Manganese(III) phosphate is an inorganic chemical compound of manganese with the formula MnPO4. It is a hygroscopic purple solid that absorbs moisture to form the pale-green monohydrate,[1] though the anhydrous and monohydrate forms are typically each synthesized by separate methods.
The diphosphomanganate(III) ion slowly converts to the monohydrate. Heating of the monohydrate does not yield the anhydrous form, instead, it decomposes to manganese(II) pyrophosphate (Mn2P2O7) at 420 °C:[3]
The anhydrous form is sensitive to moisture. In the absence of moisture, it decomposes at 400 °C, but when moisture is present, it slowly transitions to an amorphous phase and decomposes at 250 °C.[1]
The monohydrate form has cell parameters of a = 6.912 Å, b = 7.470 Å, β = 112.3°, and Z = 4. It consists of interconnected distorted trans-[Mn(PO4)4(H2O)2] octahederons.[5]
References
^ abcdefgYiqing Huang; Jin Fang; Fredrick Omenya; Martin O'Shea; Natasha A. Chernova; Ruibo Zhang; Qi Wang; Nicholas F. Quackenbush; Louis F. J. Piper; David O. Scanlon; M. Stanley Whittingham (2014). "Understanding the stability of MnPO4". Journal of Materials Chemistry A. 2 (32): 12827–12834. doi:10.1039/C4TA00434E.
^Eiichi Narita; Taijiro Okabe (1982). "Inhibition of catalytic decomposition of acid permanganate solutions". Industrial & Engineering Chemistry Product Research and Development. 21 (4): 662–666. doi:10.1021/i300008a030.
^ abNarita Eiichi; Okabe Taijiro (1983). "The Thermal Decomposition of Manganese(III) Phosphate Monohydrate". Bulletin of the Chemical Society of Japan. 56 (9): 2841–2842. doi:10.1246/bcsj.56.2841.
^Slobotka Aleksovska; Vladimir M. Petruševski; Bojan Šoptrajanov (1997). "Infrared spectra of the monohydrates of manganese(III) phosphate and manganese(III) arsenate: relation to the compounds of the kieserite family". Journal of Molecular Structure. 408–409: 413–416. Bibcode:1997JMoSt.408..413A. doi:10.1016/S0022-2860(96)09720-7.
^ abPhilip Lightfoot; Anthony K. Cheetham; Arthur W. Sleight (1987). "Structure of manganese(3+) phosphate monohydrate by synchrotron x-ray powder diffraction". Inorganic Chemistry. 26 (21): 3544–3547. doi:10.1021/ic00268a025.
^"Purpurite". mindat.org. Retrieved 5 September 2023.