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ISSN: 2056-9890

Crystal structure of Na4(As2O5)(H2O)0.5 and a survey of the pyroarsenite anion, (As2O5)4−

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aTU Wien, Institute for Chemical Technologies and Analytics, Division of Applied Solid State Chemistry, Getreidemarkt 9/E164-05-1, 1060 Vienna, Austria
*Correspondence e-mail: [email protected]

Edited by L. Suescun, Universidad de la República, Uruguay (Received 16 February 2026; accepted 18 March 2026; online 24 March 2026)

The title compound, tetra­sodium pyroarsenite hemihydrate, [Na4(As2O5)(H2O)0.5], represents the first pyroarsenite compound of an alkali metal. The asymmetric unit comprises four Na, two As, five O sites and one H site in a general position, and one water O atom located on a twofold rotation axis in space group C2/c. The (As2O5)4– anion is made up from two trigonal-pyramidal {AsO3} units sharing a corner. In the crystal structure, all O atoms of the anion are also part of a framework defined by one [NaO4] and three [NaO6] coordination polyhedra. Almost linear hydrogen-bonding inter­actions of medium strength [O⋯O 2.651 (4) Å; O—H⋯O 171 (6)°] between the water mol­ecule and one of the terminal O atoms of the pyroarsenite anion consolidate the crystal structure. Data mining for structural data on isolated pyroarsenite anions resulted in 30 (As2O5)4– groups present in various crystal structures. In these pyroarsenite anions, the mean As—O distance to terminal oxygen atoms is 1.764 (33) Å and to bridging oxygen atoms 1.856 (64) Å. The values of the As—O—As bridging angle are highly variable [range 107.78 (13) to 144.12 (5)°], with that of Na4(As2O5)(H2O)0.5 having by far the smallest value of all structures chacterized so far.

1. Chemical context

Formation studies of alkali transition-metal oxido­anti­m­onates(V) and related oxidoarsenates(V) led to the unexpected discovery of the oxidoarsenate(III) compound K3FeAs2O6 under hydro­flux conditions (Wolflehner, 2026View full citation). A comprehensive review of this synthesis method has been given recently by He et al. (2023View full citation). To obtain the hypothetical sodium variant of K3FeAs2O6, the starting materials used under similar hydro­flux conditions have been adjusted. However, the corresponding experiment did not yield the planned target phase, but rather the transition metal-free compound Na4(As2O5)(H2O)0.5, the crystal structure of which is reported here, together with a survey on structural details regarding the pyroarsenite anion, (As2O5)4–.

2. Structural commentary

The asymmetric unit of Na4(As2O5)(H2O)0.5 comprises four Na, two As, six O and one H-atom positions. With the exception of the water O atom O1W (site symmetry 2; multiplicity 4, Wyckoff letter e), all atoms are located at sites corresponding to a general position (8 f) of space group C2/c.

The two AsIII atoms each are coordinated by three oxygen atoms in a trigonal–pyramidal shape, typical for arsenite groups. Two such trigonal pyramids share an O atom (O3), resulting in the formation of the condensed (As2O5)4– anion. The As—O bond lengths distribution in Na4(As2O5)(H2O)0.5 (Table 1[link]) is typical for a condensed system consisting of two oxido anions, for example, for pyro-anions consisting of two tetra­hedral groups, e.g. phosphates (Durif, 1995View full citation) or silicates (Liebau, 1985View full citation), here with four shorter As—O bonds [average value 1.730 (5) Å] to terminal O atoms and two longer As—O bonds to the bridging O atom [average value 1.903 (12) Å]. The mean As—O bond length of 1.788 (82) Å in the anion of the title compound agrees very well with the literature value of 1.782 Å for the averaged AsIII—O distance in the crystal structures of arsenite compounds (Majzlan et al., 2014View full citation). Structural data specific to pyroarsenite anions are discussed in more detail in section 3.

Table 1
Selected geometric parameters (Å, °)

As1—O1 1.732 (3) As2—O5 1.723 (3)
As1—O2 1.737 (3) As2—O4 1.728 (3)
As1—O3 1.915 (3) As2—O3 1.891 (3)
       
O1—As1—O2 102.68 (15) O5—As2—O3 97.79 (16)
O1—As1—O3 98.42 (16) O4—As2—O3 98.38 (12)
O2—As1—O3 97.34 (12) As2—O3—As1 107.78 (13)
O5—As2—O4 102.92 (16)    

If the non-bonding 4s2 electron lone pair ψ of the AsIII atom is also taken into account, [ψAsO3] polyhedra with the shapes of flattened tetra­hedra are formed. The positions of ψ were calculated with the LPLoc program (Hamani et al., 2020View full citation) resulting in the following fractional coordinates: x = 0.10919, y = −0.13221, z = 0.64501 for ψ1 located at the As1 atom [distance As1—ψ1 = 1.240 Å; radius(ψ1) = 1.19 Å], and x = 0.04042, y = 1.15526, z = 0.46720 for ψ2 located at the As2 atom [distance As2—ψ2 = 1.276 Å; radius(ψ2) = 1.19 Å].

