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Titanium tetrachloride

Titanium tetrachloride is the inorganic compound with the formula TiCl4. It is an important intermediate in the production of titanium metal and the pigment titanium dioxide. TiCl4 is a volatile liquid. Upon contact with humid air, it forms thick clouds of titanium dioxide (TiO2) and hydrochloric acid, a reaction that was formerly exploited for use in smoke machines. It is sometimes referred to as "tickle" or "tickle 4" due to the phonetic resemblance of its molecular formula (TiCl4) to the word.[7][8]

Titanium tetrachloride
Names
IUPAC name
Titanium(IV) chloride
Other names
Titanium tetrachloride
Tetrachlorotitanium
Identifiers
  • 7550-45-0 Y
3D model (JSmol)
  • Interactive image
ChemSpider
  • 22615 Y
ECHA InfoCard 100.028.584
EC Number
  • 231-441-9
MeSH Titanium+tetrachloride
  • 24193
RTECS number
  • XR1925000
UNII
  • 8O3PJE5T7Q Y
UN number 1838
  • DTXSID8042476
  • InChI=1S/4ClH.Ti/h4*1H;/q;;;;+4/p-4 Y
    Key: XJDNKRIXUMDJCW-UHFFFAOYSA-J Y
  • InChI=1/4ClH.Ti/h4*1H;/q;;;;+4/p-4/rCl4Ti/c1-5(2,3)4
    Key: XJDNKRIXUMDJCW-FOGBWSKZAG
  • Cl[Ti](Cl)(Cl)Cl
Properties
TiCl4
Molar mass 189.679 g/mol
Appearance Colourless liquid
Odor penetrating acid odor
Density 1.726 g/cm3
Melting point −24.1 °C (−11.4 °F; 249.1 K)
Boiling point 136.4 °C (277.5 °F; 409.5 K)
reacts (exothermic hydrolysis)[1]
Solubility soluble in dichloromethane,[2] toluene,[3] pentane[4]
Vapor pressure 1.3 kPa (20 °C)
−54.0·10−6 cm3/mol
1.61 (10.5 °C)
Viscosity 827 μPa s
Structure
Tetragonal
Tetrahedral
0 D
Thermochemistry
355 J·mol−1·K−1[5]
−763 kJ·mol−1[5]
Hazards[6]
Occupational safety and health (OHS/OSH):
Main hazards
Toxic, corrosive, reacts with water to release HCl
GHS labelling:
Danger
H314, H317, H330, H335, H370, H372
P280, P301+P330+P331, P304+P340, P305+P351+P338, P308+P310
NFPA 704 (fire diamond)
Health 3: Short exposure could cause serious temporary or residual injury. E.g. chlorine gasFlammability 0: Will not burn. E.g. waterInstability 2: Undergoes violent chemical change at elevated temperatures and pressures, reacts violently with water, or may form explosive mixtures with water. E.g. white phosphorusSpecial hazard W: Reacts with water in an unusual or dangerous manner. E.g. sodium, sulfuric acid
3
0
2
Safety data sheet (SDS) MSDS
Related compounds
Other anions
Titanium(IV) bromide
Titanium(IV) fluoride
Titanium(IV) iodide
Other cations
Hafnium(IV) chloride
Zirconium(IV) chloride
Related compounds
Titanium(II) chloride
Titanium(III) chloride
Except where otherwise noted, data are given for materials in their standard state (at 25 °C [77 °F], 100 kPa).
Y verify (what is YN ?)
Crystals of frozen titanium tetrachloride melting into the liquid

Properties and structure Edit

TiCl4 is a dense, colourless distillable liquid, although crude samples may be yellow or even red-brown. It is one of the rare transition metal halides that is a liquid at room temperature, VCl4 being another example. This property reflects the fact that molecules of TiCl4 weakly self-associate. Most metal chlorides are polymers, wherein the chloride atoms bridge between the metals. Its melting point is similar to that of CCl4.

