dihalomethane

The dihalomethanes are organic compounds in which two hydrogen atoms in methane are replaced by halogen atoms. They belong to the haloalkanes, specifically the subgroup of halomethanes, and contains ten members.

There are four members with only one kind of halogen atom: difluoromethane, dichloromethane, dibromomethane and diiodomethane.

class="wikitable float-right" style="text-align:center; font-size:90%;"
-

| Structural Formula

| 100px

| 100px

| 100px

| 100px

-

| Name

| Difluoromethane

DichloromethaneDibromomethaneDiiodomethane
-

| Melting point

| −136 °C{{GESTIS|ZVG=100470|CAS=75-10-5|Name=Difluormethan|Date=2020-02-29}}

| −97 °C{{GESTIS|Name=Dichlormethan|ZVG=12630|CAS=75-09-2|Date=2020-02-29}}

| −52 °C{{GESTIS|Name=Dibrommethan|ZVG=30900|CAS=74-95-3|Date=2020-02-29}}

| 6 °C{{GESTIS|Name=Methyleniodid|ZVG=492386|CAS=75-11-6|Date=2020-02-29}}

-

| Boiling point

| −51,7 °C

| 40 °C

| 97 °C

| decomposes

-

| Space-filling model

| 90px

| 110px

| 120px

| 130px

There are six members with two kinds of halogen atoms:

References

{{Reflist}}

See also

{{Halomethanes}}

{{Commons category|Dihalomethanes}}

Category:Chemical substances