Title: George Mason University
1George Mason University General Chemistry
212 Chapter 23 Transition Elements Acknowledgemen
ts Course Text Chemistry the Molecular Nature
of Matter and Change, 6th ed, 2011, Martin S.
Silberberg, McGraw-Hill The Chemistry 211/212
General Chemistry courses taught at George Mason
are intended for those students enrolled in a
science /engineering oriented curricula, with
particular emphasis on chemistry, biochemistry,
and biology The material on these slides is taken
primarily from the course text but the instructor
has modified, condensed, or otherwise reorganized
selected material.Additional material from other
sources may also be included. Interpretation of
course material to clarify concepts and solutions
to problems is the sole responsibility of this
instructor.
2Transition Elements
- Properties of the Transition Elements
- The Inner Transition Elements
- Highlights of Selected Transition Elements
- Coordination Compounds
- Theoretical Basis for the Bonding and Properties
of Complexes
3Transition Elements
- Main-Group vs Transition Elements
- Most important uses of Main-Group elements
involve the compounds made up of these elements - Transition Elements are highly useful in their
elemental or uncombined form
4Transition Elements
- Properties of Transition Elements
- Recall The A (Main Group) elements make up the
s and p blocks - Transition Elements make up the
- d block (B group)
- f block elements (Inner Transition Elements)
- As ions, transition metals (elements) provide
fascinating insights into chemical bonding and
structure - Transition metals play an important role in
living organisms
5Transition Elements
6Transition Elements
- Electron Configurations of the Transition Metals
- In the Periodic Table, the Transition metals,
designated d-block (B-Group) elements, are
located in - 40 elements in 4 series within Periods 4 -7
- Lie between the last ns-block elements in group
2A(2) (Ca Ra) and the first np-block elements
in group (3A(13) (Ga element 113 (unnamed) - Each series represents the filling of the 5 d
orbitals - l 2 ? ml -2 -1 0 1 2
- (5 orbitals per period x 2 electrons per orbital
x 4 Periods - 40 Elements
7Transition Elements
- Condensed d-block ground-state electron
configuration - noble gas ns2(n-1)dx, with n 4 -7 x 1-10
- (several aufbau build-up exceptions)
- Partial (valence shell) electron configuration
- ns2(n-1)dx
- Recall Chromium (Cr) and Copper (Cu) are
exceptions to the above aufbau configuration
setup - Expected Cr Ar 4s23d4 Cu Ar 4s23d9
- Actual Cr Ar 4s13d5 Cu Ar 4s13d10
- Reasons change in relative energies of 4s 3d
orbitals and the unusual stability of ½ filled
and filled sublevels (level 4 relative to level
3)
8Transition Elements
Note Aufbau build up exceptions for Cr Cu
9Transition Elements
- The Inner Transition elements
- Lie between the 1st and 2nd members of the
d-block elements in Periods 6 7 (n6 n7) - Condensed f-block ground-state electron
configuration (Periods 6 7) - noble gas ns2 (n-2)f14(n-1)dx, with n 6 -7
- The 28 f orbitals are filled as follows
- l 3 ? ml -3 -2 -1 0 1 2
3 - 7 orbitals per period x 2 electrons per orbital x
2 periods - 28 Elements
10Transition Elements
- Transition Metal Ions
- Form through the loss of the ns
electronsbefore the (n-1)d electrons - Ex. Ti2 Ar 3d2 4s2 ? Ar 3d2 2e-
(not Ar 4s2) - (Ti2 also called d2 ion)
- Ions of different transition metals with the same
electron configuration often have similar
properties - Ex. Mn2 and Fe3 are both d5 ions
- Mn2 Ar 3d54s2 ? Ar 3d5 2e-
- Fe3 Ar 3d64s2 ? Ar 3d5 3e-
- Both Ions have pale colors in aqueous solutions
- Both form complex ions with similar magnetic
properties
11Practice Problem
- Write condensed electron configurations for the
following ions - Zr V3 Mo3
- Vanadium (V)
Period 4 - Zirconium (Zr) Molybdenum (Mo) Period 5
- General Configuration ns2(n-1)dx
- a. Zr is 2nd element in the 4d series Kr
5s24d2 (d2 ion) - b. V is the 3rd element in the 3d series Ar
4s23d3 - ns electrons lost first
- In forming V3, 3 electrons lost two 4s one
3d - ? V3 Ar 4s23d3 ? Ar 3d2 (d2 ion)
3e- - c. Mo lies below Cr in Period 5, Group 6B(6)