The pyroarsenite anion exhibits a half-eclipsed conformation as evidenced by the torsion angles O1—As1⋯As2—O4 of 82.71 (19)° (synclinal), O2—As1⋯As2—O5 of 81.15 (18)° (synclinal), O2—As1⋯As2—O4 of −30.5 (2)° (boundary between synperiplanar and synclinal) and O1—As1⋯As2—O5 of −165.61 (13)° (anti­periplanar). The free electron pairs (taking into account the coordinates given above) have a torsion angle ψ1—As2⋯As2—ψ2 of −80.34° and are therefore also synclinal to each other (Fig. 1[link]).

[Figure 1]
Figure 1
The (As2O5)4– anion in the title compound in a side view (top) and approximately along the As1⋯As2 axis (bottom). Displacement ellipsoids are drawn at the 90% probability level; the calculated electron lone pairs ψ are indicated as spheres of arbitrary radius.

The Na+ sites show coordination numbers of 4 (Na1) and 6 (Na2, Na3 and Na4), and their coordination polyhedra are shown in Fig. 2[link]. The description of the closest matching ideal polyhedron for each site and qu­anti­fication of the distortion (δ) from it is based on the Polynator program (Link & Niewa, 2023View full citation), and numerical data considering Na—O distances up to 3.0 Å as relevant are compiled in Table 2[link], including averaged Na—O bond lengths. The latter are in reasonable agreement with literature values (Gagné & Hawthorne, 2016View full citation) of 2.359 (76) Å for coordination number 4, and 2.441 (112) Å for coordination number 6.

Table 2
Coordination environments (Å) around the Na+ cations in Na4(As2O5)(H2O)0.5

Atom Coordination number Polyhedron with idealized point group symmetry [in brackets] and deviation δ (in parentheses) from it Range of Na—O bond lengths Average Na—O bond length Number of water mol­ecules in the first coordination sphere Bond valence/valence units
Na1 4 heterodisphenoid [mm2] (4.159) 2.306 (4) – 2.559 (3) 2.408 1; O1W 0.76
Na2 6 didigonal scalenohedron [Mathematical equation2m] (10.947) 2.259 (3) – 2.775 (3) 2.488 0; – 1.00
Na3 6 twisted trigonal prism [32] (3.999) 2.342 (3) – 2.613 (5) 2.464 0; – 0.98
Na4 6 monocapped trigonal anti­frustum [3m] (28.070) 2.409 (9) – 2.623 (4) 2.496 1; O1W 0.86
[Figure 2]
Figure 2
Coordination environments for the four Na+ positions. Displacement ellipsoids are as in Fig. 1[link]. [Symmetry codes: (i) x, −y + 1, z − Mathematical equation; (ii) −x, y + 1, −z + Mathematical equation; (iii) x, −y, z − Mathematical equation; (iv) −x + Mathematical equation, −y + Mathematical equation, −z + 1; (v) −x + Mathematical equation, −y − Mathematical equation, −z + 1; (vi) −x + Mathematical equation, y + Mathematical equation, −z + Mathematical equation; (vii) −x + Mathematical equation, y − Mathematical equation, −z + Mathematical equation; (viii) x + Mathematical equation, y − Mathematical equation, z.]

In the extended structure, the diarsenite groups are isolated from each other and arranged via inversion centres to form opposite pairs that are stacked along [010] (Fig. 3[link]), whereby the anions are embedded in a framework of corner- and edge-sharing [NaO4] and [NaO6] polyhedra. The electron lone pairs of the AsIII atoms are stereochemically active and point into the free space of the framework. The crystal structure of Na4(As2O5)(H2O)0.5 is consolidated by O—H⋯O hydrogen bonds between the water mol­ecule and a terminal O atom (O4) of the diarsenite anion as the acceptor atom (Table 3[link]). Based on the DA distance, the hydrogen-bonding inter­action is classified as of medium strength (Jeffrey, 1997View full citation).

Table 3
Hydrogen-bond geometry (Å, °)

D—H⋯A D—H H⋯A DA D—H⋯A
O1W—H1⋯O4 0.86 (1) 1.80 (1) 2.651 (4) 171 (6)
[Figure 3]
Figure 3
The crystal structure of Na4(As2O5)(H2O)0.5 in a projection along [0Mathematical equation0]. The (As2O5)4– anion is given in polyhedral representation; displacement ellipsoids are as in Fig. 1[link]. Na—O bonds < 3.0 Å are displayed, and O—H⋯O hydrogen-bonding inter­actions are shown as yellow lines.

