Book Chapter10.1016/S0065-2792(08)60179-X
Mixed Valence Chemistry-A Survey and Classification
Melvin B. Robin,Peter Day +1 more
2.5K
TL;DR: In this article, a review is concerned with the neglected class of inorganic compounds, which contain ions of the same element in two different formal states of oxidation, and a number of references cite that many individual examples of this class have been studied, yet they have very rarely been treated as a class, and there has never before, to our knowledge, been a systematic attempt to classify their properties in terms of their electronic and molecular structures.
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Abstract: Publisher Summary This review is concerned with the neglected class of inorganic compounds, which contain ions of the same element in two different formal states of oxidation. Although the number of references cited in our review show that many individual examples of this class have been studied, yet they have very rarely been treated as a class, and there has never before, to our knowledge, been a systematic attempt to classify their properties in terms of their electronic and molecular structures. In the past, systems containing an element in two different states of oxidation have gone by various names, the terms “mixed valence,” nonintegral valence,” “mixed oxidation,” “oscillating valency,” and “controlled valency” being used interchangeably. Actually, none of these is completely accurate or all-embracing, but in our hope to avoid the introduction of yet another definition, we have somewhat arbitrarily adopted the phrase “mixed valence” for the description of these systems. The concept of resonance among various valence bond structures is one of the cornerstones of modern organic chemistry.
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References
Octahedral Metal Clusters
TL;DR: In this paper, the metal octahedron of Mo6Cl84+ and Ta6Cl122+ cations has been rationalized in terms of a 40-electron model.
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Zur Kenntnis der Cyanverbindungen der Platinmetalle
F. Krauss,G. Schrader +1 more
TL;DR: The Doppelcyanide des Ruthenium leiten sich den alteren Angaben entsprechend von der Saure H4[Ru(CN)6] ab as discussed by the authors.
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Reflectance spectra of praseodymium oxides in the composition range Pr2O3 to Pr6O11
F. Vratny,M. Tsai,J.M. Honig +2 more
TL;DR: The spectra of praseodymium oxides (PrO χ ) have been studied in the composition range 1·5 ≤ x ≤ 1·83 from 200 to 2000 mμ.
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