1970
DOI: 10.1002/9780470166123.ch1
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Vibrational Spectra and Metal–Metal Bonds

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1975
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Cited by 43 publications
(1 citation statement)
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“…My first graduate students took advantage of the Hornig instrument to explore a number of metal complexes, including the polynuclear hydroxy complexes of bismuth(III), lead(II), and trimethylplatinum(IV), with which I had become familiar in Stockholm. Their spectra gave evidence of interaction among the metal ions, leading us to explore the vibrational spectroscopy of metal−metal bonds in a series of metal cluster compounds. Raman spectroscopy was well suited to this application because of the low frequencies and large polarizability derivatives of the metal−metal stretching vibratons …”
Section: Princeton and Ramanmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…My first graduate students took advantage of the Hornig instrument to explore a number of metal complexes, including the polynuclear hydroxy complexes of bismuth(III), lead(II), and trimethylplatinum(IV), with which I had become familiar in Stockholm. Their spectra gave evidence of interaction among the metal ions, leading us to explore the vibrational spectroscopy of metal−metal bonds in a series of metal cluster compounds. Raman spectroscopy was well suited to this application because of the low frequencies and large polarizability derivatives of the metal−metal stretching vibratons …”
Section: Princeton and Ramanmentioning
confidence: 99%