| Literature DB >> 27258790 |
Dickson O Ojwang1, Jekabs Grins1, Dariusz Wardecki1, Mario Valvo2, Viktor Renman2, Lennart Häggström2, Tore Ericsson2, Torbjörn Gustafsson2, Abdelfattah Mahmoud3, Raphaël P Hermann3,4, Gunnar Svensson1.
Abstract
Copper hexacyanoferrate, Cu(II)[Fe(III)(CN)6]2/3·nH2O, was synthesized, and varied amounts of K(+) ions were inserted via reduction by K2S2O3 (aq). Ideally, the reaction can be written as Cu(II)[Fe(III)(CN)6]2/3·nH2O + 2x/3K(+) + 2x/3e(-) ↔ K2x/3Cu(II)[Fe(II)xFe(III)1-x(CN)6]2/3·nH2O. Infrared, Raman, and Mössbauer spectroscopy studies show that Fe(III) is continuously reduced to Fe(II) with increasing x, accompanied by a decrease of the a-axis of the cubic Fm3̅m unit cell. Elemental analysis of K by inductively coupled plasma shows that the insertion only begins when a significant fraction, ∼20% of the Fe(III), has already been reduced. Thermogravimetric analysis shows a fast exchange of water with ambient atmosphere and a total weight loss of ∼26 wt % upon heating to 180 °C, above which the structure starts to decompose. The crystal structures of Cu(II)[Fe(III)(CN)6]2/3·nH2O and K2/3Cu[Fe(CN)6]2/3·nH2O were refined using synchrotron X-ray powder diffraction data. In both, one-third of the Fe(CN)6 groups are vacant, and the octahedron around Cu(II) is completed by water molecules. In the two structures, difference Fourier maps reveal three additional zeolitic water sites (8c, 32f, and 48g) in the center of the cavities formed by the -Cu-N-C-Fe- framework. The K-containing compound shows an increased electron density at two of these sites (32f and 48g), indicating them to be the preferred positions for the K(+) ions.Entities:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27258790 DOI: 10.1021/acs.inorgchem.6b00227
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Inorg Chem ISSN: 0020-1669 Impact factor: 5.165