Formula of Oxone












4















A problem in my book asked the commercial name of sodium peroxide. The answer given was 'Oxone'. Even the website https://www.911metallurgist.com/oxone/ mentions oxone as sodium peroxide.



However, upon searching 'Oxone' on Wikipedia, gives another compound named potassium peroxymonosulfate.



So what exactly is Oxone?










share|improve this question




















  • 2





    The second one.

    – Zhe
    2 hours ago











  • Look at 911metallurgist.com/oxone. It mentions oxone as sodium peroxide

    – Akshat Joshi
    2 hours ago








  • 2





    I believe if you search darknet for oxone, you are also going to find some new funky chemicals with the same name. Don't take everything posted on the internet for granted.

    – andselisk
    1 hour ago
















4















A problem in my book asked the commercial name of sodium peroxide. The answer given was 'Oxone'. Even the website https://www.911metallurgist.com/oxone/ mentions oxone as sodium peroxide.



However, upon searching 'Oxone' on Wikipedia, gives another compound named potassium peroxymonosulfate.



So what exactly is Oxone?










share|improve this question




















  • 2





    The second one.

    – Zhe
    2 hours ago











  • Look at 911metallurgist.com/oxone. It mentions oxone as sodium peroxide

    – Akshat Joshi
    2 hours ago








  • 2





    I believe if you search darknet for oxone, you are also going to find some new funky chemicals with the same name. Don't take everything posted on the internet for granted.

    – andselisk
    1 hour ago














4












4








4


1






A problem in my book asked the commercial name of sodium peroxide. The answer given was 'Oxone'. Even the website https://www.911metallurgist.com/oxone/ mentions oxone as sodium peroxide.



However, upon searching 'Oxone' on Wikipedia, gives another compound named potassium peroxymonosulfate.



So what exactly is Oxone?










share|improve this question
















A problem in my book asked the commercial name of sodium peroxide. The answer given was 'Oxone'. Even the website https://www.911metallurgist.com/oxone/ mentions oxone as sodium peroxide.



However, upon searching 'Oxone' on Wikipedia, gives another compound named potassium peroxymonosulfate.



So what exactly is Oxone?







inorganic-chemistry identification






share|improve this question















share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited 1 hour ago









andselisk

14.2k648105




14.2k648105










asked 2 hours ago









Akshat JoshiAkshat Joshi

794




794








  • 2





    The second one.

    – Zhe
    2 hours ago











  • Look at 911metallurgist.com/oxone. It mentions oxone as sodium peroxide

    – Akshat Joshi
    2 hours ago








  • 2





    I believe if you search darknet for oxone, you are also going to find some new funky chemicals with the same name. Don't take everything posted on the internet for granted.

    – andselisk
    1 hour ago














  • 2





    The second one.

    – Zhe
    2 hours ago











  • Look at 911metallurgist.com/oxone. It mentions oxone as sodium peroxide

    – Akshat Joshi
    2 hours ago








  • 2





    I believe if you search darknet for oxone, you are also going to find some new funky chemicals with the same name. Don't take everything posted on the internet for granted.

    – andselisk
    1 hour ago








2




2





The second one.

– Zhe
2 hours ago





The second one.

– Zhe
2 hours ago













Look at 911metallurgist.com/oxone. It mentions oxone as sodium peroxide

– Akshat Joshi
2 hours ago







Look at 911metallurgist.com/oxone. It mentions oxone as sodium peroxide

– Akshat Joshi
2 hours ago






2




2





I believe if you search darknet for oxone, you are also going to find some new funky chemicals with the same name. Don't take everything posted on the internet for granted.

– andselisk
1 hour ago





I believe if you search darknet for oxone, you are also going to find some new funky chemicals with the same name. Don't take everything posted on the internet for granted.

– andselisk
1 hour ago










1 Answer
1






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4














From [1, p. 828] (and many other organic chemistry textbooks), Oxone's formula is equally written as $ce{KHSO5 * 0.5KHSO4 * 0.5K2SO4}$ or $ce{2KHSO5 * KHSO4 * K2SO4}$, a potassium monopersulfate triple salt:




Oxone®
$(ce{2KHSO5 * KHSO4 * K2SO4})$



A “triple salt”, providing a convenient source of potassium monoperoxysulfate (potassium hydrogen persulfate)

[37222-66-51]



Commercially available



Notes: This reagent is a useful oxidizing agent.



enter image description here




Sodium peroxide is not mentioned as Oxone in any of the respectable literature sources I flipped through; rather, its names would be Solozone and Flocool.