To verify the validity of the structure model, bond-valence sums (BVS; Brown, 2002View full citation) were calculated using the ECoN21 program (Ilinca, 2022View full citation). The BVS values (in valence units, v. u.) of the Na sites are listed in Table 1[link]; those of the As and O atoms are As1 2.92, As2 3.01, O1 1.92, O2 1.84, O3 1.97, O4 1.61, O5 1.92, and O1W 0.50. The calculated values correspond to expectations [1.00 v. u. for Na, 3.00 v. u. for As, 2.00 v. u. for O] and also reflect the role of individual oxygen atoms in hydrogen-bonding inter­actions. Since the contributions of the H atoms to the bonding were not taken into account in the BVS calculations, the O1W atom of the water mol­ecule has a very low BVS value, and the O4 atom, which acts as the acceptor atom of the medium-strong hydrogen bond (Table 3[link]), has a value significantly below 2.

3. Database survey

A search of the Inorganic Crystal Structure Database (ICSD; data release 2025-1; Zagorac et al., 2019View full citation) for compounds in the system Na2O–AsIII2O3–H2O revealed five phases, viz. NaAsO2 (Menary, 1958View full citation; Lee & Harrison, 2004View full citation), Na2(H2As4O8), NaAsO2·4H2O, Na2(HAsO3)·5H2O and Na5(HAsO3)(AsO3)·12H2O (Sheldrick & Häusler, 1987View full citation). The first three phases consist of chains of polymetaarsenite anions, whereas the latter two phases contain discrete arsenite anions. Sodium compounds with pyroarsenite anions have not been reported to date, nor have those of other alkali metals. The title compound thus represents the first structurally characterized pyroarsenite of the alkali metals.

A further database search for inorganic compounds containing discrete pyroarsenite anions in their crystal structure yielded over 20 hits compiled in Table 4[link], including several minerals. Together with the title compound, this results in 30 individual (As2O5)4– anions, whose averaged As—O bond lengths to terminal and bridging oxygen atoms and As—O—As bridging angles are listed. The structural features described in section 2 can also be observed for the vast majority of the other crystal structures comprising pyroarsenite anions, i.e., the presence of significantly longer As—O bonds to the bridging oxygen atoms compared to those involving terminal oxygen atoms. The mean As—Oterminal and As—Obridging distances in all 30 pyroarsenite anions are 1.764 (33) Å and 1.856 (64) Å [overall mean As—O bond length 1.795 (63) Å]. However, the values of the As—O—As bridging angle in the listed pyroarsenite anions are highly variable [range 107.78 (13) to 144.12 (5)°], whereby Na4(As2O5)(H2O)0.5 has by far the smallest value of all structures. Histograms illustrating these features graphically can be found in Fig. 4[link].

Table 4
As—O bond lengths (Å) and bridging angles (°) in the crystal structures of compounds with isolated pyroarsenite (As2O5)4– groups

