Nitrosyl azide explained

Nitrosyl azide is an inorganic compound of nitrogen and oxygen with the chemical formula . It is a highly labile nitrogen oxide with the empirical formula .

Synthesis

Nitrosyl azide can be synthesized via the following reaction of sodium azide and nitrosyl chloride at low temperatures:

Properties

Below −50 °C, nitrosyl azide exists as a pale yellow solid. Above this temperature, it decomposes into nitrous oxide and molecular nitrogen :[1]

Characterization of the compound with IR and Raman spectroscopy show absorption bands that agree well with calculated values for a trans-structure.[1] [2] Quantum chemical calculations show a cis-form higher in energy by 4.2 kJ/mol and an aromatic ring form (oxatetrazole) that is more stable by 205 kJ/mol. However, the cyclization to the ring form would have to surpass the 205 kJ/mol activation energy barrier require to bend the azide group, which might explain why nitrosyl azide is stable enough to be isolated at low temperature.[1]

References

  1. Schulz. Axel. Tornieporth-Oetting. Inis C.. Klapötke. Thomas M.. 1993. Nitrosyl Azide, N4O, an Intrinsically Unstable Oxide of Nitrogen. . en. 32. 11. 1610–1612. 10.1002/anie.199316101.
  2. Lucien. Harold W.. 1958. The Preparation and Properties of Nitrosyl Azide. Journal of the American Chemical Society. en. 80. 17. 4458–4460. 10.1021/ja01550a004.