Journal of the American Chemical Society, Vol.126, No.50, 16639-16652, 2004
Electronic and molecular structure of high-spin d(4) complexes: Experimental and theoretical study of the [Cr(D2O)(6)](2+) cation in Tutton's salts
Variable-temperature spectroscopic and crystallographic studies on the chromium(II) Tutton's salts, (M-I)(2)Cr(X2O)(6)(SO4)(2), where M-I = ND4+, Rb+, or Cs+, and X = H or D, are reported. Inelastic neutron scattering (INS) and multifrequency EPR experiments facilitate a rigorous definition of the ground-state electronic structure from 1.5 up to 296 K, which is unprecedented for a high-spin d(4) complex. Modeling of the INS data using a conventional S = 2 spin Hamiltonian reveals a dramatic variation in the axial and rhombic zero-field-splitting parameters. For the ammonium salt, D and E are -2.454(3) and 0.087(3) cm(-1) at 10 K and -2.29(2) and 0.16(3) cm(-1) at 250 K, respectively. A temperature variation in the stereochemistry of the [Cr(D2O)(6)](2+) complex is also identified, with an apparent coalescence of the long and medium Cr-O bond lengths at temperatures above 150 K. The corresponding changes for the rubidium and cesium salts are notable, though less pronounced. The experimental quantities are interpreted using a (5)Ecircle timese Jahn-Teller Hamiltonian, perturbed by anisotropic strain. It is shown that good agreement can be obtained only by employing a model in which the anisotropic strain is itself temperature dependent. A new theoretical approach for calculating variable-temperature EPR spectra of high-spin d(4) complexes, developed within the (5)Ecircle timese coupling model, is described. Differences between spin-Hamiltonian parameters determined by INS and EPR are consistent with those of the different time scales of the two techniques.