Compound (mineral name) As—Oterminal As—Obridging As—O—As Reference
Na4(As2O5)·0.5H2O 1.732 (3), 1.737 (3), 1.723 (3), 1.728 (3) 1.915 (3), 1.891 (3) 107.78 (13) This work
BaCo(As2O5) 2×1.716 (3), 2×1.736 (3) 1.837 (5), 1.809 (5) 130.9 (3) David et al. (2014View full citation)
BaFe2(As2O5)(AsO3)(OH) 2×1.745 (13), 2×1.757 (12) 2×1.816 (7) 134.7 (10) Leclercq et al. (2020View full citation)
Ba2Fe2O(As2O5)2 4×1.7503 (12) 2×1.8391 (11) 130.24 (14) Leclercq et al. (2020View full citation)
Ba2(Ti4+V3+)(As2O5)2OF (bianchiniite) 4×1.7397 (15) 2×1.8377 (13) 127.12 (16) Biagioni et al. (2021View full citation)
CaSb5+2(As2O5)2O2·10H2O (prachařite) 1.7633 (17), 1.7661 (16), 1.7611 (17), 1.7641 (17) 1.8079 (19), 1.8185 (18) 128.55 (9) Kolitsch et al. (2023View full citation)
Fe2+Fe3+3(As2O5)2(AsO3) (schneiderhöhnite) 1.7680 (15), 1.7997 (16), 1.7936 (15), 1.7968 (15); 1.7689 (16), 1.7608 (15), 1.7485 (15), 1.7844 (15) 1.7926 (16), 1.7648 (15); 1.8610 (15), 1.8075 (16) 132.9 (2), 136.8 (2) Cooper & Hawthorne (2016View full citation)
Fe3+3(AsO2)4(As2O5)(OH) (karibibite) 2×1.77 (2), 2×1.79 (2) 2×1.77 (2) 141 (3) Colombo et al. (2017View full citation)
Fe3(As2O5)(AsO3)Cl 1.779 (7), 1.772 (8), 1.825 (7), 1.766 (7) 1.834 (7), 1.811 (9) 125.2 (4) Leclercq et al. (2020View full citation)
In2(As2O5)Cl2 1.756 (5), 1.804 (8), 1.742 (6), 1.786 (7) 1.912 (7), 1.827 (6) 124.9 (5) Jiang et al. (2011View full citation)
In4(As2O5)(As3O7)Br3 1.734 (9), 1.782 (8), 1.777 (10), 1.780 (8) 1.881 (9), 1.814 (8) 124.3 (5) Jiang et al. (2011View full citation)
Mn2(As2O5) 1.727 (4), 1.736 (4), 1.740 (3), 1.752 (4), 1.709 (4), 1.763 (3), 1.722 (4), 1.779 (3) 1.872 (4), 1.838 (4), 1.860 (4), 1.834 (4) 116.04 (16), 137.33 (19) Priestner et al. (2019View full citation)
Nd4(A2O5)2(As4O8) 1.716 (3), 1.778 (4), 1.719 (4), 1.783 (4) 1.861 (4), 1.880 (4) 118.2 (2) Ben Hamida et al. (2005View full citation)
[(Mo6+O2)2(H2O)2(As2O5]·3H2O (vajdakite) 1.750 (6), 1.822 (6), 1.778 (6), 1.793 (6) 1.786 (5), 1.817 (5) 127.6 (3) Ondruš et al. (2002View full citation)
Pb2As2O5 (paulmooreite) 1.747 (9), 1.750 (9), 1.733 (9), 1.772 (8) 1.826 (9), 1.842 (9) 123.0 (5) Araki et al. (1980View full citation)
Pb8OCl6(As2O5)2 (gebhardite) 1.762 (2), 1.823 (2), 1.674 (2), 1.792 (2); 1.757 (2), 1.757 (2), 1.756 (2), 1.866 (2) 1.888 (2), 1.6323 (19); 1.693 (2), 1.890 (2) 132.85 (6); 144.12 (5) Klaska & Gebert (1982View full citation)
RE3Cl2(AsO3)(As2O5) RE = Eu; Gd 1.776 (5), 1.827 (5), 1.751 (5), 1.753 (5); 1.772 (2), 1.831 (2), 1.741 (2); 1.749 (2) 1.864 (5), 1.968 (5); 1.855 (2), 1.972 (2) 116.0 (3), 115.97 (13) Schander et al. (2024View full citation)
RE3Br2(AsO3)(As2O5) RE = Y, Dy–Yb 1.736 (10) – 1.858 (9) 1.858 (9) – 1.971 (7) 115.2 (5) – 116.0 (5) Locke et al. (2025View full citation).
Sm3Cl2(As2O5)(AsO3) 1.769 (7), 1.833 (7), 1.753 (6), 1.765 (7) 1.866 (6), 1.969 (6) 116.2 (3) Goerigk et al. (2020View full citation)
Sm4(A2O5)2(As4O8) 1.719 (2), 1.787 (2), 1.714 (2), 1.774 (3) 1.883 (2), 1.862 (3) 117.7 (2) Kang & Schleid (2006View full citation)
Sm4(A2O5)2(As4O8) 1.709 (7), 1.778 (8), 1.721 (8), 1.783 (8) 1.850 (8), 1.886 (8) 117.7 (4) Ben Hamida et al. (2005View full citation)
[Figure 4]
Figure 4
Histograms for the As—Oterminal and As—Obridging bond lengths and As—O—As bridging angles in the crystal structures listed in Table 4[link]; red colors refer to the title compound.

4. Synthesis and crystallization

Na8(As2O5)2·H2O was first obtained serendipitously under hydro­flux conditions. Powders of Fe2O3 and As2O3 were mixed in a 1:2 ratio and combined with an excess of NaOH (98.5%wt) as a flux and a suitable amount of water to achieve a molar NaOH:H2O ratio of approximately 1:1. The reaction was carried out in a Teflon container placed in a steel autoclave that was heated to 483 K for 2 d. An off-white, highly water-soluble solid product was obtained, which also dissolved when placed in a methanol solution for a prolonged period of time. To remove the NaOH flux, the product was finally washed quickly in two stages, twice with dry methanol and twice with dry acetone. The shape of the obtained colourless crystals was rather unspecific, mostly plate- to block-like with rounded edges.

Na4(As2O5)·(H2O)0.5 was obtained specifically, i.e., without the addition of iron oxide, when As2O3 was heated directly with an excess of NaOH (approximate molar ratios As2O3: NaOH 1:12 and H2O: NaOH 1.5:1) in an autoclave under the same conditions.

5. Refinement

Crystal data, data collection and structure refinement details are summarized in Table 5[link]. The position of the water H atom was clearly discernible from a difference-Fourier map. The O—H distance was restrained to 0.85 (1) Å, while the Uiso(H) parameter was refined freely.

