Abstract

The molecular structures of three types of zinc(II) alkanoates (Zn(Cn)2, ZnNa2(Cn)4 and ZnK2(Cn)4, Cn=CH3(CH2)n−2COO−, n=8–18) were investigated by Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy (FTIR) and powder X-ray diffraction (PXRD) to aid the study of degradation phenomena in oil paint. Each type of complex forms a homologous series in the studied chain length range. For (Zn(Cn)2 and ZnNa2(Cn)4, these homologous series indicate that the long-chain complexes have structures highly similar to those published for short-chain single-crystal analogs. Moreover, we introduce a chain tilt factor Ftilt to derive information about alkanoate chain angles from highly accurate PXRD long spacing values. The complex ZnK2(Cn)4 has not been reported before. It consists of metal sheets containing tetrahedrally coordinated Zn atoms and octahedrally coordinated K atoms bridged by effectively monodentate carboxylate groups, and alkanoate chains that are tilted relative to the long axis.

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