kr 5s1 4d5 - Note Same electron configuration exception as
Cr - ? Mo3 Kr 5s1 4d5 ? Kr 4d3 (d3 ion)
3 e- -
12Transition Elements
- Trends of Transition Elements Across a Period
- Transition elements exhibit smaller, less regular
changes in - Size
- Electronegativity
- First Ionization Energy
- than the Main Group Elements in the same group
13Transition Elements
- Atomic Size
- General overall decrease across a period for both
Main group and Transition group elements - As the d orbitals are filled across a period,
the change in atomic size within the transition
elements evens out because the increased nuclear
charge shields the outer electrons preventing
them from spreading out
Transition Metals
Main group
Main group
14Transition Elements
- Electronegativity
- Electronegativity generally increases across
period - Change in electronegativity within a series
(period) is relatively small in keeping with the
relatively small change in size - Small electronegativity change in Transition
Elements is in contrast with the steeper increase
between the Main Group elements across a period - Magnitude of Electronegativity in Transition
elements is similar to the larger main-group
metals
Transition Metals
15Transition Elements
- Ionization Energy
- Ionization Energy of Period 4 Main-group elements
rise steeply from left to right as the electrons
become more difficult to remove from the poorly
shielded increasing nuclear charge, i.e., no d
electrons - In the Transition metals, however, the first
ionization energies increase relatively little
because of the effective shielding by the inner
d electrons reducing the effect of the
increased nuclear charge
Transition Metals
16Transition Elements
- Trends Within (down) a Group (relative to
main-group elements) - Vertical trends differ from those of the Main
Group elements - Atomic Size
- Increases, as expected, from Period 4 to 5
- No increase from Period 5 to 6
- Lanthanides, starting in period 6 with buried
4f sublevel orbitals, appear between the 4d
orbitals in period 5 and the 5d orbitals in
period 6 Aufbau buildup sequence - An element in Period 6 is separated from the one
above it in Period 5 by 32 electrons - (ten 4d, six 5p, two 6s, and fourteen 4f)
- The extra shrinking that results from the
increased nuclear charge due to the addition of
the fourteen 4f electrons is called the - Lanthanide Contraction
17Transition Elements
Note n gt 7 l gt 3 Sublevels not utilized for
any element in the current Period Table
n5
18Transition Elements
Main Group Non-metals
Main Group Metals
Transition Metals
Inner Transition Metals
Order of Sublevel Orbital Filling
19Transition Elements
- Trends Within a Group (relative to main-group
elements) - Electronegativity (EN) Relative ability of an
atom in a covalent bond to attract shared
electrons - EN of Main-group elements decreases down group
- greater size means less attraction by nucleus
- Greater Reactivity
- EN in Transition elements is opposite the trend
in Main-group elements - EN increases from period 4 to period 5
- No change from period 5 to period 6, since the
change in volume is small and Zeff increases (f
orbital electrons) - Transition metals exhibit more covalent bonding
and attract electrons more strongly than
main-group metals - The EN values in the heavy metals exceed those of
most metalloids, forming salt-like compounds,
such as CsAu and the Au- ion
20Transition Elements
- Trends Within a Group (relative to Main-group
elements) - Ionization Energy Energy required to remove an
electron from a gaseous atom or ion - Main-group elements increase in size down a
group, decreasing the Zeff , making it
relatively easier to remove the outer electrons - The relatively small increase in size of
transition metals, combined with the relatively
large increase in nuclear charge (Zeff), makes it
more difficult to remove a valence electron,
resulting in a general increase in the first
ionization energy down a group
21Transition Elements
- Trends Within a Group (relative to Main-group
elements) - Density
- Atomic size (volume) is inversely related to
density - (As size increases density decreases)