Table 5
Experimental details

Crystal data
Chemical formula [Na4(As2O5)(H2O)0.5]
Mr 330.81
Crystal system, space group Monoclinic, C2/c
Temperature (K) 301
a, b, c (Å) 18.283 (3), 5.0747 (9), 14.740 (3)
β (°) 91.256 (6)
V3) 1367.3 (4)
Z 8
Radiation type Mo Kα
μ (mm−1) 10.00
Crystal size (mm) 0.04 × 0.03 × 0.02
 
Data collection
Diffractometer Bruker APEXII CCD
Absorption correction Multi-scan (SADABS; Krause et al., 2015View full citation)
Tmin, Tmax 0.660, 0.746
No. of measured, independent and observed [I > 2σ(I)] reflections 10323, 1910, 1193
Rint 0.069
(sin θ/λ)max−1) 0.695
 
Refinement
R[F2 > 2σ(F2)], wR(F2), S 0.033, 0.058, 1.02
No. of reflections 1910
No. of parameters 109
No. of restraints 1
H-atom treatment All H-atom parameters refined
Δρmax, Δρmin (e Å−3) 0.72, −0.79
Computer programs: APEX4 and SAINT (Bruker, 2022View full citation), SHELXT (Sheldrick, 2015aView full citation), SHELXL (Sheldrick, 2015bView full citation), ATOMS for Windows (Dowty, 2006View full citation) and publCIF (Westrip, 2010View full citation).

Supporting information


Computing details top

Tetrasodium pyroarsenite hemihydrate top
Crystal data top
[Na4(As2O5)(H2O)0.5]F(000) = 1240
Mr = 330.81Dx = 3.214 Mg m3
Monoclinic, C2/cMo Kα radiation, λ = 0.71073 Å
a = 18.283 (3) ÅCell parameters from 1379 reflections
b = 5.0747 (9) Åθ = 2.2–28.9°
c = 14.740 (3) ŵ = 10.00 mm1
β = 91.256 (6)°T = 301 K
V = 1367.3 (4) Å3Block, colourless
Z = 80.04 × 0.03 × 0.02 mm
Data collection top
Bruker APEXII CCD
diffractometer
1193 reflections with I > 2σ(I)
ω– and φ–scansRint = 0.069
Absorption correction: multi-scan
(SADABS; Krause et al., 2015)
θmax = 29.6°, θmin = 2.2°
Tmin = 0.660, Tmax = 0.746h = 2525
10323 measured reflectionsk = 77
1910 independent reflectionsl = 2020
Refinement top
Refinement on F21 restraint
Least-squares matrix: fullHydrogen site location: difference Fourier map
R[F2 > 2σ(F2)] = 0.033All H-atom parameters refined
wR(F2) = 0.058 w = 1/[σ2(Fo2) + 4.6824P]
where P = (Fo2 + 2Fc2)/3
S = 1.02(Δ/σ)max < 0.001
1910 reflectionsΔρmax = 0.72 e Å3
109 parametersΔρmin = 0.79 e Å3
Special details top

Geometry. All esds (except the esd in the dihedral angle between two l.s. planes) are estimated using the full covariance matrix. The cell esds are taken into account individually in the estimation of esds in distances, angles and torsion angles; correlations between esds in cell parameters are only used when they are defined by crystal symmetry. An approximate (isotropic) treatment of cell esds is used for estimating esds involving l.s. planes.

