Disulfur dioxide
Disulfur dioxide, dimeric sulfur monoxide or SO dimer is an oxide of sulfur with the formula S2O2. The solid is unstable with a lifetime of a few seconds at room temperature.
Structure
Disulfur dioxide adopts a cis planar structure with C2v symmetry. The S−O bond length is 145.8 pm, shorter than in sulfur monoxide. The S−S bond length is 202.45 pm and the O−S−S angle is 112.7°. S2O2 has a dipole moment of 3.17 D. It is an asymmetric top molecule.The electronic ground state is a singlet, unlike disulfur or dioxygen.
Formation
converts to disulfur dioxide spontaneously and reversibly. So the substance can be generated by methods that produce sulfur monoxide. Disulfur dioxide has also been formed by an electric discharge in sulfur dioxide. Another laboratory procedure is to react oxygen atoms with carbonyl sulfide or carbon disulfide vapour.Although most forms of elemental sulfur do not combine with SO2, atomic sulfur does so to form sulfur monoxide, which dimerizes:
Disulfur dioxide is also produced upon a microwave discharge in sulfur dioxide diluted in helium. At a pressure of, five percent of the result is S2O2.
Disulfur dioxide is formed transiently when hydrogen sulfide and oxygen undergo flash photolysis.
A branched isomer valence isoelectronic to SO3, S=SO2, is believed to form during the thermal decomposition of cyclic vicinal alkyl thiosulfites.
Properties
The ionization energy of disulfur dioxide is.Disulfur dioxide absorbs at 320–400 nm, as observed of the Venusian atmosphere, and is believed to have contributed to the greenhouse effect on that planet.
Reactions and decomposition
Although disulfur dioxide exists in equilibrium with sulfur monoxide, it also reacts with sulfur monoxide to form sulfur dioxide and disulfur monoxide.Decomposition of S2O2 proceeds via the following disproportionation reaction: