RESUMO
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 P 4 â¾ b2, a necessity of hydrogen bonding. At 300â K, barium guanidinate crystallizes in P21/c with a=6.26439(2)â Å, b=16.58527(5)â Å, c=6.25960(2)â Å, and a monoclinic angle of ß=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 3.04â Å. The IR and Raman spectra of barium guanidinate were compared with DFT-calculated phonon spectra to identify the vibrational modes.
RESUMO
Strontium guanidinate, SrC(NH)3 , the first compound with a doubly deprotonated guanidine unit, was synthesized from strontium and guanidine in liquid ammonia and characterized by X-ray and neutron diffraction, IR spectroscopy, and density-functional theory including harmonic phonon calculations. The compound crystallizes in the hexagonal space group P63 /m, constitutes the nitrogen analogue of strontium carbonate, SrCO3 , and its structure follows a layered motif between Sr(2+) ions and complex anions of the type C(NH)3 (2-) ; the anions adopt the peculiar trinacria shape. A comparison of theoretical phonons with experimental IR bands as well as quantum-chemical bonding analyses yield a first insight into bonding and packing of the formerly unknown anion in the crystal.