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Effect of lone‐pair stereoactivity on polyhedral volume and structural flexibility: application to Te IV O 6 octahedra
Author(s) -
Christy Andrew G.,
Mills Stuart J.
Publication year - 2013
Publication title -
acta crystallographica section b
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.604
H-Index - 33
eISSN - 2052-5206
pISSN - 2052-5192
DOI - 10.1107/s2052519213023087
Subject(s) - polyhedron , octahedron , crystallography , lone pair , tetrahedron , dodecahedron , bond length , combinatorics , mathematics , geometry , chemistry , crystal structure , molecule , organic chemistry
The Distortion Theorem implies that the irregularity of bond distances in a distorted coordination polyhedron causes an increase of mean bond distance. Examination of 40 polyhedra containing the lone‐pair cation Te IV shows that this does not imply an increase in polyhedral volume. Volumes of these polyhedra are 10.3–23.7 Å 3 , compared with the 12.83 Å 3 expected for a hypothetical regular octahedron. There is little correlation between volume and measures of polyhedral distortion such as quadratic elongation, bond‐angle variance or vector bond valence. However, the oxygens of our polyhedra lie very close to a sphere of best fit, centred at ∼ 1 Å from the Te IV atom. The Te IV –centre distance is an index of lone‐pair stereoactivity and is linearly related to the radius R sph of the sphere; this is explained by a more localized lone pair repelling the anions more strongly, leading to a longer non‐bonded distance between the lone pair and anions. Polyhedral volume still varies considerably for a given R sph , because the oxygen ligands may be distributed over the whole sphere surface, or confined to a small portion of it. The uniformity of this distribution can be estimated from the distance between the sphere centre and the centroid of the O 6 polyhedron. Te IV –centre and centroid–centre distances alone then account for 95% of the variation observed in volume for polyhedra which are topologically octahedral. Six of the polyhedra studied that are outliers are closer in shape to pentagonal pyramids than octahedra. These have short distances from the central Te IV cation to other Te IV and/or to large, polarizable cations, suggesting additional weak bonding interactions between these species and the central lone pair. The flexibility of lone‐pair polyhedra is further enhanced by the ability of a single polyhedron to accommodate different cations with different degrees of lone‐pair activity, which facilitates more diverse solid solution behaviour than would otherwise be the case.