Category
page 2Oxides
Mill scale
chemical compound
aluminium oxynitride
transparent polycrystalline ceramic
Boron suboxide
chemical compound
terbium(III,IV) oxide
chemical compound
dibromine monoxide
chemical compound

indium gallium zinc oxide
semiconducting material
technetium(IV) oxide
chemical compound
aluminium(I) oxide
chemical compound
bismuth strontium calcium copper oxide
family of high-temperature superconductors
polonium monoxide
chemical compound
polonium(IV) oxide
chemical compound
bismuth ferrite
chemical compound
digallium monoxide
chemical compound
dineptunium pentaoxide
chemical compound
curium(IV) oxide
chemical compound
berkelium(III) oxide
chemical compound
potassium osmate(VI) dihydrate
chemical compound
silicon oxynitride
chemical compound
praseodymium(III,IV) oxide
chemical compound
tellurium monoxide
Compound of tellurium and oxygen
gadolinium gallium garnet
synthetic crystalline material of the garnet group
dibromine pentoxide
chemical compound
berkelium(IV) oxide
chemical compound
lead oxide
group of inorganic compounds with formulas including lead (Pb) and oxygen (O)
cuprate superconductor
type of high-temperature superconductor
californium(III) oxide
chemical compound
carbonyl selenide
chemical compound
arsenic tetroxide
chemical compound
Bromine oxide
Wikimedia disambiguation page
bismuth pentoxide
chemical compound
europium(II) oxide
chemical compound
oxidobromine(.)
chemical compound
Nitryl
right|thumb|Nitrogen dioxide
radium oxide
chemical compound
Han purple and Han blue
artificial barium copper silicate pigments developed in ancient China during the Han dynasty
Olation
In inorganic chemistry, olation is the process by which metal ions form polymeric oxides in aqueous solution. The phenomenon is important for understanding the relationship between metal aquo complexes and metal oxides, which are represented by many minerals.
praseodymium(IV) oxide
chemical compound
Schikorr reaction
transformation of Fe(OH)2 into Fe3O4 with hydrogen release
Rare-earth barium copper oxide
chemical compounds known for exhibiting high temperature superconductivity
californium(IV) oxide
chemical compound
uranium hexaoxide
chemical compound
polonium trioxide
chemical compound
terbium gallium garnet
synthetic garnet
thorium monoxide
chemical compound
protactinium(II) oxide
chemical compound
Diuranium pentoxide
chemical compound
terbium(IV) oxide
chemical compound
trihydrogen oxide
chemical compound
mixed oxide
oxide that contains cations of more than one chemical element
Transparent ceramics
Type of material
trioxide
A trioxide is a compound with three oxygen atoms. For metals with the M2O3 formula there are several common structures. Al2O3, Cr2O3, Fe2O3, and V2O3 adopt the corundum structure. Many rare earth oxides adopt the "A-type rare earth structure" which is hexagonal. Several others plus indium oxide adopt the "C-type rare earth structure", also called "bixbyite", which is cubic and related to the fluorite structure.
bismuth silicon oxide
chemical compound