Fractional atomic coordinates and isotropic or equivalent isotropic displacement parameters (Å2) top
xyzUiso*/Ueq
Na10.03814 (10)0.4524 (4)0.09242 (14)0.0176 (4)
Na20.23554 (8)0.0157 (5)0.32203 (11)0.0163 (4)
Na30.30984 (9)0.0008 (5)0.01553 (11)0.0149 (4)
Na40.37938 (11)0.0460 (4)0.21031 (13)0.0207 (5)
As10.15826 (2)0.01960 (12)0.62085 (3)0.00966 (12)
As20.08337 (2)0.01329 (12)0.43240 (3)0.01006 (11)
O10.14842 (16)0.3569 (6)0.6337 (2)0.0111 (8)
O20.24805 (15)0.0336 (7)0.65721 (19)0.0132 (7)
O30.17524 (14)0.0122 (8)0.49315 (17)0.0133 (6)
O40.11217 (15)0.0392 (7)0.3230 (2)0.0157 (7)
O50.07415 (16)0.3510 (7)0.4372 (2)0.0132 (8)
O1W0.0000000.3006 (10)0.2500000.0189 (12)
H10.034 (2)0.202 (9)0.273 (4)0.044 (19)*
Atomic displacement parameters (Å2) top
U11U22U33U12U13U23
Na10.0124 (8)0.0218 (10)0.0184 (9)0.0026 (10)0.0012 (7)0.0004 (10)
Na20.0115 (8)0.0186 (10)0.0186 (9)0.0027 (11)0.0024 (7)0.0006 (11)
Na30.0146 (8)0.0152 (9)0.0149 (9)0.0013 (11)0.0007 (7)0.0017 (11)
Na40.0240 (9)0.0239 (12)0.0143 (10)0.0033 (11)0.0035 (8)0.0003 (10)
As10.0102 (2)0.0097 (3)0.0091 (2)0.0005 (2)0.00026 (17)0.0004 (3)
As20.0089 (2)0.0107 (2)0.0106 (2)0.0009 (2)0.00064 (17)0.0001 (2)
O10.0125 (18)0.0092 (18)0.0118 (18)0.0013 (12)0.0030 (14)0.0007 (13)
O20.0124 (14)0.0161 (17)0.0109 (14)0.0038 (15)0.0026 (11)0.0028 (15)
O30.0119 (14)0.0204 (17)0.0076 (13)0.0027 (18)0.0007 (11)0.0005 (17)
O40.0134 (15)0.0215 (19)0.0122 (15)0.0007 (15)0.0018 (12)0.0038 (15)
O50.0101 (19)0.013 (2)0.016 (2)0.0009 (13)0.0010 (16)0.0006 (13)
O1W0.019 (3)0.017 (3)0.020 (3)0.0000.007 (2)0.000
Geometric parameters (Å, º) top
Na1—O1i2.306 (4)Na3—O3vi2.613 (5)
Na1—O5ii2.316 (4)Na4—O5vi2.409 (4)
Na1—O5iii2.450 (4)Na4—O1iv2.416 (4)
Na1—O1W2.559 (3)Na4—O2iii2.510 (3)
Na2—O42.259 (3)Na4—O4vi2.556 (4)
Na2—O1iv2.299 (3)Na4—O1Wviii2.588 (3)
Na2—O2iii2.447 (3)Na4—O4vii2.623 (4)
Na2—O2v2.483 (4)As1—O11.732 (3)
Na2—O2iv2.662 (4)As1—O21.737 (3)
Na2—O32.775 (3)As1—O31.915 (3)
Na3—O5vi2.342 (3)As2—O51.723 (3)
Na3—O2iii2.402 (3)As2—O41.728 (3)
Na3—O1vii2.455 (4)As2—O31.891 (3)
Na3—O3iii2.477 (3)O1W—H10.860 (10)
Na3—O3vii2.498 (5)O1W—H1ix0.860 (10)
O1i—Na1—O5ii129.43 (13)Na2iv—O1—Na3vi82.39 (11)
O1i—Na1—O5iii94.78 (12)Na1x—O1—Na3vi85.74 (12)
O5ii—Na1—O5iii99.78 (12)Na4iv—O1—Na3vi150.20 (15)
O1i—Na1—O1W98.11 (11)As1—O2—Na3xi100.39 (13)
O5ii—Na1—O1W92.44 (11)As1—O2—Na2xi101.09 (13)
O5iii—Na1—O1W150.34 (15)Na3xi—O2—Na2xi156.45 (14)
O4—Na2—O1iv153.99 (15)As1—O2—Na2v107.58 (15)
O4—Na2—O2iii96.86 (11)Na3xi—O2—Na2v96.75 (13)
O1iv—Na2—O2iii99.53 (12)Na2xi—O2—Na2v85.87 (12)
O4—Na2—O2v99.75 (13)As1—O2—Na4xi172.49 (19)
O1iv—Na2—O2v97.70 (12)Na3xi—O2—Na4xi78.92 (10)
O2iii—Na2—O2v98.35 (13)Na2xi—O2—Na4xi78.52 (10)
O4—Na2—O2iv93.27 (13)Na2v—O2—Na4xi79.91 (10)
O1iv—Na2—O2iv65.71 (11)As1—O2—Na2iv89.16 (13)
O2iii—Na2—O2iv93.71 (13)Na3xi—O2—Na2iv88.71 (12)
O2v—Na2—O2iv161.01 (14)Na2xi—O2—Na2iv82.07 (11)
O4—Na2—O365.04 (10)Na2v—O2—Na2iv161.02 (14)
O1iv—Na2—O397.26 (11)Na4xi—O2—Na2iv83.35 (11)
O2iii—Na2—O3161.88 (10)As2—O3—As1107.78 (13)
O2v—Na2—O386.05 (12)As2—O3—Na3xi158.62 (15)
O2iv—Na2—O387.01 (12)As1—O3—Na3xi92.96 (10)
O5vi—Na3—O2iii99.15 (12)As2—O3—Na3vi98.08 (15)
