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<div class="csl-entry">Weil, M., & Stöger, B. (2025). The missing representatives of the hydrated sodium orthophosphate phases: Na₃(PO₄)(H₂O)₇ and Na₃(PO₄)(H₂O)₆. <i>Acta Crystallographica Section E: Crystallographic Communications</i>, <i>81</i>(12), 1119–1125. https://doi.org/10.1107/S2056989025009843</div>
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dc.identifier.uri
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12708/222609
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dc.description.abstract
The crystal structures of the long-known compound Na₃(PO₄)(H₂O)₆, trisodium orthophosphate hexahydrate, and the compound Na₃(PO₄)(H₂O)₇, trisodium orthophosphate heptahydrate, the possible existence of which is discussed in the literature, were elucidated by single-crystal X-ray diffraction. In both crystal structures, all the water molecules are bound to the sodium cations, but the different water content leads to different arrangements in terms of polyhedral linkage. In the case of the heptahydrate (space group Pca2₁, Z = 4), this results in a layered structure made up from three sixfold coordinated Na⁺ cations with phosphate units in between. In the case of the hexahydrate (space group P1, Z = 4), a three-dimensional network is realised by one fivefold and five sixfold coordinated Na⁺ cations, in which the phosphate units are embedded in the voids. In both crystal structures, the water molecules are involved in complex O—H⋯O hydrogen-bonding networks and form moderately strong hydrogen bonds on average, almost exclusively with the phosphate O atoms. It is noteworthy that some O atoms accept up to five such bonds.