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In chemistry, a mixed oxide is a somewhat informal name for an oxide that contains cations of more than one chemical element or cations of a single element in several states of oxidation.
The term is usually applied to solid ionic compounds that contain the oxide anion O and two or more element cations. Typical examples are ilmenite , a mixed oxide of iron and titanium cations, perovskite and garnet. The cations may be the same element in different ionization states: a notable example is magnetite Fe3O4, which contains the cations Fe and Fe in 1:2 ratio. Other notable examples include red lead Pb3O4, the ferrites, and the yttrium aluminum garnet Y3Al5O12, used in lasers.
The term is sometimes also applied to compounds of oxygen and two or more other elements, where some or all of the oxygen atoms are covalently bound into oxyanions. In sodium zincate Na2ZnO2, for example, the oxygens are bound to the zinc atoms forming zincate anions.
Sometimes the term is applied loosely to solid solutions of metal oxides rather than chemical compounds, or to fine mixtures of two or more oxides.