O5vi—Na3—O1vii93.73 (11)As1—O3—Na3vi92.93 (14)
O2iii—Na3—O1vii163.93 (14)Na3xi—O3—Na3vi85.65 (12)
O5vi—Na3—O3iii159.87 (15)As2—O3—Na3vii90.08 (14)
O2iii—Na3—O3iii68.45 (10)As1—O3—Na3vii94.99 (14)
O1vii—Na3—O3iii101.55 (11)Na3xi—O3—Na3vii82.85 (12)
O5vi—Na3—O3vii103.59 (12)Na3vi—O3—Na3vii166.34 (14)
O2iii—Na3—O3vii99.63 (12)As2—O3—Na286.35 (10)
O1vii—Na3—O3vii67.81 (10)As1—O3—Na2165.85 (13)
O3iii—Na3—O3vii94.35 (12)Na3xi—O3—Na273.01 (8)
O5vi—Na3—O3vi66.47 (11)Na3vi—O3—Na284.33 (11)
O2iii—Na3—O3vi91.46 (12)Na3vii—O3—Na285.28 (11)
O1vii—Na3—O3vi102.52 (11)As2—O4—Na2108.81 (14)
O3iii—Na3—O3vi97.15 (12)As2—O4—Na4vii92.81 (15)
O3vii—Na3—O3vi166.34 (14)Na2—O4—Na4vii83.25 (12)
O5vi—Na4—O1iv154.17 (13)As2—O4—Na4vi110.26 (16)
O5vi—Na4—O2iii94.47 (11)Na2—O4—Na4vi89.30 (13)
O1iv—Na4—O2iii94.71 (12)Na4vii—O4—Na4vi156.92 (15)
O5vi—Na4—O4vi65.80 (12)As2—O5—Na1xii120.53 (16)
O1iv—Na4—O4vi89.87 (12)As2—O5—Na3vii104.04 (15)
O2iii—Na4—O4vi91.49 (12)Na1xii—O5—Na3vii135.32 (16)
O5vi—Na4—O1Wviii89.59 (10)As2—O5—Na4vii98.18 (15)
O1iv—Na4—O1Wviii94.54 (10)Na1xii—O5—Na4vii93.74 (13)
O2iii—Na4—O1Wviii149.65 (16)Na3vii—O5—Na4vii82.18 (11)
O4vi—Na4—O1Wviii117.37 (14)As2—O5—Na1xi105.99 (15)
O5vi—Na4—O4vii91.18 (12)Na1xii—O5—Na1xi80.22 (12)
O1iv—Na4—O4vii113.12 (13)Na3vii—O5—Na1xi85.10 (11)
O2iii—Na4—O4vii88.68 (11)Na4vii—O5—Na1xi154.79 (16)
O4vi—Na4—O4vii156.92 (15)Na1ix—O1W—Na1144.9 (2)
O1Wviii—Na4—O4vii61.14 (12)Na1ix—O1W—Na4vi84.13 (10)
O1—As1—O2102.68 (15)Na1—O1W—Na4vi79.19 (10)
O1—As1—O398.42 (16)Na1ix—O1W—Na4xiii79.19 (10)
O2—As1—O397.34 (12)Na1—O1W—Na4xiii84.13 (10)
O5—As2—O4102.92 (16)Na4vi—O1W—Na4xiii122.5 (2)
O5—As2—O397.79 (16)Na1ix—O1W—H191 (4)
O4—As2—O398.38 (12)Na1—O1W—H1109 (4)
As1—O1—Na2iv102.22 (15)Na4vi—O1W—H166 (4)
As1—O1—Na1x118.57 (16)Na4xiii—O1W—H1166 (4)
Na2iv—O1—Na1x138.84 (16)Na1ix—O1W—H1ix109 (4)
As1—O1—Na4iv109.29 (15)Na1—O1W—H1ix91 (4)
Na2iv—O1—Na4iv83.37 (12)Na4vi—O1W—H1ix166 (4)
Na1x—O1—Na4iv87.96 (12)Na4xiii—O1W—H1ix66 (4)
As1—O1—Na3vi99.26 (14)H1—O1W—H1ix109 (8)
Symmetry codes: (i) x, y+1, z1/2; (ii) x, y+1, z+1/2; (iii) x, y, z1/2; (iv) x+1/2, y+1/2, z+1; (v) x+1/2, y1/2, z+1; (vi) x+1/2, y+1/2, z+1/2; (vii) x+1/2, y1/2, z+1/2; (viii) x+1/2, y1/2, z; (ix) x, y, z+1/2; (x) x, y+1, z+1/2; (xi) x, y, z+1/2; (xii) x, y1, z+1/2; (xiii) x1/2, y+1/2, z.
Hydrogen-bond geometry (Å, º) top
D—H···AD—HH···AD···AD—H···A
O1W—H1···O40.86 (1)1.80 (1)2.651 (4)171 (6)
Coordination environments (Å) around the Na+ cations in Na4(As2O5)(H2O)0.5 top
AtomCoordination numberPolyhedron with idealized point group symmetry [in brackets] and deviation δ (in parentheses) from itRange of Na—O bond lenghtsAverage Na—O bond lengthNumber of water molecules in the first coordination sphereBond valence/valence units (without contribution of H atoms)
Na14heterodisphenoid [mm2] (4.159)2.306 (4)–2.559 (3)2.4081; O1W0.76
Na26didigonal scalenohedron [42m] (10.947)2.259 (3) – 2.775 (3)2.4880; –1.00
Na36twisted trigonal prism [32] (3.999)2.342 (3) – 2.613 (5)2.4640; –0.98
Na46monocapped trigonal antifrustum [3m] (28.070)2.409 (9) – 2.623 (4)2.4961; O1W0.86
