Cyanogen fluoride
Cyanogen fluoride is an inorganic compound with the chemical formula . The molecule of this compound is linear, having the structural formula. It consists of a fluorine atom in a single bond with a carbon atom of a cyano group. It is a toxic and explosive gas at room temperature. It is used in organic synthesis and can be produced by pyrolysis of cyanuric fluoride or by fluorination of cyanogen.
Synthesis
Cyanogen fluoride, is synthesized by the pyrolysis of cyanuric fluoride at 1300 °C and 50 mmHg pressure; this process gives a maximum of 50% yield. Other products observed were cyanogen and Trifluoroacetonitrile|. For pyrolysis, an induction heated carbon tube with an internal diameter of 0.75 inches is packed with 4 to 8 mesh carbon granules and is surrounded by graphite powder insulation and a water-jacketed shell. The cyanuric fluoride is pyrolyzed at a rate of 50g/hr, and appears as fluffy white solid collected in liquid nitrogen traps. These liquid nitrogen traps are filled to atmospheric pressure with nitrogen or helium. This process yields crude cyanogen fluoride, which is then distilled in a glass column at atmospheric pressure to give pure cyanogen fluoride.Another method of synthesizing cyanogen fluoride is by the fluorination of cyanogen. Nitrogen trifluoride can fluoridate cyanogen to cyanogen fluoride when both the reactants are injected downstream into the nitrogen arc plasma. With carbonyl fluoride and carbon tetrafluoride, FCN was obtained by passing these fluorides through the arc flame and injecting the cyanogen downstream into the arc plasma.
Properties
Cyanogen fluoride is a toxic, colorless gas with a molecular mass of 45.015 g/mol. Cyanogen fluoride has a boiling point of −46.2 °C and a melting point of −82 °C. The stretching constant for the CN bond was 17.5 mdyn/Å and for the CF bond it was 8.07 mdyn/Å, but this can vary depending on the interaction constant. At room temperature, the condensed phase converts rapidly to polymeric materials. Liquid FCN explodes at −41 °C when initiated by a squib.Spectroscopy
The fluorine NMR pattern for FCN showed that there was a triplet peak centered at 80 ppm with a 32-34 cps splitting between adjacent peaks because of the 14N nucleus. This splitting is absent near freezing point and it collapses to a singlet peak.The IR spectrum of FCN shows two doublet bands at around 2290 cm−1
and 1078 cm−1. The C-F doublet band has a 24 cm−1 separation between the two branches. A triplet band is observed at around 451 cm−1.