- Transition element density across a period
initially increases, then levels off, finally
dips at end of series - From Period 5 to Period 6 the density increases
dramatically because atomic volumes change little
while nuclear mass increases significantly - Period 6 series contains some of the densest
elements known - Tungsten, Rhenium, Osmium, Iridium, Platinum,
Gold - (Density 20 times greater than water,
- 2 times more dense than lead)
22Transition Elements
- Trends are unlike those for the Main-group
elements in several ways - 2nd 3rd members of a transition group are
nearly same size - Electronegativity increases down a transition
group - 1st ionization energies are highest at the bottom
of transition group - Densities increase down a transition group (mass
increases faster than density
23Transition Elements
- Chemical Properties of the Transition Elements
- Atomic physical properties of Transitions
elements are similar to Main group elements - Chemical properties of transition elements are
very different from main group elements - Oxidation States
- Main-group elements display one, or at most two,
oxidation states - The ns (n-1)d electrons in transition
elements are very close in energy - All or most can be used as valence electrons in
bonding Transition metals can have multiple
oxidation states
24Transition Elements
Oxidation State (Number) Magnitude of charge an
atom in a covalent compound would have if its
shared electrons were held completely by the atom
that attracts them more strongly
Note All 3 d5
Ex. MnO2 O.N. Mn 4
Ex. MnO4- O.N. Mn 7
25Transition Elements
- Metallic Behavior
- Atomic size and oxidation state have a major
effect on the nature of bonding in transition
metal compounds - Transition elements in their lower oxidation
states behave more like metals Oxides more
basic - Transition elements in their higher oxidation
states exhibit more covalent bonding Oxides
more acidic - Ex. TiCl2 (Ti2) is an ionic solid
- TiCl4 (Ti4) is a molecular liquid
26Transition Elements
- Metallic Behavior
- In the higher oxidation states
- The atoms have fewer electrons
- The nuclear charge pulls remaining electrons
closer, decreasing the volume and increasing the
density - The charge density (ratio of the ions charge to
its volume) increases - The increase in charge density leads to more
polarization of the electron clouds in non-metals
- The bonding becomes more covalent
- The stronger the covalent bond, the less metallic
- The oxides, therefore, become less basic
- Ex. TiO (Ti2) is weakly basic in water
- TiO2 (Ti4) is amphoteric, reacting with both
acid and base
27Transition Elements
- Electronegativity, Oxidation State,
Acidity/Basicity - Why does oxide acidity increase with oxidation
state? - Metal with a higher oxidation state is more
positively charged - Attraction of electrons is increased, i.e.,
electronegativity increases - Effective Electronegativity Valence State
Electronegativity - EN Cr 1.6 Al 1.5 (basic oxide)
Cr3 1.7 Cr6 2.3 P 2.1
(acidic oxides)
28Transition Elements
- Metallic Behavior
- Reduction Strength (Redox)
- Standard Electrode Potential, Eo , generally
decreases across a period - As the value of Eo becomes more negative, i.e.,
at the beginning of the series, the ability of
the species to act as a reducing agent increases - Thus, Ti2, Eo -01.63V, is a stronger reducing
agent than Ni2, Eo -0.25V
- All species with a negative value of Eo can
reduce H - 2H(aq) 2e- ? H2(g) Eo 0.0V)
- Note Cu2 (Eo 0.34 V) cannot reduce H
- The magnitude of the Eo values between two
species, and the relative degree of surface
oxidation, determines the level of reactivity of
the oxidation/reduction reaction in water, steam,
or acid solution
29Transition Elements
- Color in Transition Elements
- Most Main-Group Ionic Compounds are colorless
- Metal ions have a filled outer shell
- With only much higher energy orbitals available
to receive an excited electron, the ion does
not absorb visible light - The partially filled d orbitals of the
transition metals can absorb visible wavelengths
and move to slightly higher energy d levels
30Transition Elements
