metallhalogenides
Metallhalogenides, or metal halides, are binary compounds formed from a metal and a halogen (fluorine, chlorine, bromine, iodine, or astatine). They have the general formula MXn, where M is a metal and X is a halogen, and the exact stoichiometry reflects the metal’s typical oxidation state and coordination. The most common families are alkali metal halides (MX), alkaline earth metal halides (MX2), and a broad range of transition metal halides (such as FeCl2, TiCl4, NiBr2) that exhibit diverse bonding, from ionic to covalent, and variable structures from molecular to extended lattices.
Alkali and alkaline earth halides typically form colorless crystalline solids with high melting points. Many are
Synthesis usually occurs by direct combination of the metal with the halogen at elevated temperature, halogenation
Naturally occurring halide minerals, such as sodium chloride and calcium fluoride, illustrate the natural occurrence of