The colour of Co(II) complexes.
The colour of Co(II) complexes has interested chemists for many
years and the pale-pink, octahedral to bright-blue, tetrahedral
colour change is seen in such devices as weather guides and in
the dye in silica gel dessicant used in the laboratory.
Assignment of the bands for these spectra can present some
problems however where the different stereochemistries are
interpreted on each side of an F Orgel diagram.
For a typical tetrahedral complex, [CoCl4]2- and
assuming Δt = 4/9 Δo where Δo is around 9000 cm-1
then we can predict that the transition
4T2 ← 4A2 should be
observed below 4000 cm-1. Only 1 band is seen in the visible region at
15,000 cm-1 although a full scan from the IR through to the UV
reveals an additional band at 5,800 cm-1. (ε value for the
15,000 band is ~60 m2 mol-1). The lower energy band must
therefore correspond to
4T1(F) ← 4A2 and the
other to 4T1(P) ← 4A2
(which shows splitting thought to arise from spin-orbit coupling).
For the octahedral aqua ion, a band is observed at around 8000
cm-1 and a broad band centred around 20,000 cm-1
(ε for these bands is less than 1 m2 mol-1).
The lowest energy band must correspond to:
4T2g ← 4T1g which
leaves the bands at 16,000, 19,400 and 21,600 cm-1 to
be assigned.
A tentative assignment puts the
4T1g(P) ← 4T1g
transition at 19,400 and hence the 16,000 band is due to
4A2g ← 4T1g.
The band at 21,600 cm-1 is believed to come from spin-orbit
effects.
From this Δ ~ 9000 cm-1 and B ~ 900 cm-1.
Low spin Co(II) complexes
The ground term for the low spin case is 2Eg and looking at the right hand side
of the TS diagram where Δ is quite large then it can be seen there are
numerous doublet excited states. The quartets would now correspond to
spin-forbidden states and be the weaker bands in the spectrum.
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Lancashire, all rights reserved.
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Lancashire,
The Department of Chemistry, University of the West Indies,
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Created October 2006. Links checked and/or
last modified 29th March 2011.
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