Ti4+ has a "closed" electronic shell, with the same number of electrons as the noble gas argon. The tetrahedral structure for TiCl4 is consistent with its description as a d0 metal center (Ti4+) surrounded by four identical ligands. This configuration leads to highly symmetrical structures, hence the tetrahedral shape of the molecule. TiCl4 adopts similar structures to TiBr4 and TiI4; the three compounds share many similarities. TiCl4 and TiBr4 react to give mixed halides TiCl4−xBrx, where x = 0, 1, 2, 3, 4. Magnetic resonance measurements also indicate that halide exchange is also rapid between TiCl4 and VCl4.[9]

TiCl4 is soluble in toluene and chlorocarbons. Certain arenes form complexes of the type [(C6R6)TiCl3]+.[10] TiCl4 reacts exothermically with donor solvents such as THF to give hexacoordinated adducts.[11] Bulkier ligands (L) give pentacoordinated adducts TiCl4L.

Production Edit

TiCl4 is produced by the chloride process, which involves the reduction of titanium oxide ores, typically ilmenite (FeTiO3), with carbon under flowing chlorine at 900 °C. Impurities are removed by distillation.

2 FeTiO3 + 7 Cl2 + 6 C → 2 TiCl4 + 2 FeCl3 + 6 CO

The coproduction of FeCl3 is undesirable, which has motivated the development of alternative technologies. Instead of directly using ilmenite, "rutile slag" is used. This material, an impure form of TiO2, is derived from ilmenite by removal of iron, either using carbon reduction or extraction with sulfuric acid. Crude TiCl4 contains a variety of other volatile halides, including vanadyl chloride (VOCl3), silicon tetrachloride (SiCl4), and tin tetrachloride (SnCl4), which must be separated.

Applications Edit

Production of titanium metal Edit

The world's supply of titanium metal, about 250,000 tons per year, is made from TiCl4. The conversion involves the reduction of the tetrachloride with magnesium metal. This procedure is known as the Kroll process:[12]

2 Mg + TiCl4 → 2 MgCl2 + Ti

In the Hunter process, liquid sodium is the reducing agent instead of magnesium.

Production of titanium dioxide Edit

Around 90% of the TiCl4 production is used to make the pigment titanium dioxide (TiO2). The conversion involves hydrolysis of TiCl4, a process that forms hydrogen chloride:[12]

TiCl4 + 2 H2O → TiO2 + 4 HCl

In some cases, TiCl4 is oxidised directly with oxygen:

TiCl4 + O2 → TiO2 + 2 Cl2

Smoke screens Edit

It has been used to produce smoke screens since it produces a heavy, white smoke that has little tendency to rise. "Tickle" was the standard means of producing on-set smoke effects for motion pictures, before being phased out in the 1980s due to concerns about hydrated HCl's effects on the respiratory system.[13]

Chemical reactions Edit

Titanium tetrachloride is a versatile reagent that forms diverse derivatives including those illustrated below.[citation needed]

 

Alcoholysis and related reactions Edit

A characteristic reaction of TiCl4 is its easy hydrolysis, signaled by the release of HCl vapors and titanium oxides and oxychlorides. Titanium tetrachloride has been used to create naval smokescreens, as the hydrochloric acid aerosol and titanium dioxide that is formed scatter light very efficiently. This smoke is corrosive, however.

Alcohols react with TiCl4 to give alkoxides with the formula [Ti(OR)4]n (R = alkyl, n = 1, 2, 4). As indicated by their formula, these alkoxides can adopt complex structures ranging from monomers to tetramers. Such compounds are useful in materials science as well as organic synthesis. A well known derivative is titanium isopropoxide, which is a monomer. Titanium bis(acetylacetonate)dichloride results from treatment of titanium tetrachloride with excess acetylacetone:[14]

TiCl4 + 2 Hacac → Ti(acac)2Cl2 + 2 HCl

Organic amines react with TiCl4 to give complexes containing amido (R2N-containing) and imido (RN2−-containing) complexes. With ammonia, titanium nitride is formed. An illustrative reaction is the synthesis of tetrakis(dimethylamido)titanium Ti(N(CH3)2)4, a yellow, benzene-soluble liquid:[15] This molecule is tetrahedral, with planar nitrogen centers.[16]

