- +2, and +5. The −1
oxidation state occurs in
aurides,
compounds containing the Au− anion.
Caesium auride (CsAu), for example,
crystallizes in the caesium...
-
Caesium auride is the
inorganic compound with the
formula CsAu. It is the Cs+ salt of the
unusual Au− anion. CsAu is
obtained by
heating a stoichiometric...
-
Tetramethylammonium auride, (CH3)4NAu, is an
ionic compound containing tetramethylammonium as
cation and gold in a –1
oxidation state as anion. It is an...
-
bonds to the six
nearest rubidium cations, each of
which has 4
bonds to the
auride anion. The bond
graph summarizes these connectivities. The bond
orders (also...
- 4-thiatriazol-5-thiolato- -yl 1,2,3,4-thiatriazol-5-thiolate ~ CS2N3
auride Au2 (Gold dimer) HAu (Gold(I) hydride)
auride aurido-
Organogold chemistry ~ Au −Au...
- of
caesium and gold will
react to form
yellow caesium auride (Cs+Au−) upon heating. The
auride anion here
behaves as a pseudohalogen. The
compound reacts...
- at all; gold can form
compounds where it
gains an
electron (
aurides, e.g.
caesium auride). The
oxides of
elemental metals are
often basic. However, oxides...
-
exist as single-metallic anions. For example: Cs + Au -> CsAu (Caesium
Auride , a
yellow crystalline salt with the Au− ion).[citation needed] Platinum...
- +2, and +5. The −1
oxidation state occurs in
aurides,
compounds containing the Au− anion.
Caesium auride (CsAu), for example,
crystallizes in the caesium...
- nonmetals. It
forms the Au–
auride anion and
exhibits a
tendency to bond to itself,
behaviors which are
unexpected for metals. In
aurides (MAu,
where M = Li–Cs)...