n.
[Nitroso- + -yl.]
(Chem.) The radical -NO, called also the nitroso group. The term is sometimes loosely used to designate certain nitro compounds; as, nitrosyl sulphuric acid. Used also adjectively.
| Dictionary: Ni·tro·syl |
[Nitroso- + -yl.]
(Chem.) The radical -NO, called also the nitroso group. The term is sometimes loosely used to designate certain nitro compounds; as, nitrosyl sulphuric acid. Used also adjectively.
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| Medical Dictionary: ni·tro·syl |
| Wikipedia: Nitrosyl |
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Nitrosyls are molecules with the general formula RNO, where R represents an unspecified substituent. A common example is nitrosyl chloride, NOCl (although its structure is better represented ONCl).
Nitrosyl also refers to the discrete molecule nitric oxide, NO. Nitric oxide is a stable radical, having an unpaired electron.
Reduction of nitric oxide gives the hyponitrite anion, NO−:
Oxidation of NO yields the nitrosonium cation, NO+:
Nitric oxide can serve as a ligand in complexes. The resulting complexes are called metal nitrosyls, and can bond to a metal atom in two distinct modes: as NO+ and as NO−. NO+ coordinates linearly, the M−N−O angle being 180°, whereas NO− forms a bent geometry, with an M−N−O angle of approximately 120°.
Nitroso compounds are a class of organic compounds containing the nitroso functional group, R−N=O.
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