Potassium ferrooxalate


Potassium ferrooxalate, also known as potassium bisoxalatoferrate, is a salt with the formula , sometimes abbreviated. The ferrooxalate anion is a transition metal complex, consisting of an atom of iron in the +2 oxidation state bound to two bidentate oxalate ions. The anion charge is balanced by two cations of potassium.
The anhydrous salt is orange-yellow and dissolves in water to give a red solution. Crystals of the dihydrate ·2 are golden yellow in color.
Potassium ferrooxalate is believed to be formed when the related compound potassium ferrioxalate is decomposed by light in solution or heated above 296 °C.

Preparation

While the ferrooxalate anion had been previously identified in solution, the solid salt was described only in 1992, by J. Ladriere. He obtained it by dissolving the approriate amounts of potassium oxalate dihydrate ·2 and iron oxalate dihydrate ·2 in boiling water, partially evaporating the red solution, and cooling it to room temperature, when gold-yellow crystals of K2Fe2·2 precipitated.

Properties

Thermal decomposition

The dihydrate loses two water molecules at 200 °C.
The anhydrous salt is stable in the absence of oxygen up to about 470 °C, when it decomposes into potassium oxalate and ferrous oxide .