References




  1. Mundy, B. P.; Ellerd, M. G.; Favaloro, F. G. Name Reactions and Reagents in Organic Synthesis, 2nd ed.; Wiley: Hoboken, N.J.; 2005.






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    4














    From [1, p. 828] (and many other organic chemistry textbooks), Oxone's formula is equally written as $ce{KHSO5 * 0.5KHSO4 * 0.5K2SO4}$ or $ce{2KHSO5 * KHSO4 * K2SO4}$, a potassium monopersulfate triple salt:




    Oxone®
    $(ce{2KHSO5 * KHSO4 * K2SO4})$



    A “triple salt”, providing a convenient source of potassium monoperoxysulfate (potassium hydrogen persulfate)

    [37222-66-51]



    Commercially available



    Notes: This reagent is a useful oxidizing agent.



    enter image description here




    Sodium peroxide is not mentioned as Oxone in any of the respectable literature sources I flipped through; rather, its names would be Solozone and Flocool.



    References




    1. Mundy, B. P.; Ellerd, M. G.; Favaloro, F. G. Name Reactions and Reagents in Organic Synthesis, 2nd ed.; Wiley: Hoboken, N.J.; 2005.






    share|improve this answer






























      4














      From [1, p. 828] (and many other organic chemistry textbooks), Oxone's formula is equally written as $ce{KHSO5 * 0.5KHSO4 * 0.5K2SO4}$ or $ce{2KHSO5 * KHSO4 * K2SO4}$, a potassium monopersulfate triple salt:




      Oxone®
      $(ce{2KHSO5 * KHSO4 * K2SO4})$



      A “triple salt”, providing a convenient source of potassium monoperoxysulfate (potassium hydrogen persulfate)

      [37222-66-51]



      Commercially available



      Notes: This reagent is a useful oxidizing agent.



      enter image description here




      Sodium peroxide is not mentioned as Oxone in any of the respectable literature sources I flipped through; rather, its names would be Solozone and Flocool.



      References




      1. Mundy, B. P.; Ellerd, M. G.; Favaloro, F. G. Name Reactions and Reagents in Organic Synthesis, 2nd ed.; Wiley: Hoboken, N.J.; 2005.






      share|improve this answer




























        4












        4








        4







        From [1, p. 828] (and many other organic chemistry textbooks), Oxone's formula is equally written as $ce{KHSO5 * 0.5KHSO4 * 0.5K2SO4}$ or $ce{2KHSO5 * KHSO4 * K2SO4}$, a potassium monopersulfate triple salt:




        Oxone®
        $(ce{2KHSO5 * KHSO4 * K2SO4})$



        A “triple salt”, providing a convenient source of potassium monoperoxysulfate (potassium hydrogen persulfate)

        [37222-66-51]



        Commercially available



        Notes: This reagent is a useful oxidizing agent.



        enter image description here




        Sodium peroxide is not mentioned as Oxone in any of the respectable literature sources I flipped through; rather, its names would be Solozone and Flocool.



        References




        1. Mundy, B. P.; Ellerd, M. G.; Favaloro, F. G. Name Reactions and Reagents in Organic Synthesis, 2nd ed.; Wiley: Hoboken, N.J.; 2005.






        share|improve this answer















        From [1, p. 828] (and many other organic chemistry textbooks), Oxone's formula is equally written as $ce{KHSO5 * 0.5KHSO4 * 0.5K2SO4}$ or $ce{2KHSO5 * KHSO4 * K2SO4}$, a potassium monopersulfate triple salt:




        Oxone®
        $(ce{2KHSO5 * KHSO4 * K2SO4})$



        A “triple salt”, providing a convenient source of potassium monoperoxysulfate (potassium hydrogen persulfate)

        [37222-66-51]



        Commercially available



        Notes: This reagent is a useful oxidizing agent.



        enter image description here




        Sodium peroxide is not mentioned as Oxone in any of the respectable literature sources I flipped through; rather, its names would be Solozone and Flocool.



        References




        1. Mundy, B. P.; Ellerd, M. G.; Favaloro, F. G. Name Reactions and Reagents in Organic Synthesis, 2nd ed.; Wiley: Hoboken, N.J.; 2005.







        share|improve this answer














        share|improve this answer



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        edited 49 mins ago









        orthocresol

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        38.5k7112233










        answered 1 hour ago









        andseliskandselisk

        14.2k648105




        14.2k648105






























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