Bromine monochloride explained

Bromine monochloride, also called bromine(I) chloride, bromochloride, and bromine chloride, is an interhalogen inorganic compound with chemical formula BrCl. It is a very reactive golden yellow gas with boiling point 5 °C and melting point −66 °C. Its CAS number is 13863-41-7, and its EINECS number is 237-601-4.[1] It is a strong oxidizing agent. Its molecular structure in the gas phase was determined by microwave spectroscopy; the Br-Cl bond has a length of re = 2.1360376(18) Å.[2] Its crystal structure was determined by single crystal X-ray diffraction; the bond length in the solid state is 2.179(2) Å and the shortest intermolecular interaction is r(Cl···Br) = 3.145(2) Å.[3]

Uses

Bromine monochloride is used in analytical chemistry in determining low levels of mercury, to quantitatively oxidize mercury in the sample to Hg(II) state.

A common use of bromine monochloride is as an algaecide, fungicide, and disinfectant of industrial recirculating cooling water systems.

Addition of bromine monochloride is used in some types of Li-SO2 batteries to increase voltage and energy density.[4]

See also

Notes and References

  1. Book: Gangolli, S. . Royal Society of Chemistry . Royal Society of Chemistry . The Dictionary of Substances and Their Effects . 1999 . 0-85404-808-1 . 676.
  2. Ogilvie . J. F. . 1995 . Electric polarity+BrCland rotational g factor from analysis of frequencies of pure rotational and vibration–rotational spectra . J. Chem. Soc., Faraday Trans. . 91 . 18 . 3005–3006 . 10.1039/ft9959103005 . 0956-5000.
  3. Drews . Thomas . Seppelt . Konrad . October 2012 . Bromine Monofluoride . Zeitschrift für anorganische und allgemeine Chemie . en . 638 . 12-13 . 2106–2110 . 10.1002/zaac.201200293.
  4. Web site: Battery Chemistry - Lithium / Thionyl Chloride . 2008-07-09 . GlobalSpec . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20071223174334/http://electronic-components.globalspec.com/specifications/electrical_electronic_components/batteries/lithium_batteries . 2007-12-23 .