Zakład Fizyki Wysokich Ciśnień - publikacje

Structure, molecular motion, and phase transition of a highly disordered crystal [Co(NH 3) 6](ClO 4) 3

Górska N.1, Inaba A.1, Hirao Y.2, Mikuli E.3, Hołderna-Natkaniec K.4
  • 1Research Center for Structural Thermodynamics, Graduate School of Science, Osaka University, Toyonaka, Osaka 560-0043, Japan
  • 2Department of Chemistry, Graduate School of Science, Osaka University, Toyonaka, Osaka 560-0043, Japan
  • 3Department of Chemical Physics, Faculty of Chemistry, Jagiellonian University, Ingarden 3, 30-060 Kraków, Poland
  • 4Institute of Physics, A. Mickiewicz University, Umultowska 85, 61-614 Poznań, Poland
RSC Advances, 2 (10), pp.4283-4291, 2012
DOI:: 10.1039/c2ra01184k
Abstract: Four crystalline phases of the coordination compound [Co(NH 3) 6](ClO 4) 3 are identified by adiabatic calorimetry. An order-disorder phase transition (II→I) occurs at T C1 = 334.2 K with an entropy change of 6.4 J K -1 mol -1. The X-ray single-crystal diffraction at 340 K demonstrates that phase I is cubic (Z = 4) and that two types of anions exist with different types of disorder. In phase II at 200 K, five anions (out of twelve) become ordered and three cations (out of four) are deformed to give a lower symmetry, still in a cubic system (Z = 32). This is attributed to orientational ordering of the anions triggered by NH⋯O hydrogen-bonding interactions. The 1H-NMR study suggests that some NH 3 ligands are oriented because of hydrogen bonding, whereas some cations reorient isotropically like in phase I. The energy required to reorient an ordered anion in the crystal lattice of phase II is estimated from the excess heat capacity below T C1 to be 40 kJ mol -1, which corresponds to the energy needed to break the hydrogen bond, 8 kJ mol -1. While the transitions at 111.7 K (III→II) and 97.6 K (IV→II), with an entropy change of 5.7 J K -1 mol -1, do not substantially affect the dynamics, they are attributed to further orientational ordering of the anions still disordered in phase II. © The Royal Society of Chemistry 2012.
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