As—O bond lengths (Å) and bridging angles (°) in the crystal structures of compounds with isolated pyroarsenite (As2O5)4– groups top
Compound (mineral name)As—OterminalAs—ObridgingAs—O—AsReference
Na4(As2O5)·0.5H2O1.732 (3), 1.737 (3), 1.723 (3), 1.728 (3)1.915 (3), 1.891 (3)107.78 (13)This work
BaCo(As2O5)2×1.716 (3), 2×1.736 (3)1.837 (5), 1.809 (5)130.9 (3)David et al. (2014)
BaFe2(As2O5)(AsO3)(OH)2×1.745 (13), 2×1.757 (12)2×1.816 (7)134.7 (10)Leclercq et al. (2020)
Ba2Fe2O(As2O5)24×1.7503 (12)2×1.8391 (11)130.24 (14)Leclercq et al. (2020)
Ba2(Ti4+V3+)(As2O5)2OF (bianchiniite)4×1.7397 (15)2×1.8377 (13)127.12 (16)Biagioni et al. (2021)
CaSb5+2(As2O5)2O2·10H2O (prachařite)1.7633 (17), 1.7661 (16), 1.7611 (17), 1.7641 (17)1.8079 (19), 1.8185 (18)128.55 (9)Kolitsch et al. (2023)
Fe2+Fe3+3(As2O5)2(AsO3) (schneiderhöhnite)1.7680 (15), 1.7997 (16), 1.7936 (15), 1.7968 (15); 1.7689 (16), 1.7608 (15), 1.7485 (15), 1.7844 (15)1.7926 (16), 1.7648 (15); 1.8610 (15), 1.8075 (16)132.9 (2), 136.8 (2)Cooper & Hawthorne (2016)
Fe3+3(AsO2)4(As2O5)(OH) (karibibite)2×1.77 (2), 2×1.79 (2)2×1.77 (2)141 (3)Colombo et al. (2017)
Fe3(As2O5)(AsO3)Cl1.779 (7), 1.772 (8), 1.825 (7), 1.766 (7)1.834 (7), 1.811 (9)125.2 (4)Leclercq et al. (2020)
In2(As2O5)Cl21.756 (5), 1.804 (8), 1.742 (6), 1.786 (7)1.912 (7), 1.827 (6)124.9 (5)Jiang et al. (2011)
In4(As2O5)(As3O7)Br31.734 (9), 1.782 (8), 1.777 (10), 1.780 (8)1.881 (9), 1.814 (8)124.3 (5)Jiang et al. (2011)
Mn2(As2O5)1.727 (4), 1.736 (4), 1.740 (3), 1.752 (4), 1.709 (4), 1.763 (3), 1.722 (4), 1.779 (3)1.872 (4), 1.838 (4), 1.860 (4), 1.834 (4)116.04 (16), 137.33 (19)Priestner et al. (2019)
Nd4(A2O5)2(As4O8)1.716 (3), 1.778 (4), 1.719 (4), 1.783 (4)1.861 (4), 1.880 (4)118.2 (2)Ben Hamida et al. (2005)
[(Mo6+O2)2(H2O)2(As2O5]·3H2O (vajdakite)1.750 (6), 1.822 (6), 1.778 (6), 1.793 (6)1.786 (5), 1.817 (5)127.6 (3)Ondruš et al. (2002)
Pb2As2O5 (paulmooreite)1.747 (9), 1.750 (9), 1.733 (9), 1.772 (8)1.826 (9), 1.842 (9)123.0 (5)Araki et al. (1980)
Pb8OCl6(As2O5)2 (gebhardite)1.762 (2), 1.823 (2), 1.674 (2), 1.792 (2); 1.757 (2), 1.757 (2), 1.756 (2), 1.866 (2)1.888 (2), 1.6323 (19); 1.693 (2), 1.890 (2)132.85 (6); 144.12 (5)Klaska & Gebert (1982)
RE3Cl2(AsO3)(As2O5) RE = Eu; Gd1.776 (5), 1.827 (5), 1.751 (5), 1.753 (5); 1.772 (2), 1.831 (2), 1.741 (2); 1.749 (2)1.864 (5), 1.968 (5); 1.855 (2), 1.972 (2)116.0 (3), 115.97 (13)Schander et al. (2024)
RE3Br2(AsO39(As2O5) RE = Y, Dy–Yb1.736 (10) – 1.858 (9)1.858 (9) – 1.971 (7)115.2 (5) – 116.0 (5)Locke et al. (2025).
Sm3Cl2(As2O5)(AsO3)1.769 (7), 1.833 (7), 1.753 (6), 1.765 (7)1.866 (6), 1.969 (6)116.2 (3)Goerigk et al. (2020)
Sm4(A2O5)2(As4O8)1.719 (2), 1.787 (2), 1.714 (2), 1.774 (3)1.883 (2), 1.862 (3)117.7 (2)Kang & Schleid (2006)
Sm4(A2O5)2(As4O8)1.709 (7), 1.778 (8), 1.721 (8), 1.783 (8)1.850 (8), 1.886 (8)117.7 (4)Ben Hamida et al. (2005)
 

Acknowledgements

The authors acknowledge the X-ray Centre of TU Wien for providing access to instrumentation and analysis software and TU Wien Bibliothek for financial support through its Open Access Funding Program.

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