- Magnetism in Transition Elements
- Magnetic properties are related to electron
sublevel occupancy - A Paramagnetic substance has atoms or ions with
unpaired electrons - A Diamagnetic substance has atoms or ions with
only paired electrons - Most Main-Group metal ions are diamagnetic
(filled outer shells) - Many Transition metal compounds are paramagnetic
because of unpaired electron in the d subshells
31Transition Elements
- Chemical Behavior Within a Group
- Main_Group
- The decrease in Ionization Energy (IE) going down
a group results in increased reactivtiy - Transition metals
- Ionization Energy increases down group
- The Standard Electrode Potential (Eo) also
increases (becomes more positive) - ?Chromium is stronger reducing agent
32Transition Elements
- The Inner Transition Elements
- Lanthanides (Rare Earth Elements)
- (Cerium (Ce) Z 58 Lutetium (Lu) Z 71)
- Silvery, high melting point (800 1600oC) metals
- Small variations in chemical properties makes
them difficult to separate - Occur naturally in the 3 oxidation state as M3
ions of very similar radii - Most lanthanides have the ground-state electron
configuration filling the f subshell level - Xe 6s2 4fx 5d0 x varies across series
(Period) - Exceptions Ce, Gd, Lu have single e- in 5d
orbital
33Sample Problem
- Finding the Number of Unpaired Electrons
- The alloy SmCo5 forms a permanent magnet because
both Samarium and Cobalt have unpaired electrons - How many unpaired electrons are in the Sm atom
(Z62)? - Ans
- Samarium is the eighth element after Xe (Noble
Shell) - Xe 6s2 4f6
- Two (2) electrons go in the 6s sublevel
- In general, the 4f sublevel fills before the 5d
sublevel (slide 17) - Recall previous slide - only Ce, Gd, Lu have
5d electrons - ? Remaining 6 electrons go into the 4f orbitals
6s
4f
5d
6p
Six unpaired electrons
34Transition Elements
- The Actinides
- (Thorium (Th) Z90 - Lawrencium Z103)
- All Actinides are Radioactive (Alpha (4He2)
Decay - Only Thorium Uranium occur in nature
- Share very similar chemical physical properties
- Silvery and chemically reactive
- Principal oxidation state is 3, similar to
lanthanides
35Transition Elements
- Highlights of Selected Transition Metals
- Period 4 Chromium Manganese
- Chromium
- Silvery, shiny metal with many colorful compounds
- Cr2O3 acts as protective coating on easily
corroded (oxidized) metals, such as iron - Stainless steels contain as much as 18 Cr,
making them highly resistant to corrosion - Electron Configuration (Ar 4s1 3d5) with 6
valence electrons occurs in all possible positive
oxidation states - Important ions Cr2, Cr3, Cr6
- Non-metallic character and oxide acidity increase
with metal oxidation state - Cr2 potential reducing agent (Cr loses
additional electrons) - Cr6 potential oxidizing agent (Cr gains
electrons)
36Transition Elements
- Highlights of Selected Transition Metals
- Chromium
- Chromium (II) Cr2
- CrO is basic and largely ionic
- Forms insoluble hydroxide in neutral or basic
solution - Dissolves in acid to yield Cr2 ion and water
- CrO(s) 2H ? Cr2 (aq) H2O(l)
- Chromium(III) Cr3
- Cr2O3 is amphoteric, similar properties as
Aluminum - Dissolves in acid to yield violet Cr3 ion
- Cr2O3(s) 6H(aq) ? 2Cr3(aq) 3H2O(l)
- Reacts with base to form the green Cr(OH)4- ion
- Cr2O3(s) 3H2O OH- ? 2Cr(OH)4-(aq)
37Transition Elements
- Highlights of Selected Transition Metals
- Chromium (cont)
- Chromium (VI) - Cr6 (Deep Red)
- CrO3 is covalent and acidic
- Dissolves in water to form Chromic Acid (H2CrO4)
- CrO3(s) H2O(l) ? H2CrO4(aq)
- H2CrO4 yields yellow Chromate ion (CrO42-) in
base - H2CrO4(aq) 2OH(l) ? CrO42-(aq) 2H2O(l)
- Chromate ion forms orange dichromate (Cr2O72-)
ion in acid - 2CrO42-(aq) 2H(aq) ? Cr2O72-(aq) H2O(l)
38Transition Elements
- Highlights of Selected Transition Metals
- Manganese
- Hard and Shiny
- Like Vanadium Chromium used to make steel
alloys - Chemistry of Manganese is similar to Chromium
- Metal reduces H from acids to form Mn2 ion
- Mn(s) 2H(aq) ? Mn2(aq) H2(g) Eo
1.18 V - Manganese can use all its valence electrons
(several oxidation states) to form compounds - Mn2 Mn4 Mn7 most important
