- Source: Tris(bipyridine)iron(II) chloride
Tris(bipyridine)iron(II) chloride is the chloride salt of the coordination complex tris(bipyridine)iron(II), [Fe(C10H8N2)3]2+. It is a red solid. In contrast to tris(bipyridine)ruthenium(II), this iron complex is not a useful photosensitizer because its excited states relax too rapidly, a consequence of the primogenic effect.
Tris(bipyridine)iron(II) chloride features an octahedral Fe(II) center bound to three 2,2'-Bipyridine ligands. The complex has been isolated as salts with many anions.
Synthesis and reactions
The sulfate salt [Fe(bipy)3]SO4 is produced by combining ferrous sulfate with excess bipy in aqueous solution. This result illustrates the preference of Fe(II) for bipyridine vs water. Addition of cyanide to this solution precipitates solid Fe(bipy)2(CN)2.
Related complexes
Tris(o-phenanthroline)iron(II)
Reference
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Bilangan oksidasi
- Tris(bipyridine)ruthenium(II) chloride
- Tris(bipyridine)iron(II) chloride
- Ruthenium(III) chloride
- Nitrate chlorides
- Belousov–Zhabotinsky reaction
- Ferroin
- Ruthenium
- Transition metal pyridine complexes
- Oxalate chloride
- Ruthenium compounds