ChemistryOpen (Mar 2019)

Ammonothermal Synthesis, X‐Ray and Time‐of‐Flight Neutron Crystal‐Structure Determination, and Vibrational Properties of Barium Guanidinate, Ba(CN3H4)2

  • Dr. Sebastian Benz,
  • Dr. Ronja Missong,
  • George Ogutu,
  • Dr. Ralf P. Stoffel,
  • Prof. Dr. Ulli Englert,
  • Dr. Shuki Torii,
  • Dr. Ping Miao,
  • Prof. Dr. Takashi Kamiyama,
  • Prof. Dr. Richard Dronskowski

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1002/open.201900068
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 8, no. 3
pp. 327 – 332

Abstract

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Abstract We report the crystal structure of Ba(CN3H4)2 as synthesized from liquid ammonia. Structure solution based on X‐ray diffraction data suffers from a severe pseudo‐tetragonal problem due to extreme scattering contrast, so the true monoclinic symmetry is detectable only from neutron powder diffraction patterns, and structure solution and refinement was greatly aided by density‐functional theory. The symmetry lowering is due to slight deviations of the guanidinate anion from the mirror plane in space group P4‾ b2, a necessity of hydrogen bonding. At 300 K, barium guanidinate crystallizes in P21/c with a=6.26439(2) Å, b=16.58527(5) Å, c=6.25960(2) Å, and a monoclinic angle of β=90.000(1)°. To improve the data‐to‐parameter ratio, anisotropic displacement parameters from first‐principles theory were incorporated in the neutron refinement. Given the correct structural model, the positional parameters of the heavy atoms were also refinable from X‐ray diffraction of a twinned crystal. The two independent guanidinate anions adopt the all‐trans‐ and the anti‐shape. The Ba cation is coordinated by eight imino nitrogens in a square antiprism with Ba−N contacts between 2.81 and 3.04 Å. The IR and Raman spectra of barium guanidinate were compared with DFT‐calculated phonon spectra to identify the vibrational modes.

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