Sulfate fluoride

The sulfate fluorides are double salts that contain both sulfate and fluoride anions. They are in the class of mixed anion compounds. Some of these minerals are deposited in fumaroles.

Fluoride sulfates were first discovered by Jean Charles de Marignac in 1859.[1][2]

Some elements such as cobalt or uranium can form complexes that contain fluoride and sulfate groups, and would be referred to as fluoro and sulfato metallates.

  1. ^ Avdontceva, Margarita S.; Zolotarev, Andrey A.; Krivovichev, Sergey V. (November 2015). "Order–disorder phase transition in the antiperovskite-type structure of synthetic kogarkoite, Na3SO4F". Journal of Solid State Chemistry. 231: 42–46. Bibcode:2015JSSCh.231...42A. doi:10.1016/j.jssc.2015.07.033.
  2. ^ de Marignac, Jean Charles (1859). Recherches sur les formes cristallines et la composition chimique de divers sels. p. 221. {{cite book}}: |work= ignored (help)