Charge transfer in mixed-valence solids. Part IV. Electronic spectra of hexachloroantimonates(III,V)
Abstract
Four series of hexachloroantimonate(III,V) salts, AI2SbxSn1–xCl6(AI= NH4+, Cs+, and MeNH3+), and Cs2SbIIIy-InIII½–ySbV½Cl6 have been prepared and characterised by chemical analysis, X-ray powder diffraction, and far-i.r. measurements. Visible and u.v. spectra of all the compounds were measured at room temperature by diffuse reflectance and, in the case of the MeNH3+ salts, by single-crystal transmission between room temperature and 6°K. The concentration-dependence of the spectra showed that the intensity of the visible mixed-valence band was proportional to the concentration of SbIII–Sbv pairs in the hexachlorostannate(IV) lattice. From the absolute intensity of the mixed-valence transition it was found that delocalisation of the optical (5s) electrons of SbCl63– on to the neighbouring SbCl6– was less than 0·1% in the ground state, in agreement with the far-i.r. results. The band, therefore, is almost purely charge-transfer in character. The temperature-dependence of the half-width of the band between 300 and 6°K could be accounted for in terms of broadening by a single effective frequency of 210 cm.–1. The relation between this optically derived frequency and the ground-state vibrational frequencies of SbCl63– and SbCl6– is considered.
- This article is part of the themed collection: In memory of Peter Day