How to open .CXF files on iOS
To open .CXF files on iOS, iOS typically won’t have built-in support for Chemical eXchange Format; use the Files app to save the .CXF file, then transfer it to a desktop computer with chemistry software (such as STN Express) to open it.
Step-by-step instructions
- iOS typically won’t have built-in support for Chemical eXchange Format; use the Files app to save the .CXF file, then transfer it to a desktop computer with chemistry software (such as STN Express) to open it.
Recommended software
- Textastic
- Kodex
- Files app
Alternative methods
- Open .CXF in a browser-based viewer if desktop apps fail.
- Try opening .CXF on iOS with a secondary app to rule out app-specific issues.
- Convert .CXF only with trusted tools when direct opening is not possible.
Common issues
The .CXF file won’t open or shows “unknown format”
Most systems don’t include a default viewer for specialized chemical exchange formats, and some apps only support certain chemical formats or subsets.
- Open the file from within a chemistry tool that supports CXF (for example, CAS STN Express is documented to open *.cxf).
- Confirm the file is actually Chemical eXchange Format (CXF); the .cxf extension may be used by other, unrelated formats in some environments.
- Ask the sender to export to another widely supported chemical format if your software cannot import CXF.
File opens, but the structure/data looks incomplete or corrupted
The file may be truncated, damaged in transfer, or not fully supported by the specific importer/version you are using.
- Re-download or re-transfer the file (avoid copy/paste through messaging apps that may alter attachments).
- Try opening/importing in the originating workflow tool (or in STN Express, which explicitly supports *.cxf).
- If possible, ask for a fresh export from the source system.
Your system identifies it as chemical/x-cxf, but there is no application to open it
Some Linux/desktop MIME databases include chemical/x-cxf mappings, but that does not guarantee an installed viewer/editor.
- Check your installed chemistry software for an Import/Open option that mentions CXF.
- If no compatible Linux/macOS application is available in your environment, use a Windows system with STN Express (per CAS documentation).
Security note
Treat .CXF as untrusted input when it comes from unknown sources: while it is a data format, any complex parser can have vulnerabilities, so prefer opening it in well-maintained, up-to-date chemistry software.