Dictionary Definition
dioxide n : an oxide containing two atoms of
oxygen in the molecule
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Derived terms
- americium dioxide
- berkelium dioxide
- carbon dioxide
- cerium dioxide
- chlorine dioxide
- chromium dioxide
- curium dioxide
- germanium dioxide
- hafnium dioxide
- hydrogen dioxide
- lead dioxide
- manganese dioxide
- nitrogen dioxide
- plumbic dioxide
- plutonium dioxide
- ruthenium dioxide
- selenium dioxide
- silicon dioxide
- sulfur dioxide, sulphur dioxide
- tellurium dioxide
- thorium dioxide
- tin dioxide
- titanium dioxide
- uranium dioxide
- vanadium dioxide
- zirconium dioxide
Translations
- Dutch: dioxide
- Finnish: dioksidi
- German: Dioxid
- Italian: diossido, biossido
- Polish: dwutlenek
- Spanish: dióxido
Dutch
Noun
Extensive Definition
An oxide is a chemical
compound containing at least one oxygen atom as well as at least
one other element. Most of the Earth's
crust consists of oxides. Oxides result when elements are
oxidized by oxygen in air.
Combustion of hydrocarbons affords the two
principal oxides of carbon, carbon
monoxide and carbon
dioxide. Even materials that are considered to be pure elements
often contain a coating of oxides. For example, aluminium
foil has a thin skin of Al2O3 that protects the foil
from further corrosion.
Virtually all elements burn in an atmosphere of
oxygen. In the presence of water and oxygen (or simply air), some
elements - lithium,
sodium, potassium, rubidium, caesium, strontium and barium - react rapidly, even
dangerously to give the hydroxides. In part for this reason, alkali
and alkaline earth metals are not found in nature in their
metallic, i.e., native, form. Caesium is so reactive with oxygen
that it is used as a getter in vacuum tubes,
and solutions of potassium and sodium, so called NaK are used to
deoxygenate and dehydrate some organic solvents. The surface of
most metals consist of oxides and hydroxides in the presence of
air. A well known example is aluminium
foil, which is coated with a thin film of aluminium
oxide that passivates the metal,
slowing further corrosion. The aluminium oxide
layer can be built to greater thickness by the process of electrolytic anodising. Although solid
magnesium and aluminium react slowly with oxygen at
STP, they, like most metals, will burn in air, generating very
high temperatures. As a consequence, finely divided powders of most
metals can be dangerously explosive in air.
In dry oxygen, iron readily forms iron(II)
oxide, but the formation of the hydrated ferric oxides,
Fe2O3−2x(OH)x, that mainly comprise rust, typically requires oxygen
and water. The production of free oxygen by photosynthetic bacteria some 3.5 billion years
ago precipitated
iron out of solution in the oceans as Fe2O3 in the
economically-important iron
ore hematite.
Due to its electronegativity,
oxygen forms chemical
bonds with almost all elements to give the corresponding
oxides. So-called noble metals (common examples: gold, platinum) resist direct
chemical combination with oxygen, and substances like gold(III)
oxide must be generated by indirect routes.
Insolubility in water
The oxide ion, O2−, is the conjugate base of the hydroxide ion, OH−, and is encountered in ionic solid such as calcium oxide. O2− is unstable in aqueous solution − its affinity for H+ is so great (pKb ~ −22) that it abstracts a proton from a solvent H2O molecule:- O2− + H2O → 2 OH−
Although many anions are stable in aqueous
solution, ionic oxides are not. For example, sodium
chloride dissolves readily in water to give a solution
containing the constituent ions, Na+ and Cl−. Oxides do not behave
like this. If an ionic oxide dissolves, the O2− ions become
protonated. Although calcium
oxide, CaO, is said to "dissolve" in water, the products
include hydroxide:
- CaO + H2O → Ca2+ + 2 OH−
In fact, no monoatomic dianion is known to
dissolve in water - all are so basic that they undergo hydrolysis. Concentrations of
oxide ion in water are too low to be detectable with current
technology.
Authentic soluble oxides do exist, but they
release oxyanions, not
O2−. Well known soluble salts of oxyanions include sodium
sulfate (Na2SO4), potassium
permanganate (KMnO4), and sodium nitrate (NaNO3).