- As oxidation state rises from 2 to 7, the
valence state electronegativity increases and the
oxides of Mn change from basic to acidic - Mn(II)O (basic) Mn(III)2O3
(amphoteric) - Mn(IV)O2 (insoluble) Mn(VII)2O7 (acidic)
39Transition Elements
- All Manganese species with oxidation states
greater than 2 act as oxidizing agents (gaining
the electrons lost by the atoms being oxidized) - Mn7O4-(aq) 4H 3e- ? Mn4O2(s)
2H2O(l) Eo 1.68 - Mn7O4-(aq) 2H2O 3e- ? Mn4O2(s) 4OH-
Eo 0.59 - (Mn7O4- is a much stronger oxidizing agent in
acid solution than in basic solution note
difference in Eo values)
40Transition Elements
- Manganese
- Unlike Cr2 Fe2, the Mn2 (3d5) ion resists
oxidation in air - Recall half-filled (-1/2 spin electrons missing)
filled sublevels are more stable than partially
filled sublevels - Cr2 is a d4 species and readily loses a 3d
electron to form the d3 ion Cr3, which is more
stable - Fe2 is a d6 species and removing a 3d electron
yields the stable, half-filled d5 configuration
of Fe3 - Removing an electron from Mn2 disrupts the more
stable d5 configuration
41Transition Elements TheirCoordination Compounds
- Coordination Compounds (Complexes)
- Most distinctive aspect of transition metal
chemistry - Complex Substances that contain at least one
complex ion - Complex ion Species consisting of a central
metal cation (either a main-group or transition
metal) that is bonded to molecules and/or anions
called Ligands - The Complex ion is typically associated with
other (counter) ions to maintain neutrality - A coordination compound behaves like an
electrolyte in water - Complex ion and counter ion separate
- Complex ion behaves like a polyatomic ion the
ligands and central atom remain attached
42Transition Elements TheirCoordination Compounds
- Components of Coordination Compound
- When solid complex dissolves in water, the
complex ion and the counter ions separate, but
ligands remain bound to central atom
Co(NH3)6Cl3(s)
Octahedral Geometry
Central Atom
Ligands
Counter Ions
43Transition Elements TheirCoordination Compounds
- Complex ions
- A complex ion is described by the metal ion and
the number and types of ligands attached to it - The bonding between metal and ligand generally
involves formal donation of one or more of the
ligand's electron pairs - The metal-ligand bonding can range from covalent
to more ionic - Furthermore, the metal-ligand bond order can
range from one to three (single, double, triple
bonds) - Ligands are viewed as Lewis Bases (donate
electron pairs), although rare cases are known
involving Lewis acidic ligands
44Transition Elements TheirCoordination Compounds
- Complex ions
- The complex ion structure is related to three
characteristics - Coordination Numbers
- The number of ligand atoms that are bonded
directly to the central metal ion - Coordination number is specific for a given metal
ion in a particular oxidation state and compound - Coordination number in Co(NH3)63 is 6
- The most common coordination number in complex
ions is 6, but 2 and 4 are common, with a few
higher
45Transition Elements TheirCoordination Compounds
- Complex ions
- Geometry Depends on Coordination No. Nature
of Metal Ion
d8
d1
d3
d9
d5
d10
d6
46Transition Elements TheirCoordination Compounds
- Complex Ions
- Donor Atoms per Ligand
- The Ligands of complex ions are molecules or
anions with one or more donor atoms that each
donate a lone pair of electrons to the metal ion
to form a covalent bond - Atoms with lone pairs of electrons often come
from Groups 5A, 6A, or 7A (main-group elements)
47Transition Elements TheirCoordination Compounds
- Complex Ions
- Ligands are classified in terms of the number of
donor atoms (teeth) that each uses to bond to the
central metal ion - Monodentate Ligands use a single donor atom
- Bidentate Ligands have two donor atoms
- Polydentate Ligands have more than two donor
atoms
48Transition Elements TheirCoordination Compounds
Donor Atom
The Ligands contains one or more Donor atoms that
have electron pairs to donate to the Central Atom
49Transition Elements TheirCoordination Compounds
- Complex Ions
- Chelates (Greek chela crabs claw)
