PHOTOLYSIS OF THE [FE(CN)(5)(NO)](2-) ION IN WATER AND POLY(VINYL ALCOHOL) FILMS - EVIDENCE FOR CYANO RADICAL, CYANIDE ION AND NITRIC-OXIDELOSS AND REDOX PATHWAYS
Mg. Deoliveira et al., PHOTOLYSIS OF THE [FE(CN)(5)(NO)](2-) ION IN WATER AND POLY(VINYL ALCOHOL) FILMS - EVIDENCE FOR CYANO RADICAL, CYANIDE ION AND NITRIC-OXIDELOSS AND REDOX PATHWAYS, Journal of the Chemical Society. Dalton transactions, (12), 1995, pp. 2013-2019
Ultraviolet-visible and IR spectroscopy and mass spectrometry have bee
n used to investigate photolysis of the [Fe(CN)(5)(NO)](2-) ion upon i
rradiation with UV/VIS light in aqueous solutions and in poly(vinyl al
cohol) films at 12 and 298 K. Changes in the nu(CN) and nu(NO) bands i
n the IR and in the d-d and charge-transfer bands in the UV/VIS region
were used to monitor the appearance and disappearance of complex ions
as a function of photolysis time: Mass spectrometric analysis of the
gaseous products released during the irradiation of aqueous solutions
revealed NO, HCN and (CN)(2). The combined results showed that the [Fe
(CN)(5)(NO)](2-) ion undergoes photoaquation and photoreduction, produ
cing aquacyanoferrate-(III) and (II) species, The origin of the iron(I
I) species was shown to be mainly due to the photoreduction of the iro
n(III) species produced after primary loss of the nitrosyl ligand as m
olecular NO and not as NO+. Subsequent thermal reactions between. she
iron-(II) and -(III) species led to the formation of mixed-valence com
pounds, e.g. Prussian blue. A scheme for the photochemical and thermal
reactions with CN., CN- and NO loss pathways is proposed. The possibl
e implications of the results for the use of [Fe(CN)(5)(NO)](2-) as a
vasodilator are discussed.