Pervanadyl (VO+2) is a pale yellow[1]oxycation of vanadium(V). It is the predominant vanadium(V) species in acidic solutions with pH between 0 and 2, and its salts are formed by protonation of vanadium(V) oxide in such solutions:[2][3]
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^Yamada, Shinkichi.; Ukei, Yuko.; Tanaka, Motoharu. (April 1976). "Kinetics and mechanism of the complexation reactions of pervanadyl ion with some aminopolycarboxylates". Inorganic Chemistry. 15 (4): 964–967. doi:10.1021/ic50158a048.
^Pal, Satyanarayan; Pal, Samudranil (2000). "A dimeric pervanadyl (VO2+) complex with a tridentate Schiff base ligand". Journal of Chemical Crystallography. 30 (5): 329–333. doi:10.1023/A:1009561224540. S2CID91300997.
^Jin, Jutao; Fu, Xiaogang; Liu, Qiao; Liu, Yanru; Wei, Zhiyang; Niu, Kexing; Zhang, Junyan (25 June 2013). "Identifying the Active Site in Nitrogen-Doped Graphene for the VO 2+ /VO 2 + Redox Reaction". ACS Nano. 7 (6): 4764–4773. doi:10.1021/nn3046709. PMID23647240.