Big Chemical Encyclopedia

Chemical substances, components, reactions, process design ...

Articles Figures Tables About

Silver-manganese complex

As stated previously, the silver(III) state is stabilized by the electron-rich nature of the ligand in addition to the cavity size contribution. The silver(III) center may easily obtain an electron from the ligand to form a ligand radical, which satisfies the metal ion s high electrophilicity. This finding may explain why in some silver(lll) complexes the silver(II) and (III) states can switch reversibly. Whether this property of silver can be utilized in oxidation catalysis the way iron and manganese porphyrin systems were used still has to be seen (27-30). [Pg.6]

Although trialkyl- and triarylbismuthines are much weaker donors than the corresponding phosphoms, arsenic, and antimony compounds, they have nevertheless been employed to a considerable extent as ligands in transition metal complexes. The metals coordinated to the bismuth in these complexes include chromium (72—77), cobalt (78,79), iridium (80), iron (77,81,82), manganese (83,84), molybdenum (72,75—77,85—89), nickel (75,79,90,91), niobium (92), rhodium (93,94), silver (95—97), tungsten (72,75—77,87,89), uranium (98), and vanadium (99). The coordination compounds formed from tertiary bismuthines are less stable than those formed from tertiary phosphines, arsines, or stibines. [Pg.131]

H. 8-Hydroxyquinaldine (XI). The reactions of 8-hydroxyquinaldine are, in general, similar to 8-hydroxyquinoline described under (C) above, but unlike the latter it does not produce an insoluble complex with aluminium. In acetic acid-acetate solution precipitates are formed with bismuth, cadmium, copper, iron(II) and iron(III), chromium, manganese, nickel, silver, zinc, titanium (Ti02 + ), molybdate, tungstate, and vanadate. The same ions are precipitated in ammoniacal solution with the exception of molybdate, tungstate, and vanadate, but with the addition of lead, calcium, strontium, and magnesium aluminium is not precipitated, but tartrate must be added to prevent the separation of aluminium hydroxide. [Pg.444]

Cations e.g. nickel [1-7] cobalt [4-7] copper, iron, manganese silver [6] DMSO complexes of cobalt, nickel [8] HjC CHj HO-N N-OH... [Pg.137]

Other methods reported for the determination of beryllium include UV-visible spectrophotometry [80,81,83], gas chromatography (GC) [82], flame atomic absorption spectrometry (AAS) [84-88] and graphite furnace (GF) AAS [89-96]. The ligand acetylacetone (acac) reacts with beryllium to form a beryllium-acac complex, and has been extensively used as an extracting reagent of beryllium. Indeed, the solvent extraction of beryllium as the acety-lacetonate complex in the presence of EDTA has been used as a pretreatment method prior to atomic absorption spectrometry [85-87]. Less than 1 p,g of beryllium can be separated from milligram levels of iron, aluminium, chromium, zinc, copper, manganese, silver, selenium, and uranium by this method. See also Sect. 5.74.9. [Pg.142]

Emissions of silver from coal-fired power plants may lead to accumulations in nearby soils (Fowler and Nordberg 1986). Silver in soils is largely immobilized by precipitation to insoluble salts and by complexation or adsorption by organic matter, clays, and manganese and iron oxides (Smith and Carson 1972). [Pg.543]

The first metal-olefin complex was reported in 1827 by Zeise, but, until a few years ago, only palladium(II), platinum(Il), copper(I), silver(I), and mercury(II) were known to form such complexes (67, 188) and the nature of the bonding was not satisfactorily explained until 1951. However, recent work has shown that complexes of unsaturated hydrocarbons with metals of the vanadium, chromium, manganese, iron, and cobalt subgroups can be prepared when the metals are stabilized in a low-valent state by ligands such as carbon monoxide and the cyclopentadienyl anion. The wide variety of hydrocarbons which form complexes includes olefins, conjugated and nonconjugated polyolefins, cyclic polyolefins, and acetylenes. [Pg.78]

The ease with which olefins form complexes with metals naturally led to investigation of acetylenes as ligands but until recent years only a few ill-defined, unstable acetylene complexes of copper and silver were known. Now complexes of acetylenes with metals of the chromium, manganese, iron, cobalt, nickel, and copper subgroups are known. These complexes fall naturally into two classes—those in which the structure of the acetylene is essentially retained and those in which the acetylene is changed into another ligand during complex formation. Complexes of the first class are discussed here and the second class is discussed in Section VI. [Pg.103]


See other pages where Silver-manganese complex is mentioned: [Pg.924]    [Pg.92]    [Pg.89]    [Pg.117]    [Pg.102]    [Pg.432]    [Pg.117]    [Pg.432]    [Pg.304]    [Pg.6262]    [Pg.480]    [Pg.109]    [Pg.129]    [Pg.322]    [Pg.68]    [Pg.26]    [Pg.196]    [Pg.146]    [Pg.121]    [Pg.262]    [Pg.444]    [Pg.874]    [Pg.15]    [Pg.1064]    [Pg.305]    [Pg.136]    [Pg.419]    [Pg.26]    [Pg.20]    [Pg.221]    [Pg.136]    [Pg.146]    [Pg.363]    [Pg.650]    [Pg.651]    [Pg.878]   


SEARCH



Manganese complexes

Manganese complexing

Silver complexes

© 2024 chempedia.info