CRYSTAL STRUCTURES OF DAWSON-TYPE METAL-SUBSTITUTED POLYOXOTUNGSTATES

R. Mattes, P. Moraw, R. Neier, Ph. Schulte

Institute of Inorganic Chemistry, University Muenster, Wilhelm-Klemm-Str. 8, D-48149 Muenster, Germany.
E-mail:
mattes@uni-muenster.de

Keywords: Heteropolytungstates, metal-substituted Dawson-type ions, arsenotungstates

Metal-substituted polyoxoanions are of great interest in catalysis. Important classes of the compounds with overall Dawson-structures are

An example of the first class is [P2W15Nb3O62]9- [1]. Examples of the second class are [M(II)4(H2O)2(P2W15O56)2]16-, M(II) = Co, Cu, Zn [2] and [Fe(III)4(H2O)2 (P2W15O56)2]12- [3].

We have prepared and characterized the following compounds:

Anion 1 belongs to the rare species of twofold substituted Dawson-ions. It was obtained by attempting the preparation of a sandwich-type dimer compound. 1 is disordered with respect to a longitudinal crystallographic mirror plane, contrary to 2, which is the first example of a crystallographically not disordered threefold-substituted Dawson-ion. Here a W3-triplet is replaced by a Al3O10(H2O)3 unit with three rather regular AlO6 octahedra. The Al-Al distances (307.4 pm) are considerably shorter than the W-W distances within the W3-triplet (341.0 pm) in the opposite site of the anion. The crystallographically ordered blue coloured anion 3 contains a V3-triplet instead of a W3-triplet. In 1-3 the W-W distances are smaller in the substituted part and larger in the unsubstituted part than in the regular Dawson-type polyoxotungstates [4]. Compounds 4a-4d are the first examples of sandwich-type dimer Dawson-anions with arsenic as the heteroatom. Some of them have been characterized by X-ray single crystal diffraction.

Figure

  1. R.G. Finke, D.K. Lyon, N. Nomiya, T.J.R. Weakley, Acta Crystallogr. C46 (1990) 1592.
  2. C.J. Gómez-García, J.J. Borrás-Almenar, E. Coronado, L. Ouahab, Inorg. Chem. 33 (1994) 4016 and references cited.
  3. X. Zhang, Q. Chen, D.C. Duncan, C.F. Campana, C.L. Hill, Inorg. Chem. 36 (1997) 4208.
  4. H. Neubert, J. Fuchs, Z. Naturforsch. 42b (1987) 951.