4 LiN(CH3)2 + TiCl4 → 4 LiCl + Ti(N(CH3)2)4

Complexes with simple ligands Edit

TiCl4 is a Lewis acid as implicated by its tendency to hydrolyze. With the ether THF, TiCl4 reacts to give yellow crystals of TiCl4(THF)2. With chloride salts, TiCl4 reacts to form sequentially [Ti2Cl9], [Ti2Cl10]2− (see figure above), and [TiCl6]2−.[17] The reaction of chloride ions with TiCl4 depends on the counterion. [N(CH2CH2CH2CH3)4]Cl and TiCl4 gives the pentacoordinate complex [N(CH2CH2CH2CH3)4][TiCl5], whereas smaller [N(CH2CH3)4]+ gives [N(CH2CH3)4]2[Ti2Cl10]. These reactions highlight the influence of electrostatics on the structures of compounds with highly ionic bonding.

Redox Edit

Reduction of TiCl4 with aluminium results in one-electron reduction. The trichloride (TiCl3) and tetrachloride have contrasting properties: the trichloride is a colored solid, being a coordination polymer, and is paramagnetic. When the reduction is conducted in THF solution, the Ti(III) product converts to the light-blue adduct TiCl3(THF)3.

Organometallic chemistry Edit

The organometallic chemistry of titanium typically starts from TiCl4. An important reaction involves sodium cyclopentadienyl to give titanocene dichloride, TiCl2(C5H5)2. This compound and many of its derivatives are precursors to Ziegler–Natta catalysts. Tebbe's reagent, useful in organic chemistry, is an aluminium-containing derivative of titanocene that arises from the reaction of titanocene dichloride with trimethylaluminium. It is used for the "olefination" reactions.

Arenes, such as C6(CH3)6 react to give the piano-stool complexes [Ti(C6R6)Cl3]+ (R = H, CH3; see figure above).[10] This reaction illustrates the high Lewis acidity of the TiCl+3 entity, which is generated by abstraction of chloride from TiCl4 by AlCl3.

Reagent in organic synthesis Edit

TiCl4 finds occasional use in organic synthesis, capitalizing on its Lewis acidity, its oxophilicity, and the electron-transfer properties of its reduced titanium halides[18] It is used in the Lewis acid catalysed aldol addition[19] Key to this application is the tendency of TiCl4 to activate aldehydes (RCHO) by formation of adducts such as (RCHO)TiCl4OC(H)R.

Toxicity and safety considerations Edit

Hazards posed by titanium tetrachloride generally arise from its reaction with water that releases hydrochloric acid, which is severely corrosive itself and whose vapors are also extremely irritating. TiCl4 is a strong Lewis acid, which exothermically forms adducts with even weak bases such as THF and water.