- Bidentate and Polydentate ligands give rise to
rings in the complex ion - Ex Ethylene Diamine (abbreviated (en) in
formulas) - (N C C N)
- forms a 5-member ring, with the two electron
donatingN atoms bonding to the metal atom - Such ligands seem to grab the metal ion like
claws
Ethylenediaminetetraacetate (EDTA)
Used in treating heavy-metal poisoning, by acting
as a scavenger of lead and other heavy-metal
ions, removing them from blood and other body
fluids
50Transition Elements TheirCoordination Compounds
- Formulas and Names of Coordination Compounds
- Important rules for writing formulas of
coordinate compounds - The cation is written before the anion
- The charge of the cation(s) is balanced by the
charge of the anions - In the complex ion, neutral ligands are written
before anionic ligands - The entire ion is placed in brackets, i.e.,
51Transition Elements TheirCoordination Compounds
- Formulas and Names of Coordination Compounds
- Coordination Compound Formulas
- Example 1
- Two compound cations (K) Total Charge 2
- Ion Central Metal Cation (Co2) Total Charge
2 - Neutral Ligands (2 NH3) Total Charge 0
- Counter Ions (4 Cl-) Total Charge -4
- Net Charge on Complex Ion - 2 Co(NH3)2Cl4-2
52Transition Elements TheirCoordination Compounds
- Formulas and Names of Coordination Compounds
- Coordination Compound Formulas
- Example 2 Complex Ion and Counter Ion
- Co(NH3)4Cl2Cl
- Counter Ion (Cl-) (not part of complex ion)
Total charge -1 - Complex Ion - Neutral Ligands (4 NH3)
Total Charge 0 - Complex Ion - Anion Ligands (2 Cl-)
Total Charge -2 - Complex Ion - Co(NH3)4Cl2 Total Charge
1 - Complex Ion - Central Metal Atom (Co) Total
Charge 3 - Co3(NH3)4Cl-2Cl-
53Transition Elements TheirCoordination Compounds
- Formulas and Names of Coordination Compounds
- Example 3 Complex Cation and Complex Anion
- Co(NH3)5Br2Fe(CN)6
- Complex Cation - Co(NH3)5Br2
- Complex Cation Central Atom (Co3) Total
charge 3 - Complex Cation Neutral Ligands (5 NH3) Total
Charge 0 - Complex Cation Anionic Ligand (Br-) Total
Charge -1 - Complex Anion (Fe(CN)64-) Total Charge -4
- Complex Anion Central Cation (Fe2) Total
Charge 2 - Complex Anion Ligand (6 CN-1) Total Charge -6
- Co3(NH3)5Br-2Fe2(CN-)6
- 2 x (3 -1) 4 2 - 6 -4
54Transition Elements TheirCoordination Compounds
- Formulas and Names of Coordination Compounds
- Naming Coordination Compounds
- Rules
- The Cation is named before the Anion
- Within the Complex Ion, the Ligands are named, in
alphabetical order, before the metal ion - Neutral Ligands generally have the molecule name,
with exceptions Ex NH3 (ammine), H2O (aqua), CO
(carbonyl) - Anionic Ligands drop the ide and add o after
the root name Ex. Cl- becomes chloro - A numerical prefix indicates the number of
ligands of a particular type Ex di (2), tri
(3), tetra (4) - Co(NH3)4Cl2Cl
- Tetra ammine di chloro cobalt(III)chloride
- m
55Transition Elements TheirCoordination Compounds
- Formulas and Names of Coordination Compounds
Names of Some Neutral and Anionic Ligands
Names of Some Metals Ions in Complex Anions
Numerical Prefixes used In Complex Anions
56Transition Elements TheirCoordination Compounds
- Formulas and Names of Coordination Compounds
- Naming Coordination Compounds
- Rules
- Some ligand names already contain a numerical
prefix - Ethylenediamine
- In these cases the number of ligands is
indicated by such terms as - bis (2) tris(3) tetrakis(4)
- A compound with two ethylene ligands would
contain the following ligand name - bis(ethylenediamine)
57Transition Elements TheirCoordination Compounds
- Formulas and Names of Coordination Compounds
- Naming Coordination Compounds
- Rules
- The oxidation state of the central metal ion is
given by a Roman numeral (in parentheses) only if
the metal ion can have more than one state, as in
the compound - Co(NH3)4Cl2Cl Co3(NH3)4Cl-2Cl-
- Tetra ammine di chloro cobalt(III)chloride
- If the complex ion is an anion, drop the ending
of the Central metal name and add ate - KPt(NH3)Cl5 KPt4(NH3)Cl-5-
- Potassium ammine penta chloro platinate(IV)
- Na4FeBr6 Na4Fe2Br-6
- Sodium hexa bromo ferrate(II)
58Practice Problem
- What is the systematic name of Na3AlF6?
