Spectrochemistry of solutions. Part 22. A study of the complexation of zinc(II), cadmium(II) and mercury(II) by cyanide in liquid ammonia by vibrational spectroscopy
Abstract
The stepwise ligation patterns for the complexation by CN– of Zn2+, Cd2+ and Hg2+ in liquid ammonia solutions have been established from analyses of the infrared and Raman spectra of MII/CN– mixtures between 295 and 213 K. All the cyano-complexes are soluble and complexation, complete at the 4 : 1 stage for all three metal cations, proceeds by direct replacement of the solvating NH3 by CN– on tetrahedrally co-ordinated Zn2+ and Hg2+. Cyano-ligation of Cd2+ is quite different with octahedral 1 : 1 and 2 : 1 complexes, followed by a change to tetrahedral 3 : 1 and 4 : 1 complexes. There is no evidence for multinuclear complex formation, and mononuclear complexation is strong for all three metals; no uncomplexed CN– is present until the solution composition exceeds [CN–]/[MII]= 4.0:1. Stable outer-sphere complexes (or ion associates) form between the 4:1 complexes and the Na+ cocation, viz.[Na+⋯– NC-M(CN)3], and there is some evidence for similar association of the 3 : 1 complex of Hg2+, i.e.[Na+⋯–NC–M(CN)2(NH3)]. Assignments of the vsym(CN), vasym(CN) and v(M–N) stretching frequencies of the complexes are presented.