References Edit

  1. ^ Eremenko, B. V.; Bezuglaya, T. N.; Savitskaya, A. N.; Malysheva, M. L.; Kozlov, I. S.; Bogodist, L. G. (2001). "Stability of Aqueous Dispersions of the Hydrated Titanium Dioxide Prepared by Titanium Tetrachloride Hydrolysis". Colloid Journal. 63 (2): 173–178. doi:10.1023/A:1016673605744. S2CID 93971747.
  2. ^ "titanium(IV) chloride, 1M soln. in dichloromethane". Alfa Aesar. Retrieved 7 March 2018.
  3. ^ "Titanium(IV) chloride solution 1.0 M in toluene". Sigma-Aldrich. Retrieved 7 March 2018.
  4. ^ Butts, Edward H De. "patent US3021349A".
  5. ^ a b Zumdahl, Steven S. (2009). Chemical Principles (6th ed.). Houghton-Mifflin. p. A23. ISBN 978-0-618-94690-7.
  6. ^ "Classifications - CL Inventory". echa.europa.eu.
  7. ^ [1] 2013-02-17 at the Wayback Machine American Chemistry Council – "Titanium Tetrachloride: Stepping Stone to Amazing Technology"
  8. ^ . Archived from the original on 2014-03-19. Retrieved 2013-04-10.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link) Iowa State University – "Chemistry Material Safety Data Sheets"
  9. ^ Webb, S. P.; Gordon, M. S. (1999). "Intermolecular Self-Interactions of the Titanium Tetrahalides TiX4 (X = F, Cl, Br)". J. Am. Chem. Soc. 121 (11): 2552–2560. doi:10.1021/ja983339i.
  10. ^ a b Calderazzo, F.; Ferri, I.; Pampaloni, G.; Troyanov, S. (1996). "η6-Arene Derivatives of Titanium(IV), Zirconium(IV) and Hafnium(IV)". J. Organomet. Chem. 518 (1–2): 189–196. doi:10.1016/0022-328X(96)06194-3.
  11. ^ Manzer, L. E. (1982). Tetrahydrofuran Complexes of Selected Early Transition Metals. Inorganic Syntheses. Vol. 21. pp. 135–40. doi:10.1002/9780470132524.ch31. ISBN 978-0-470-13252-4.
  12. ^ a b Völz, Hans G.; et al. (2006). "Pigments, Inorganic". Inorganic Pigments. Ullmann's Encyclopedia of Industrial Chemistry. Weinheim: Wiley-VCH. doi:10.1002/14356007.a20_243.pub2. ISBN 978-3527306732.
  13. ^ The Royal Navy at War (DVD). London: Imperial War Museum. 2005.
  14. ^ Wilkie, C. A.; Lin, G.; Haworth, D. T. (1979). "Cis ‐[Dihalobis(2,4‐Pentaedionato)Titanium(IV)] Complexes". Inorganic Syntheses. pp. 145–148. doi:10.1002/9780470132500.ch33. ISBN 9780470132500. {{cite book}}: |journal= ignored (help)
  15. ^ Bradey, D. C.; Thomas, M. (1960). "Some Dialkylamino-derivatives of Titanium and Zirconium". J. Chem. Soc.: 3857–3861. doi:10.1039/JR9600003857.
  16. ^ M. E. Davie; T. Foerster; S. Parsons; C. Pulham; D. W. H. Rankin; B. A. Smart (2006). "The Crystal Structure of Tetrakis(dimethylamino)titanium(IV)". Polyhedron. 25 (4): 923–929. doi:10.1016/j.poly.2005.10.019.
  17. ^ Creaser, C. S.; Creighton, J. A. (1975). "Pentachloro- and Pentabromotitanate(IV) ions". Dalton Trans. (14): 1402–1405. doi:10.1039/DT9750001402.
  18. ^ Gundersen, L.-L.; Rise, F.; Undheim, K. (2004). "Titanium(IV) chloride". In Paquette, L. (ed.). Encyclopedia of Reagents for Organic Synthesis. New York, NY: J. Wiley & Sons.
  19. ^ Mariappan Periasamy (2002): "New synthetic methods using the TiCl4-NR3 reagent system", Arkivoc, p. 151-166.

General reading Edit

External links Edit

  • Titanium tetrachloride: Health Hazard Information
  • NIST Standard Reference Database
  • ChemSub Online: Titanium tetrachloride