- Ans Complex ion AlF63-
- Ligands 6 (hexa) F- ions (Fluoro)
- Complex ion is an anion (net charge -3)
- End of metal ion Aluminum must be changed to
ate - Complex ion name hexafluoroaluminate
- Aluminum has only the 3 oxidation state so
Roman numerals are not required - Na3 is the positive counter ion it is
separated from the complex anion by a space - Na3AlF6 Sodium Hexfluoroaluminate
-
-
59Practice Problem
- What is the systematic name of Co(en)2Cl2NO3?
- Ans Listed alphabetically, there are two Cl-
(dichloro) and two en bis(ethylenediamine)
ligands - Note Alphabetically refers to the root chemical
names - Chloro Ethylenediamine
- The Complex ion is a Cation, with a charge
of 1 - Co3(en)2Cl-2
- The metal name in a complex ion is unchanged -
Cobalt - Because Cobalt can have several oxidation
states, its charge must be specified - Cobalt
(III) - One Nitrate ion (NO-3) balances the 1 complex
cation - Dichloro bis (ethylene diamine)cobalt(III)
nitrate -
-
60Practice Problem
- What is the formula of
- Tetra ammine bromo chlroro platinum(IV) chloride
- Ans The central atom of the complex cation is
written first - Platinate(IV) Pt4
- The ligands follow in alphabetical order of root
chemical name - Tetraammine (NH3) Bromo (Br-) Chloro (Cl-)
- Complex ion formula - Pt(NH3)4BrCl2
Pt4(NH3)4Br-Cl-2 - To balance the 2 charge of the complex
cation, 2 Cl- counter ions are required - Pt(NH3)4BrClCl2
61Practice Problem
- What is the formula of
- Hexa ammine cobalt(III) tetra chloro ferrate(III)
- Ans Compound consists of two complex ions
- Complex Cation Six hexammine (NH3)
cobalt(III) (Co3) - Complex Cation Co(NH3)63
Co3(NH3)63 - Complex Anion tetrachloro - 4 Cl-
- Complex Anion ferrate(III) - Fe3
- Complex Anion FeCl-4-
- Complex cation balanced by 3 complex anions
- Coordinate Compound Co(NH3)6FeCl4-3
62Transition Elements TheirCoordination Compounds
- Isomerism in Coordination Compounds
- Isomers are compounds with the same chemical
formula but different properties - Constitutional (Structural) Isomers
- Two compounds with the same formula, but with
atoms connected differently - Two Types
- Coordination Isomers Composition of the complex
ion changes but not the compound - Ex. Ligand and counter ion exchange positions
- Pt(NH3)4Cl2(NO2)2 Pt(NH3)4(NO2)2Cl2
- Ex. Two sets of ligands reversed
- Cr(NH3)6Co(CN)6 Co(NH3)6Cr(CN)6
- (NH3 is ligand of Cr3 in one compound and of
Co3 in the other)
63Transition Elements TheirCoordination Compounds
- Constitutional (Structural) Isomers
- Linkage Isomers
- Composition of the complex ion remains the same,
but the attachment of the ligand donor atom
changes - Some ligands can bind to the metal ion through
either of two donor atoms - Ex. pentaamminenitrocobalt(III) chloride
- Co(NH3)5(NO2Cl2
- pentaamminenitritocobalt(III) chloride
- Co(NH3)5(ONOCl2
- Ex. Cyanate ion can attach via lone pair of
electrons on - the Oxygen atom (NCO)
- or the Nitrogen atom (isocyanato (OCN)
Other examples of alternate electron donor pairs
for Linkage IsomerS
64Transition Elements TheirCoordination Compounds
- Constitutional (Structural) Isomers
- Stereo Isomers
- Compounds that have the same atomic connections
but different spatial arrangements of the atoms - Geometric Isomers (cis-trans isomers
diastereomers) - Atoms or groups of atoms arranged differently in
space relative to the Central metal
65Transition Elements TheirCoordination Compounds
- Constitutional (Structural) Isomers
- Stereo Isomers
- Optical Isomers (enantiomers)
- Occur when a molecule and its mirror image can
not be superimposed - Optical isomers have distinct physical properties
like other types of isomers, with one exception
the direction in which they rotate the plane of
polarized light
Optical isomerism in an octahedral complex ion
Rotating structure I in the cis compound gives
structure III, which is not the same as structure
II, its mirror image, Image I Image III are
optical isomers
Rotating structure I in the trans compound gives