Nomenclature
In the 18th century, oxides were named calxes or calces after the calcination process used to produce oxides. Calx was later replaced by oxyd.Oxides are usually named after the number of
oxygen atoms in the oxide. Oxides containing only one oxygen are
called oxides or monoxides, those
containing two oxygen atoms are dioxides, three oxygen
atoms makes it a trioxide, four oxygen
atoms are tetroxides, and so
on following the Greek
numerical
prefixes. In the older literature and continuing in industry,
oxides are named by contracting the element name with "a." Hence
alumina, magnesia, chromia, are, respectively, Al2O3, MgO,
Cr2O3.
Two other types of oxide are peroxide, O22−, and superoxide, O2−. In such
species, oxygen is assigned higher oxidation
states than oxide.
Types of oxides
Oxides of more electropositive elements tend to be basic. They are called basic anhydrides; adding water, they may form basic hydroxides. For example, sodium oxide is basic; when hydrated, it forms sodium hydroxide.Oxides of more electronegative elements
tend to be acidic. They are called acid anhydrides; adding water,
they form oxoacids. For
example, dichlorine
heptoxide is acid; perchloric
acid is a more hydrated form.
Some oxides can act as both acid and base at
different times. They are amphoteric. An example is
aluminium
oxide. Some oxides do not show behavior as either acid or
base.
The oxides of the chemical
elements in their highest oxidation
state are predictable and the chemical
formula can be derived from the number of valence
electrons for that element. Even the chemical formula of O4,
tetraoxygen, is
predictable as a group 16
element. One exception is copper for which the highest
oxidation state oxide is copper(II)
oxide and not copper(I)
oxide. Another exception is fluoride that does not exist as
expected as F2O7 but as OF2
with the least electronegative element
given priority. . Phosphorus
pentoxide, the third exception is not properly represented by
the chemical formula P2O5 but by P4O10
List of all known oxides sorted by oxidation state
- Element in −1 oxidation state
- Element in +1 oxidation state
- Copper(I) oxide (Cu2O)
- Dicarbon monoxide (C2O)
- Dichlorine monoxide (Cl2O)
- Lithium oxide (Li2O)
- Potassium oxide (K2O)
- Rubidium oxide (Rb2O)
- Silver(I) oxide (Ag2O)
- Thallium oxide (Tl2O)
- Sodium oxide (Na2O)
- Water (hydrogen oxide) (H2O)
- Element in +2 oxidation state
- Aluminium monoxide (AlO)
- Barium oxide (BaO)
- Beryllium oxide (BeO)
- Cadmium oxide (CdO)
- Calcium oxide (CaO)
- Carbon monoxide (CO)
- Cobalt(II) oxide (CoO)
- Copper(II) oxide (CuO)
- Iron(II) oxide (FeO)
- Lead(II) oxide (PbO)
- Magnesium oxide (MgO)
- Mercury(II) oxide (O)
- Nickel(II) oxide (NiO)
- Nitrogen oxide (NO)
- Palladium(II) oxide (PdO)
- Silver(II) oxide (AgO)
- Strontium oxide (SrO)
- Sulphur monoxide (SO)
- Tin(II) oxide (SnO)
- Titanium(II) oxide (TiO)
- Vanadium(II) oxide (VO)
- Zinc oxide (ZnO)
- Element in +3 oxidation state
- Aluminium oxide (Al2O3)
- Antimony trioxide (Sb2O3)
- Arsenic trioxide (As2O3)
- Bismuth trioxide (Bi2O3)
- Boron oxide (B2O3)
- Chromium(III) oxide (Cr2O3)
- Dinitrogen trioxide (N2O3)
- Erbium(III) oxide (Er2O3)