titanium, tetrachloride, inorganic, compound, with, formula, ticl4, important, intermediate, production, titanium, metal, pigment, titanium, dioxide, ticl4, volatile, liquid, upon, contact, with, humid, forms, thick, clouds, titanium, dioxide, tio2, hydrochlor. Titanium tetrachloride is the inorganic compound with the formula TiCl4 It is an important intermediate in the production of titanium metal and the pigment titanium dioxide TiCl4 is a volatile liquid Upon contact with humid air it forms thick clouds of titanium dioxide TiO2 and hydrochloric acid a reaction that was formerly exploited for use in smoke machines It is sometimes referred to as tickle or tickle 4 due to the phonetic resemblance of its molecular formula TiCl4 to the word 7 8 Titanium tetrachloride NamesIUPAC name Titanium IV chlorideOther names Titanium tetrachloride TetrachlorotitaniumIdentifiersCAS Number 7550 45 0 Y3D model JSmol Interactive imageChemSpider 22615 YECHA InfoCard 100 028 584EC Number 231 441 9MeSH Titanium tetrachloridePubChem CID 24193RTECS number XR1925000UNII 8O3PJE5T7Q YUN number 1838CompTox Dashboard EPA DTXSID8042476InChI InChI 1S 4ClH Ti h4 1H q 4 p 4 YKey XJDNKRIXUMDJCW UHFFFAOYSA J YInChI 1 4ClH Ti h4 1H q 4 p 4 rCl4Ti c1 5 2 3 4Key XJDNKRIXUMDJCW FOGBWSKZAGSMILES Cl Ti Cl Cl ClPropertiesChemical formula TiCl4Molar mass 189 679 g molAppearance Colourless liquidOdor penetrating acid odorDensity 1 726 g cm3Melting point 24 1 C 11 4 F 249 1 K Boiling point 136 4 C 277 5 F 409 5 K Solubility in water reacts exothermic hydrolysis 1 Solubility soluble in dichloromethane 2 toluene 3 pentane 4 Vapor pressure 1 3 kPa 20 C Magnetic susceptibility x 54 0 10 6 cm3 molRefractive index nD 1 61 10 5 C Viscosity 827 mPa sStructureCoordination geometry TetragonalMolecular shape TetrahedralDipole moment 0 DThermochemistryStd molarentropy S 298 355 J mol 1 K 1 5 Std enthalpy offormation DfH 298 763 kJ mol 1 5 Hazards 6 Occupational safety and health OHS OSH Main hazards Toxic corrosive reacts with water to release HClGHS labelling PictogramsSignal word DangerHazard statements H314 H317 H330 H335 H370 H372Precautionary statements P280 P301 P330 P331 P304 P340 P305 P351 P338 P308 P310NFPA 704 fire diamond 302WSafety data sheet SDS MSDSRelated compoundsOther anions Titanium IV bromide Titanium IV fluoride Titanium IV iodideOther cations Hafnium IV chloride Zirconium IV chlorideRelated compounds Titanium II chloride Titanium III chlorideExcept where otherwise noted data are given for materials in their standard state at 25 C 77 F 100 kPa Y verify what is Y N Infobox references Crystals of frozen titanium tetrachloride melting into the liquid Contents 1 Properties and structure 2 Production 3 Applications 3 1 Production of titanium metal 3 2 Production of titanium dioxide 3 3 Smoke screens 4 Chemical reactions 4 1 Alcoholysis and related reactions 4 2 Complexes with simple ligands 4 3 Redox 4 4 Organometallic chemistry 4 5 Reagent in organic synthesis 5 Toxicity and safety considerations 6 References 7 General reading 8 External linksProperties and structure EditTiCl4 is a dense colourless distillable liquid although crude samples may be yellow or even red brown It is one of the rare transition metal halides that is a liquid at room temperature VCl4 being another example This property reflects the fact that molecules of TiCl4 weakly self associate Most metal chlorides are polymers wherein the chloride atoms bridge between the metals Its melting point is similar to that of CCl4 Ti4 has a closed electronic shell with the same number of electrons as the noble gas argon The tetrahedral structure for TiCl4 is consistent with its description as a d0 metal center Ti4 surrounded by four identical ligands This configuration leads to highly symmetrical structures hence the tetrahedral shape of the molecule TiCl4 adopts similar structures to TiBr4 and TiI4 the three compounds share many similarities TiCl4 and TiBr4 react to give mixed halides TiCl4 xBrx where x 0 1 2 3 4 Magnetic resonance measurements also indicate that halide exchange is also rapid between TiCl4 and VCl4 9 TiCl4 is soluble in toluene and chlorocarbons Certain arenes form complexes of the type C6R6 TiCl3 10 TiCl4 reacts exothermically with donor solvents such as THF to give hexacoordinated adducts 11 Bulkier ligands L give pentacoordinated adducts TiCl4L Production EditTiCl4 