Sulfur oxoacids
The sulfur oxoacids are chemical compounds that contain sulfur, oxygen and hydrogen. The best known and most important industrially is sulfuric acid. Sulfur has a number of oxoacids; however, some of these are known only from their salts (these are shown in italics in the table below).[1] The acids that have been characterised contain a variety of structural features, for example:
- tetrahedral sulfur when coordinated to oxygen
- terminal and bridging oxygen atoms
- terminal and bridging peroxo groups
- terminal S=S
- chains of (–S–)n
Acid | Formula | Sulfur oxidation state | Structure | Related anions | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Sulfuric acid | H2SO4 | VI | Sulfate, SO42− and hydrogen sulfate commonly known as bisulfate | Best known and industrially significant | |
Disulfuric acid or pyrosulfuric acid | H2S2O7 | VI | Disulfate commonly known as pyrosulfate, S2O72− | Pure form melts at 36 °C. Present in fuming sulfuric acid, oleum | |
Peroxymonosulfuric acid | H2SO5 | VI | peroxymonosulfuric | Peroxymonosulfate, OOSO32− | "Caro's acid", a solid melting at 45 °C |
Peroxydisulfuric acid | H2S2O8 | VI | Peroxydisulfate, O3SOOSO32− | A solid melting at 65 °C. | |
Dithionic acid | H2S2O6 | V | dithionic | Dithionate, O3SSO32− | Not obtained pure, only concentrated solutions |
Thiosulfuric acid | H2S2O3 | IV | Thiosulfate, S2O32− Hydrogenthiosulfate HS2O3− (ammonium salt prepared in anhydrous methanol at −80 °C)[2] |
Aqueous solutions decompose. | |
Disulfurous acid | H2S2O5 | IV | Disulfite commonly known as metabisulfite, S2O52− | Not known | |
Sulfurous acid | H2SO3 | IV | sulfurous | Bisulfite, HSO3− and sulfite, SO32− | Not known |
Dithionous acid | H2S2O4 | III | Dithionite, O2SSO22− | Not known. | |
Polythionic acid | H2SxO6 | Polythionate, O3S(Sx−2)SO32−. Example tetrathionate. | Examples known with x = 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 10, 12, 14. |
References
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