Rw. Berg et al., CRYSTAL-STRUCTURE AND SPECTROSCOPIC CHARACTERIZATION OF CSV(SO4)2 - EVIDENCE FOR AN ELECTRONIC RAMAN TRANSITION, Inorganic chemistry, 32(22), 1993, pp. 4714-4720
Green platelike hexagonal crystals of CsV(SO4)2 were obtained by stepw
ise cooling in the range 500-400-degrees-C of solutions of V2O5 in Cs2
S2O7, either under SO2(g) atmosphere or during catalytic conversion of
SO2, in a 10% SO2, 11% O2, and 79% N2 gas mixture. The crystals belon
g to the trigonal system, space group P3BAR, with a = b = 4.868(1) A a
nd c = 8.767(2) angstrom at 140 K and Z = 1. The phase represents a no
vel structure type with tetrahedral SO42- ions linked to octahedrally
coordinated vanadium(III) in a way different from the known KV(SO4)2 a
nd other related M(I)M(III)(SO4)2 Structures. The infrared and Raman s
pectra of powdered CsV(SO4)2 show close analogy to those of KV(SO4)2.
The crystal Raman spectra show vibrational bands the polarization prop
erties of which cannot be explained in terms of the crystallographic p
oint group and a totally symmetric electronic ground state. Above 1300
cm-1 the Raman spectra, particularly at lower temperatures, show a co
arse structure, which is interpreted as electronic Raman transitions b
etween the spin-orbit split states of the A-3(g) and E-3(g) levels.