Plumbite
In chemistry, plumbite is the PbO2−2 oxyanion or hydrated forms, or any salt containing this anion. In these salts, lead is in the oxidation state +2. It is the traditional term for the IUPAC name plumbate(II).
For example, lead(II) oxide (PbO) dissolves in alkali to form salts containing the HPbO−2 anion (hydrogen plumbite):[1]
- PbO + OH− → HPbO−2
Lead(II) hydroxide also dissolves in excess alkali to form the [Pb(OH)6]4− anion (hexahydroxyplumbate(II)):[2]
- Pb(OH)2 + 4 OH− → [Pb(OH)6]4−
The plumbite ion is a weak reducing agent. When it functions as one, it is oxidized to the plumbate ion.
See also
- Plumbate
- Lead
- Lead(II) oxide
References
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Lead compounds
- Pb(BiO3)2
- PbBr2
- Pb(C5H5)2
- Pb(C2H3O2)2
- PbC2O4
- PbC32H16N8
- PbCl2
- Pb(ClO4)2
- PbCO3
- PbCrO4
- PbF2
- PbHAsO4
- PbI2
- Pb(C
11H
23COO)
2 - Pb(NO3)2
- Pb(N3)2
- PbO
- Pb(OH)2
- PbPo
- PbP7
- Pb3(PO4)2
- PbS
- Pb(SCN)2
- PbSe
- PbSO4
- PbSeO4
- PbTe
- PbTiO3
- PbGeO3
- C
36H
70PbO
4 - plumbite
- PbC2 (hypothetical)
- Pb3O4
- Pb(C2H3O2)4
- PbCl4
- PbF4
- PbH4
- PbO2
- PbS2
- plumbate
- Pb(OH)4 (hypothetical)
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