4.6 Article

Electronic structure, Jahn-Teller dynamics and electron spin relaxation of two types of octahedral Cu(II) complexes in cadmium formate dihydrate Cd(HCOO)2 center dot 2H(2)O. EPR and ESE studies

Journal

PHYSICAL CHEMISTRY CHEMICAL PHYSICS
Volume 6, Issue 1, Pages 64-71

Publisher

ROYAL SOC CHEMISTRY
DOI: 10.1039/b311063j

Keywords

-

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Cd(HCOO)(2).2H(2)O single crystals weakly doped with Cu(II) ions have been studied by cw-EPR (4.2-300 K) and by electron spin echo - ESE (4.2-60 K). Copper(II) ions substitute Cd(II) in two different sites forming Cu(HCOO)(6)-Cu-f and Cu(HCOO)(2)(H2O)(4)-Cu-w octahedral complexes with strong preference to Cu-f as shown by the intensity ratio of the EPR spectra (up to 20:1). Despite different molecular structures both complexes have nearly identical EPR parameters at rigid lattice limit with g(z) = 2.429, g(y) = 2.092, g(x) = 2.064, A(z) = 120, A(y) = 32 and A(x) = 12 x 10(-4) cm(-1) for Cu-f. This fact as well as strong axial deformation of the crystal field at Cu(II) sites indicate that the strong Jahn-Teller effect operates producing three wells in the potential surface with one having much lower energy than the others. In the Cu-f complex the dynamic J-T-effect has been observed as a vibronic averaging of the two g and A parameters (along z and y axes). It indicates that only one of the higher energy wells is thermally accessible and the Silver - Getz model leads to the average energy difference between the two lowest energy wells delta(12) = 500(60) cm(-1). The delta(12) is temperature dependent. For Cu-w complex no vibronic effects were observed in EPR spectra indicating that higher energy wells are not populated up to 300 K. The spin - lattice relaxation time T-1 and phase memory time T-M were measured up to 60 K only, because for higher temperatures the ESE decay was too fast. Spin - lattice relaxation is governed by two-phonon Raman processes which allow one to determine the Debye temperature of the crystal as Theta(D) = 193 K. The ESE decay was described as V(2(tau)) = V(0)exp(-tau/b-mtau(2)) indicating the contribution of the spectral diffusion (quadratic term). The ESE dephasing rate 1/T-M is governed by spectral diffusion below 15 K. For higher temperatures the T-1-processes and excitations to the higher vibronic levels of energy Delta = 166 cm(-1) give comparable contributions.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.6
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available