Abstract
In the last 65 years the properties of Tutton salts containing Cu2+ cations have been interpreted on the basis of elongated complexes induced by a static Jahn–Teller effect (JTE). Through the analysis of experimental data and the results of first-principles calculations, we show here that such an idea, though widely followed, is not correct. By contrast, this work proves that the local geometry of Cu(H2O)62+ units in Tutton salts actually arises from a compressed octahedron although hidden by an additional orthorhombic instability fully unrelated to the JTE. For understanding this conclusion, it is crucial to consider the effects of the internal electric field, ER(r), created by the rest of the lattice ions on the electrons localized in the Cu(H2O)62+ unit. Indeed, the ER(r) field in Tutton salts opens a gap between ∼x2–y2 and ∼3z2–r2 antibonding molecular orbitals that favors a hole in ∼3z2–r2 and triggers an orthorhombic distortion in the XY plane that reasonably explains available experimental data. Th...
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