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Mn(acetylacetonate)3 Synthesis & Characterization The acac Ligand • Acetylacetonate (acac) is a bidentate anionic ligand (‐1 charge). • We start with acetylacetone (or Hacac) which has the IUPAC name 2,4‐pentanedione. • Bonding consists of a resonance structure between: a covalent bond through one O and a dative bond through another O, and a delocalzied picture. All about Mn • Manganese (3d54s2) often adopts these oxidation states: +2, +3, and +7, MnCl24•H2O Mn(II) pale pink Mn(acac)3 Mn(III) dark brown KMnO4 Mn(VII) intense purple (these colors are imporant indicators in this, and many other, inorganic experiments). • Mn(acac)3 forms a D3 structure but has a “local” coordination environment (MnO6) that is approximately octahedral Splitting of Oh Environment • The 3 acac ligands form an (approximately) octahedral environment around Mn. • The degeneracy of the 5 d‐orbitals is removed, and the 3d orbitals separate into a t2g set and an eg set. spherical field weak field strong field • The purpose of this lab in part is to work out whether we have a weak field or strong field metal‐ligand complex. Characterization • UV‐Vis Absorption: Provides insight into complex’s energy level splitting • Guoy Balance and Evans Method NMR: Measures magnetic susceptibility to determine # of unpaired electrons (can distinguish between high spin and low spin species. UV‐Vis Absorption • We record UV‐Vis absorption in order to measure the energy of transitions between ground and excited electronic states. (And use Tanabe‐Sugano diagrams!) • The “strength” of the transition is often reflected in the molar absorptivity: – Weak spectra would be typical of d‐to‐d transitions – Intense/strong spectra would be typical of metal‐to‐ligand, or ligand‐to‐metal charge transfer • The best way to report such spectra is the frequency (ν=1/wavelength, λ) at the “peak” of the absorption, but its linewidth is also a useful measure. Fitting a Gaussian function to the spectrum is the most accurate way to get a measure of the peak and linewidth. Guoy Balance • Measures the response of materials to a magnetic field (an inhomogeneous field). • Magnetic properties come from the electron spin and orbital motion of electrons. • Diamagnetic substance: will move toward the weakest portion of the field—usually has all electrons paired • Paramagnetic substance: will move to the strongest portion of the field—usually has one or more unpaired electrons • (Interactions between unpaired spins can lead to long‐ range magnet “order,” resulting in ferromagnetism, antiferromagnetism, or ferrimagnetism .) Basic Concepts • When a material is put into a magnetic field, a new magnetic field is induced in it: B=H + ΔH = H + 4πM (B is induced flux density in Gauss, G; H is magnetic field intensity in Oersteds, Oe; M is the magnetization of the sample) • …along a specific spatial direction, i, is: Bi=Hi+4πMi • Rearrange to: (Bi/Hi)=1 + 4π Mi/Hi = 1 + 4πκi • Susceptibility of a material toward induction in a field of strength is denoted by κ: • κi=(Mi/Hi) cm‐3 • κ =(M/H) cm‐3 (if anisotropic) (if isotropic, i.e. same in all directions) • Magnetic susceptibilities per unit weight or moles are the most useful: – gram magnetic suscept. Χg = κ/density (units: 1/g) – molar magnetic suscept. ΧM = Χg ∙ molec. wt. (units: 1/mol) Guoy Balance Method • The experiment relates the force exerted on a sample in a magnetic field gradient to magnetic susceptibility: – If the induced field attracts the sample into the magnetic field, this produces a positive magnetic susceptibility (material is paramagnetic) – If the induced field causes the sample to be deflected (out) of the magnetic field, this produces a negative magnetic susceptibility (material is diamagnetic) • Convert magnetic susceptibility to the effective magnetic moment, μeff. • Determine the # of unpaired electrons More on X’s • X is the sum of all the paramagnetic and diamagnetic contributions in the molecule. • The two main ones are: XM’ = paramagnetic contribution of the unpaired e‐’s; this is the value used to determine µeff XMD = diamagnetic contribution of the paired core e‐’s of the metal ion (minor), and the paired e‐’s in the ligands (significant) XM’ = XM ‐ XMD • XMD can be calculated. Values for common ligands, anions and solvents are available in tables. (See Bain and Berry paper on website) Magnetic Moment and XM’ • Relationship between µeff and XM’ depends on the long‐range magnetic ordering‐‐whether material exhibits paramagnetism, ferromagnetism, antiferromagnetism, or ferrimagnetism.) • If material is a simple paramagnet, then assume the Curie law is obeyed: µeff = 2.84 [(XM’)(T)]1/2 (This is a good assumption for Mn(acac)3) • Compare µeff to µs, which is the magnetic moment coming from the electron spin, to get the # of unpaired spins: µs = 2.00 [S(S+1)]1/2 (units are µB Bohr magnetons) (Recall from Chem 461: S= ½(# of unpaired electrons)) • Example: two unpaired electrons, S=½+½=1 so µs = 2.00 [1(1+1)]1/2 = 2.83 µB • Note: µtotal = µs + µorbital Magnetic moment of unpaired electrons includes both spin and orbital contributions. However, in transition metals, the orbital contribution is usually very small (or “quenched”). Comparison of Magnetic Moments Ion # unpaired electrons S µs (calc’d) µeff (meas’d) Cu2+ 1 1/2 1.73 µB 1.7‐2.2 µB V3+ 2 1 2.83 µB 2.8 µB Cr3+ 3 3/2 3.87 µB 3.8 µB Fe2+ 4 2 4.90 µB 5.1‐5.5 µB Mn2+ 5 5/2 5.92 µB 5.9 µB • Sometimes the µeff measured experimentally is a little larger than µs calculated from theory. In those cases, the orbital contribution is not completely quenched • Good rule‐of thumb: # of unpaired electrons ~ (µeff – 0.9) rounded to next integer