+ at room temperature (α form) and above 50 °C (β form). The space group of the β form is P4/m, and the α form maintains a P4/m space group with a J6 substructure. The solid α form is unstable and converts to the β form within days. The two forms are distinguished by their difference in quadrupole splitting from their Mössbauer spectra.

Anhydrous iron(III) fluoride is prepared by treating virtually any anhydrous iron compound with fluorine. More practically and like most metal fluorides, it is prepared by treating the corresponding chloride with hydrogen fluoride:


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