Research on new reaction routes and precursors to prepare catalysts for CO 2 hydrogenation has enormous importance. Here, we report on the preparation of the permanganate salt of the urea-coordinated iron(III), [hexakis(urea- O )iron(III)]permanganate ([Fe(urea-O) 6 ](MnO 4 ) 3 ) via an affordable synthesis route and preliminarily demonstrate the catalytic activity of its (Fe,Mn)O x thermal decomposition products in CO 2 hydrogenation. [Fe(urea-O) 6 ](MnO 4 ) 3 contains O-coordinated urea ligands in octahedral propeller-like arrangement around the Fe 3+ cation. There are extended hydrogen bond interactions between the permanganate ions and the hydrogen atoms of the urea ligands. These hydrogen bonds serve as reaction centers and have unique roles in the solid-phase quasi-intramolecular redox reaction of the urea ligand and the permanganate anion below the temperature of ligand loss of the complex cation. The decomposition mechanism of the urea ligand (ammonia elimination with the formation of isocyanuric acid and biuret) has been clarified. In an inert atmosphere, the final thermal decomposition product was manganese-containing wuestite, (Fe,Mn)O, at 800 °C, whereas in ambient air, two types of bixbyite (Fe,Mn) 2 O 3 as well as jacobsite (Fe,Mn) T-4 (Fe,Mn) OC-6 2 O 4 ), with overall Fe to Mn stoichiometry of 1:3, were formed. These final products were obtained regardless of the different atmospheres applied during thermal treatments up to 350 °C. Disordered bixbyite formed first with inhomogeneous Fe and Mn distribution and double-size supercell and then transformed gradually into common bixbyite with regular structure (and with 1:3 Fe to Mn ratio) upon increasing the temperature and heating time. The (Fe,Mn)O x intermediates formed under various conditions showed catalytic effect in the CO 2 hydrogenation reaction with <57.6% CO 2 conversions and <39.3% hydrocarbon yields. As a mild solid-phase oxidant, hexakis(urea- O )iron(III) permanganate, was found to be selective in the transformation of (un)substituted benzylic alcohols into benzaldehydes and benzonitriles.
We synthesized and structurally characterized the previously unknown [Co(NH3)5Cl](MnO4)2 complex as the precursor of CoMn2O4. The complex was also deuterated, and its FT-IR, far-IR, low-temperature Raman and UV-VIS spectra were measured as well. The structure of the complex was solved by single-crystal X-ray diffraction and the 3D-hydrogen bonds were evaluated. The N-H…O-Mn hydrogen bonds act as redox centers to initiate a solid-phase quasi-intramolecular redox reaction even at 120 °C involving the Co(III) centers. The product is an amorphous material, which transforms into [Co(NH3)5Cl]Cl2, NH4NO3, and a todorokite-like solid Co-Mn oxide on treatment with water. The insoluble residue may contain {Mn4IIIMnIV2O12}n4n-, {Mn5IIIMnIVO12}n5n- or {MnIII6O12}n6n- frameworks, which can embed 2 × n (CoII and/or CoIII) cations in their tunnels, respectively, and 4 × n ammonia ligands are coordinated to the cobalt cations. The decomposition intermediates decompose on further heating via a series of redox reactions, forming a solid CoIIMIII2O4 spinel with an average size of 16.8 nm, and gaseous N2, N2O and Cl2. The CoMn2O4 prepared in this reaction has photocatalytic activity in Congo red degradation with UV light. Its activity strongly depends on the synthesis conditions, e.g., Congo red was degraded 9 and 13 times faster in the presence of CoMn2O4 prepared at 550 °C (in air) or 420 °C (under N2), respectively.
Two monoclinic polymorphs of [Ag(NH 3 ) 2 ]MnO 4 containing a unique coordination mode of permanganate ions were prepared, and the high-temperature polymorph was used as a precursor to synthesize pure AgMnO 2 . The hydrogen bonds between the permanganate ions and the hydrogen atoms of ammonia were detected by IR spectroscopy and single-crystal X-ray diffraction. Under thermal decomposition, these hydrogen bonds induced a solid-phase quasi-intramolecular redox reaction between the [Ag(NH 3 ) 2 ] + cation and MnO 4 – anion even before losing the ammonia ligand or permanganate oxygen atom. The polymorphs decomposed into finely dispersed elementary silver, amorphous MnO x compounds, and H 2 O, N 2 and NO gases. Annealing the primary decomposition product at 573 K, the metallic silver reacted with the manganese oxides and resulted in the formation of amorphous silver manganese oxides, which started to crystallize only at 773 K and completely transformed into AgMnO 2 at 873 K.
We synthesized and characterized (IR, Raman, UV, SXRD) hexaamminecobalt(III) dichloride permanganate, [Co(NH3)6]Cl2(MnO4) (compound 1) as the precursor of Co–Mn–spinel composites with atomic ratios of Co:Mn = 1:1 and 1:3. The 3D−hydrogen bond network includes N–HO–Mn and N–HCl interactions responsible for solid-phase redox reactions between the permanganate anions and ammonia ligands. The temperature-limited thermal decomposition of compound 1 under the temperature of boiling toluene (110 ∘C) resulted in the formation of (NH4)4Co2Mn6O12. which contains a todorokite-like manganese oxide network (MnII4MnIII2O1210−). The heat treatment products of compounds 1 and [Co(NH3)5Cl](MnO4)2 (2) synthesized previously at 500 ∘C were a cubic and a tetragonal spinel with Co1.5Mn1.5O4 and CoMn2O4 composition, respectively. The heating of the decomposition product of compounds 1 and 2 that formed under refluxing toluene (a mixture with an atomic ratio of Co:Mn = 1:1 and 1:2) and after aqueous leaching ((NH4)4Co2Mn6O12, 1:3 Co:Mn atomic ratio in both cases) at 500 ∘C resulted in tetragonal Co0.75Mn2.25O4 spinels. The Co1.5Mn1.5O4 prepared from compound 1 at 500 ∘C during the solid-phase decomposition catalyzes the degradation of Congo red with UV light. The decomposition rate of the dye was found to be nine times faster than in the presence of the tetragonal CoMn2O4 spinel prepared in the solid-phase decomposition of compound 2. The todorokite-like intermediate prepared from compound 1 under N2 at 115 ∘C resulted in a 54 times faster degradation of Congo red, which is a great deal faster than the same todorokite-like phase that formed from compound 2 under N2.
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