An aluminium-27 nuclear magnetic resonance study of ligand exchange. Kinetic and equilibrium properties
Abstract
27 Al Nuclear magnetic resonance measurements have been carried out between –5 and 85 °C for a methanolic aqueous Al2(SO4)3 solution: the 27Al longitudinal magnetization recovery (l.m.r.) was measured from the free-induction decays following the second pulse of a 180°–τ–90° pulse sequence. The 27Al n.m.r. spectra consisted of two resonance signals due to a first-sphere complex [Al(H2O)5SO4]+(= A) and to a hexa-aquo cation [Al(H2O)6]3+(= B), respectively. The equilibrium and kinetic properties of the exchange of H2O and SO2–4 ligands were determined by reproducing the observed l.m.r. and lineshape with the aid of the theory developed by one of the authors (K.I.). The observed rate of l.m.r. under the influence of ligand exchange was not equal to the energy relaxation rate R*1,A or R*1,B. The lifetimes τA and τB ranged from 10–3 to 5 s; the temperature dependence of both fractional populations fA or fB was determined. These data gave a high value of ΔH‡BA and a positive ΔS‡BA and showed a dissociative reaction for the forward path; a relatively small value of ΔH‡AB and a large negative ΔS‡AB showed an associative reaction for the backward path in the chemical exchange reaction AlIII(in B)⇌ AlIII(in A). The reaction was endothermic, but the product, [Al(H2O)5SO4]+, increased with increasing temperature because of the high entropy contribution.