Unusual coordination behavior of Cr3+ in microporous aluminophosphates

J Phys Chem B. 2006 Jan 19;110(2):716-22. doi: 10.1021/jp0531006.

Abstract

A CrAPO-5 molecular sieve has been investigated with X-ray absorption spectroscopy (EXAFS-XANES) as dehydrated material and after loading with water and ammonia to unravel the coordination geometries of Cr3+ in the framework of a microporous crystalline aluminophosphate, more particularly of the AFI-type. A comparison of the XANES data, a preedge analysis with crystal field multiplet calculations and EXAFS data, pointed toward the presence of framework Cr3+ which, on dehydration, takes on a distorted tetrahedral coordination state. Due to the 3d3 configuration of Cr3+, this unusual tetrahedral coordination environment strongly tends to transform into the more stable 6-fold coordination geometry by binding two extraframework water molecules during hydration. In the presence of ammonia, tetrahedral Cr3+ readily transforms into a 5-fold coordination geometry by binding one ammonia molecule. Therefore, depending on the environmental conditions, the Cr3+ ions can occur in a 4-, 5-, or 6-fold coordination. This observation underlines the flexibility of transition metal ions, such as Cr3+, to cope with unusual coordination geometries in inorganic hosts, making them interesting as potential active sites in heterogeneous catalysis.