- Gadolinium(III) oxide (Gd2O3)
- Gallium(III) oxide (Ga2O3)
- Holmium(III) oxide (Ho2O3)
- Indium(III) oxide (In2O3)
- Iron(III) oxide (Fe2O3)
- Lanthanum(III) oxide (La2O3)
- Lutetium(III) oxide (Lu2O3)
- Nickel(III) oxide (Ni2O3)
- Phosphorus trioxide (P4O6)
- Promethium(III) oxide (Pm2O3)
- Rhodium(III) oxide (Rh2O3)
- Samarium(III) oxide (Sm2O3)
- Scandium(III) oxide (Sc2O3)
- Terbium(III) oxide (Tb2O3)
- Thallium(III) oxide (Tl2O3)
- Thulium(III) oxide (Tm2O3)
- Titanium(III) oxide (Ti2O3)
- Tungsten(III) oxide (W2O3)
- Vanadium(III) oxide (V2O3)
- Ytterbium(III) oxide (Yb2O3)
- Yttrium(III) oxide (Y2O3)
- Element in +4 oxidation state
- Carbon dioxide (CO2)
- Carbon trioxide (CO3)
- Cerium(IV) oxide (CeO2)
- Chlorine dioxide (ClO2)
- Chromium(IV) oxide (CrO2)
- Dinitrogen tetroxide (N2O4)
- Germanium dioxide (GeO2)
- Hafnium(IV) oxide (HfO2)
- Lead(I) peroxide (PbO2)
- Manganese(IV) oxide (MnO2)
- Nitrogen dioxide (NO2)
- Plutonium dioxide (PuO2)
- Ruthenium(IV) oxide (RuO2)
- Selenium dioxide (SeO2)
- Silicon dioxide (SiO2)
- Sulfur dioxide (SO2)
- Tellurium dioxide (TeO2)
- Thorium dioxide (O2)
- Tin dioxide (SnO2)
- Titanium dioxide (TiO2)
- Tungsten(IV) oxide (WO2)
- Uranium dioxide (UO2)
- Vanadium(IV) oxide (VO2)
- Zirconium dioxide (ZrO2)
- Element in +5 oxidation state
- Antimony pentoxide (Sb2O5)
- Arsenic pentoxide (As2O5)
- Dinitrogen pentoxide (N2O5)
- Niobium pentoxide
- Phosphorus pentoxide (P2O5)
- Tantalum pentoxide (Ta2O5)
- Vanadium(V) oxide (V2O5)
- Element in +6 oxidation state
- Chromium trioxide (CrO3)
- Molybdenum(VI) oxide (MoO3)
- Rhenium trioxide (ReO3)
- Selenium trioxide (SeO3)
- Sulphur trioxide (SO3)
- Tellurium trioxide (TeO3)
- Tungsten trioxide (WO3)
- Uranium trioxide (UO3)
- Xenon trioxide (XeO3)
- Element in +7 oxidation state
- Element in +8 oxidation state
See also
- Other oxygen ions ozonide, O3−, superoxide, O2−, peroxide, O22− and dioxygenyl, O2+.
- Suboxide
- See :Category:Oxides for a list of oxides.
References
dioxide in Arabic: أكسيد
dioxide in Asturian: Óxidu
dioxide in Bosnian: Oksidi
dioxide in Bulgarian: Оксид
dioxide in Catalan: Òxid
dioxide in Czech: Oxid
dioxide in Danish: Oxid
dioxide in German: Oxide
dioxide in Estonian: Oksiidid
dioxide in Modern Greek (1453-): Οξείδιο
dioxide in Spanish: Óxido
dioxide in Esperanto: Oksido
dioxide in French: Oxyde
dioxide in Galician: Óxido
dioxide in Croatian: Oksidi
dioxide in Italian: Ossido
dioxide in Hebrew: תחמוצת
dioxide in Latin: Oxidum
dioxide in Latvian: Oksīds
dioxide in Lithuanian: Oksidas
dioxide in Macedonian: Оксид
dioxide in Dutch: Oxide
dioxide in Japanese: 酸化物
dioxide in Norwegian: Oksid
dioxide in Norwegian Nynorsk: Oksid
dioxide in Uzbek: Oksid
dioxide in Low German: Oxid
dioxide in Polish: Tlenki
dioxide in Portuguese: Óxido
dioxide in Romanian: Oxid
dioxide in Quechua: Muksi
dioxide in Russian: Оксиды
dioxide in Simple English: Oxide
dioxide in Slovak: Oxid
dioxide in Slovenian: Oksid
dioxide in Serbian: Оксид
dioxide in Serbo-Croatian: Oksid
dioxide in Finnish: Oksidi
dioxide in Swedish: Oxider
dioxide in Thai: ออกไซด์
dioxide in Vietnamese: Ôxít
dioxide in Ukrainian: Оксид
dioxide in Chinese: 氧化物