Inorganic Chemistry, Vol.37, No.22, 5769-5775, 1998
EPR spectra from "EPR-silent" species : High-field EPR spectroscopy of aqueous chromium(II)
High-field (up to 14.5 T) multifrequency (similar to 90-440 GHz) electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) spectroscopy has been used to probe the non-Kramers, S = 2, Cr2+ ion in frozen aqueous solution, in the presence and absence of the glassing agent, glycerol. Solutions with both chloride and sulfate counterions were investigated. Detailed analysis based on a combination of analytical and full-matrix solutions to the spin Hamiltonian for an S = 2 system gave zero-field splitting parameters D = -2.20(5) cm(-1), E = 0.0(1) cm(-1), and g(perpendicular to) approximate to g(parallel to) = 1.98(2), independent of solvent system and counterion. These results are in agreement with an early single-crystal EPR study of CrSO4. 5H(2)O; however, the present study allows unequivocal determination of the sign of D and shows that in solution [Cr(H2O)(6)](2+) is a perfectly axial system (tetragonally elongated), as opposed to solid CrSO4. 5H(2)O, which showed a measurable E value, indicative of slight orthorhombic distortion as seen in its crystal structure. HF-EPR data is combined with earlier electronic absorption data to provide a complete picture of the electronic structure of Cr2+ in this chemical environment. The results are also compared to a recent HF-EPR study of a Mn3+ complex, which showed that electronic excited states affect the ground state of the complex, but these effects are less pronounced for Cr2+. The present study also shows the applicability of high-field EPR to aqueous solutions of integer-spin ("EPR-silent") transition metal complexes, as previous studies have employed only solid (single-crystal or polycrystalline) samples.