Ronald F. Ziolo, Richard H. Stanford,
George R.
Rossman, Harry B. Gray Arthur Noyes Laboratory of Chemical Physics California Institute of Technology, Pasadena, CA 91125 |
The final product
resulting from
the reaction of KMnO4 and KCN in saturated aqueous solution
is a
gold-brown compound K7[(CN)5MnOMn(CN)5]CN,
as
established by a single-crystal X-ray diffraction study. Full-matrix
least-squares
refinement included anisotropic temperature parameters for all atoms
and
converged with a final R index (on F) of 0.091. The structure contains
the oxo
bridged [Mn2O(CN)10]6- ion, which has
2/m
crystallographic symmetry with the bridging oxygen atom lying at a
center of
symmetry. The ion exists in an eclipsed rotomeric configuration. The
Mn-O distance
is relatively short, 1.723 (4) Á. Crystallographically independent
potassium
ions are coordinated to the nitrogen ends of cyanide groups in trigonal
prismatic, octahedral, and square antiprismatic geometries. Crystal
data are as
follows: orthorhombic; space group Ibam; a = 12.397 (8), b =
12.772 (8),
c = 14.618 (7) Å (temperature 23°); Z = 4; dobsd
= 1.98, dcalcd
= 1.97 g/cm3. The synthesis, isolation, and physical characteristics of
K7[Mn20(CN)io]CN
are reported along with spectral and magnetic data. The principal
features in
the infrared spectrum are cyanide stretching bands centered around 2090
cm-1.
The optical absorption spectrum in a KBr pellet consists of a primary
band at
370 nm with a prominent shoulder at 410 nm and a weak shoulder at
approximately
610 nm. The gold-brown crystals are strongly pleochroic, the crystals
being colorless
when the E vector is parallel to the long needle axis. This
characteristic
serves as a convenient means of identification for this substance. At
room
temperature K7[Mn2O(CN)10]CN is
diamagnetic.