Treatment of chromium powder with concentrated hydroiodic acid gives a blue hydrated chromium(II) iodide, which can be converted to related acetonitrile complexes.[4]
^Tracy, J. W.; Gregory, N. W.; Stewart, J. M.; Lingafelter, E. C. (1962). "The Crystal Structure of Chromium(II) Iodide". Acta Crystallographica. 15 (5): 460–463. doi:10.1107/S0365110X62001152.
^Vest, Brian; Hermann, Andreas; Boyd, Peter D. W.; Schwerdtfeger, Peter (2010). "Nucleation of Antiferromagnetically Coupled Chromium Dihalides: From Small Clusters to the Solid State". Inorganic Chemistry. 49 (7): 3169–3182. doi:10.1021/ic901949a.