is produced by the chloride process which involves the reduction of titanium oxide ores typically ilmenite FeTiO3 with carbon under flowing chlorine at 900 C Impurities are removed by distillation 2 FeTiO3 7 Cl2 6 C 2 TiCl4 2 FeCl3 6 COThe coproduction of FeCl3 is undesirable which has motivated the development of alternative technologies Instead of directly using ilmenite rutile slag is used This material an impure form of TiO2 is derived from ilmenite by removal of iron either using carbon reduction or extraction with sulfuric acid Crude TiCl4 contains a variety of other volatile halides including vanadyl chloride VOCl3 silicon tetrachloride SiCl4 and tin tetrachloride SnCl4 which must be separated Applications EditProduction of titanium metal Edit The world s supply of titanium metal about 250 000 tons per year is made from TiCl4 The conversion involves the reduction of the tetrachloride with magnesium metal This procedure is known as the Kroll process 12 2 Mg TiCl4 2 MgCl2 TiIn the Hunter process liquid sodium is the reducing agent instead of magnesium Production of titanium dioxide Edit Around 90 of the TiCl4 production is used to make the pigment titanium dioxide TiO2 The conversion involves hydrolysis of TiCl4 a process that forms hydrogen chloride 12 TiCl4 2 H2O TiO2 4 HClIn some cases TiCl4 is oxidised directly with oxygen TiCl4 O2 TiO2 2 Cl2Smoke screens Edit It has been used to produce smoke screens since it produces a heavy white smoke that has little tendency to rise Tickle was the standard means of producing on set smoke effects for motion pictures before being phased out in the 1980s due to concerns about hydrated HCl s effects on the respiratory system 13 Chemical reactions EditTitanium tetrachloride is a versatile reagent that forms diverse derivatives including those illustrated below citation needed nbsp Alcoholysis and related reactions Edit A characteristic reaction of TiCl4 is its easy hydrolysis signaled by the release of HCl vapors and titanium oxides and oxychlorides Titanium tetrachloride has been used to create naval smokescreens as the hydrochloric acid aerosol and titanium dioxide that is formed scatter light very efficiently This smoke is corrosive however Alcohols react with TiCl4 to give alkoxides with the formula Ti OR 4 n R alkyl n 1 2 4 As indicated by their formula these alkoxides can adopt complex structures ranging from monomers to tetramers Such compounds are useful in materials science as well as organic synthesis A well known derivative is titanium isopropoxide which is a monomer Titanium bis acetylacetonate dichloride results from treatment of titanium tetrachloride with excess acetylacetone 14 TiCl4 2 Hacac Ti acac 2Cl2 2 HClOrganic amines react with TiCl4 to give complexes containing amido R2N containing and imido RN2 containing complexes With ammonia titanium nitride is formed An illustrative reaction is the synthesis of tetrakis dimethylamido titanium Ti N CH3 2 4 a yellow benzene soluble liquid 15 This molecule is tetrahedral with planar nitrogen centers 16 4 LiN CH3 2 TiCl4 4 LiCl Ti N CH3 2 4Complexes with simple ligands Edit TiCl4 is a Lewis acid as implicated by its tendency to hydrolyze With the ether THF TiCl4 reacts to give yellow crystals of TiCl4 THF 2 With chloride salts TiCl4 reacts to form sequentially Ti2Cl9 Ti2Cl10 2 see figure above and TiCl6 2 17 The reaction of chloride ions with TiCl4 depends on the counterion N CH2CH2CH2CH3 4 Cl and TiCl4 gives the pentacoordinate complex N CH2CH2CH2CH3 4 TiCl5 whereas smaller N CH2CH3 4 gives N CH2CH3 4 2 Ti2Cl10 These reactions highlight the influence of electrostatics on the structures of compounds with highly ionic bonding Redox Edit Reduction of TiCl4 with aluminium results in one electron reduction The trichloride TiCl3 and tetrachloride have contrasting properties the trichloride is a colored solid being a coordination polymer and is paramagnetic When the reduction is conducted in THF solution the Ti III product converts to the light blue adduct TiCl3 THF 3 Organometallic chemistry Edit Main article Organotitanium compound The organometallic chemistry of titanium typically starts from TiCl4 An important reaction involves sodium cyclopentadienyl to give titanocene dichloride TiCl2 C5H5 2 This compound and many of its derivatives are precursors to Ziegler Natta catalysts Tebbe s reagent useful