If you mixed Nitrogen Dioxide gas as a liquid and chlorine in liquid form, do you think the solution would turn green, yellow or possibly blue? I was
wondering about this. I dont handle toxic gasses to test it out in a small quantity.
Would it form Nitrosyl chloride (which is a yellow gas)?
[Edited on 9-10-2020 by ChemichaelRXN]itsallgoodjames - 14-10-2020 at 07:41
Nitrogen dioxide forms dinitrogen tetroxide when it liquifies. Pure dinitrogen tetroxide is colorless. I imagine if you added chlorine to pure
dinitrogen tetroxide, it'd just mix and turn yellow, and nothing would really happen. If on the other hand, it was contaminated with dinitrogen
trioxide, nitrosyl chloride would likely formunionised - 14-10-2020 at 10:06
If you're responding to me, it's mostly speculation, because nitrosyl chloride is made by the reaction of nitrogen monoxide with chlorine. But like I
said, it's more speculation than anythingunionised - 14-10-2020 at 10:49