The crystal structures of
(ND4)2[Cu(D2O)6](SO4)2
at 295 K, determined by X-ray diffraction at pressures of
1
bar, ∼1.5 kbar and ∼3.0 kbar, are reported. Between 1 bar and
1.5 kbar, the crystal structure changes to one
almost identical to that of the corresponding hydrogenous compound at 1
bar. The structural change involves a
90° switch in the direction of the long bonds of the
Cu(D2O)6
2+ ion, accompanied
by a change in the hydrogen-bonding interactions of the ammonium cations. Comparison of these
two structures with those at ∼15 K shows
that at room temperature, for both the high (H) and low
(L) pressure phases, the Cu complexes are in
thermal
equilibrium with the other structural isomer. Though one of these
is energetically preferred in the H and the
other in the L phase, the variation of the powder EPR
spectrum with pressure indicates a continuous transition
between both within ∼1 kbar and suggests that at ∼0.5 kbar the two
orientations of the copper complex are
similar in energy. However, the underlying thermally induced
equilibrium is little affected by pressure, and this
is also the case for the
Cu(H2O)6
2+ ion in
Cu2+-doped
K2[Zn(H2O)6](SO4)2.
The crystal structure of K2[Cu(H2O)6](SO4)2 at
15 K and 1.4 kbar, determined by time-of-flight neutron diffraction, is
similar to that at 295 K
and 1 bar, except for indications that here also a thermal population
of the higher energy form in which the
directions of the long and intermediate Cu−O bonds interchange occurs
at 295 K. The powder EPR spectrum of
the potassium salt at 295 K shows little change between 1 bar and 11
kbar.
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