Concept

Nitrous acid

Summary
Nitrous acid (molecular formula HNO2) is a weak and monoprotic acid known only in solution, in the gas phase and in the form of nitrite (NO-2) salts. Nitrous acid is used to make diazonium salts from amines. The resulting diazonium salts are reagents in azo coupling reactions to give azo dyes. Structure In the gas phase, the planar nitrous acid molecule can adopt both a syn and an anti form. The anti form predominates at room temperature, and IR measurements indicate it is more stable by around 2.3 kJ/mol. Image:Trans-nitrous-acid-2D-dimensions.png | Dimensions of the ''anti'' form(from the [[rotational spectroscopy|microwave spectrum]]) Image:Trans-nitrous-acid-3D-balls.png | [[ball-and-stick model|Model]] of the ''anti'' form Image:Cis-nitrous-acid-3D-balls.png | ''syn'' form Preparation Nitrous acid is usually generated by acidification of aqueous solutions of sodium nitrite with a mineral acid. The acidification is usually conducted
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