in organic chemistry is an aluminium containing derivative of titanocene that arises from the reaction of titanocene dichloride with trimethylaluminium It is used for the olefination reactions Arenes such as C6 CH3 6 react to give the piano stool complexes Ti C6R6 Cl3 R H CH3 see figure above 10 This reaction illustrates the high Lewis acidity of the TiCl 3 entity which is generated by abstraction of chloride from TiCl4 by AlCl3 Reagent in organic synthesis Edit TiCl4 finds occasional use in organic synthesis capitalizing on its Lewis acidity its oxophilicity and the electron transfer properties of its reduced titanium halides 18 It is used in the Lewis acid catalysed aldol addition 19 Key to this application is the tendency of TiCl4 to activate aldehydes RCHO by formation of adducts such as RCHO TiCl4OC H R Toxicity and safety considerations EditHazards posed by titanium tetrachloride generally arise from its reaction with water that releases hydrochloric acid which is severely corrosive itself and whose vapors are also extremely irritating TiCl4 is a strong Lewis acid which exothermically forms adducts with even weak bases such as THF and water References Edit Eremenko B V Bezuglaya T N Savitskaya A N Malysheva M L Kozlov I S Bogodist L G 2001 Stability of Aqueous Dispersions of the Hydrated Titanium Dioxide Prepared by Titanium Tetrachloride Hydrolysis Colloid Journal 63 2 173 178 doi 10 1023 A 1016673605744 S2CID 93971747 titanium IV chloride 1M soln in dichloromethane Alfa Aesar Retrieved 7 March 2018 Titanium IV chloride solution 1 0 M in toluene Sigma Aldrich Retrieved 7 March 2018 Butts Edward H De patent US3021349A a b Zumdahl Steven S 2009 Chemical Principles 6th ed Houghton Mifflin p A23 ISBN 978 0 618 94690 7 Classifications CL Inventory echa europa eu 1 Archived 2013 02 17 at the Wayback Machine American Chemistry Council Titanium Tetrachloride Stepping Stone to Amazing Technology Archived copy Archived from the original on 2014 03 19 Retrieved 2013 04 10 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link Iowa State University Chemistry Material Safety Data Sheets Webb S P Gordon M S 1999 Intermolecular Self Interactions of the Titanium Tetrahalides TiX4 X F Cl Br J Am Chem Soc 121 11 2552 2560 doi 10 1021 ja983339i a b Calderazzo F Ferri I Pampaloni G Troyanov S 1996 h6 Arene Derivatives of Titanium IV Zirconium IV and Hafnium IV J Organomet Chem 518 1 2 189 196 doi 10 1016 0022 328X 96 06194 3 Manzer L E 1982 Tetrahydrofuran Complexes of Selected Early Transition Metals Inorganic Syntheses Vol 21 pp 135 40 doi 10 1002 9780470132524 ch31 ISBN 978 0 470 13252 4 a b Volz Hans G et al 2006 Pigments Inorganic Inorganic Pigments Ullmann s Encyclopedia of Industrial Chemistry Weinheim Wiley VCH doi 10 1002 14356007 a20 243 pub2 ISBN 978 3527306732 The Royal Navy at War DVD London Imperial War Museum 2005 Wilkie C A Lin G Haworth D T 1979 Cis Dihalobis 2 4 Pentaedionato Titanium IV Complexes Inorganic Syntheses pp 145 148 doi 10 1002 9780470132500 ch33 ISBN 9780470132500 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a journal ignored help Bradey D C Thomas M 1960 Some Dialkylamino derivatives of Titanium and Zirconium J Chem Soc 3857 3861 doi 10 1039 JR9600003857 M E Davie T Foerster S Parsons C Pulham D W H Rankin B A Smart 2006 The Crystal Structure of Tetrakis dimethylamino titanium IV Polyhedron 25 4 923 929 doi 10 1016 j poly 2005 10 019 Creaser C S Creighton J A 1975 Pentachloro and Pentabromotitanate IV ions Dalton Trans 14 1402 1405 doi 10 1039 DT9750001402 Gundersen L L Rise F Undheim K 2004 Titanium IV chloride In Paquette L ed Encyclopedia of Reagents for Organic Synthesis New York NY J Wiley amp Sons Mariappan Periasamy 2002 New synthetic methods using the TiCl4 NR3 reagent system Arkivoc p 151 166 General reading EditHolleman A F Wiberg E 2001 Inorganic Chemistry San Diego CA Academic Press ISBN 978 0 12 352651 9 Greenwood Norman N Earnshaw Alan 1997 Chemistry of the Elements 2nd ed Butterworth Heinemann ISBN 978 0 08 037941 8 External links EditTitanium tetrachloride Health Hazard Information NIST Standard Reference Database ChemSub Online Titanium tetrachloride Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Titanium tetrachloride amp oldid 1173681903, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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