structure III,which is the same as structure II,
its mirror image, The trans compound does not
have any mirror images
66Practice Problem
- Draw all stereo isomers for the following
- Pt(NH3)2Br2 Cr(en)33 (en
H2NCH2CH2NH2)
Pt(II) complex is Square Planar Geometry Two
different monodentate ligands Geometric Isomers
Each isomer is superimposable on the mirror
image no optical isomerism
cis
trans
Ethylenediamine is a bidentate ligand The Cr3
has a coordination number of 6 and an octahedral
geometry, similar to Co3 The three bidendate
ions are identical ? No geometric isomerism This
complex ion has a nonsuperimposable mirror
image ? Optical Isomerism does occur
67Transition Elements TheirCoordination Compounds
- Theoretical Basis for the Bonding and Properties
of Complexes - Questions
- How do Metal Ligand bonds form
- Why certain geometries are preferred
- Why are complexes often brightly colored
- Why are complexes often paramagnetic attracted
to a magnetic field as a result of their electron
pairs being unpaired
68Transition Elements TheirCoordination Compounds
- Theoretical Basis for the Bonding and Properties
of Complexes - Application of Valence Bond Theory to Complex
Ions - In the formation of a complex ion, the filled
ligand orbital overlaps the empty metal-ion
orbital - The Ligand (Lewis Base) donates the electron pair
and the metal-ion (Lewis Acid) accepts it to form
one of the covalent bonds of the complex ion
(Lewis adduct) - When one atom in a bond donates both electrons
the bond is referred to as a coordinate covalent
bond - The number and type of metal-ion hybrid orbitals
occupied by ligand lone pairs determine the
geometry of the complex ion
69Transition Elements TheirCoordination Compounds
- Application of Valence Bond Theory to Complex
Ions - Octahedral Complexes (six electron groups about
central atom) - Ex. Hexaamminechromium(III) ion CrNH3)63
- Six hybrid orbitals are needed to make the ion
- The six lowest energy orbitals of the Cr3 ion
- Two 3d, one 4s, three 4p
- mix and become six equivalent d2sp3 hybrid
orbitals that point to the corners of an
octahedron - The six d2sp3 hybrid orbitals are filled with the
six electron pairs from the six NH3 ligands
Note the lowest 6 energy levels for Cr3 involve
both n3 n4 sublevels The 3d orbitals are of
lower energy than the 4s and 4p orbitals The
hybrid designation, d2sp3, follows this order If
all the orbitals had the same n value, the
order would have been sp3d2
Paramagnetic Unpaired e-
70Transition Elements TheirCoordination Compounds
- Application of Valence Bond Theory to Complex
Ions - Square Planar Complexes (four electron groups
about central atom) - Metal ions with a d8 configuration usually form
square planar complexes - In the Ni(CN)42- ion, the model proposes
- one 3d, one 4s, two 4p for Ni2
- to from four dsp2 hybrid orbitals pointing the
corners of a square accepting one electron pair
from each of the four CN- orbitals
Note the filling of the first 4 unhybridized 3d
orbitals after one 3d, one 4s and two 4p orbitals
combine to form the four dsp2 hybrid orbitals
Paramagnetic Unpaired e-
71Transition Elements TheirCoordination Compounds
- Application of Valence Bond Theory to Complex
Ions - Tetrahedral Complexes (four electron groups about
central atom) - Metal ions that have a filled d sublevel, such as
Zn2 Ar 3d10often form Tetrahedral complexes - In the Zn(OH)42- ion, the model proposes the
lowest available Zn2 orbitals - one 4s, three 4p
- mix to become four sp3 hybrid orbitals that
point to the corners of a tetrahedron, occupied
by four lone pairs, one from each of the four OH-
ligands
72Transition Elements TheirCoordination Compounds
- Crystal Field Theory
- Valence Bond Theory pictures and rationalizes
bonding and shape of molecules - VB theory gives little insight into the colors of
coordination compounds and can be ambiguous with
regard to magnetic properites - Crystal Field Theory explains color and magnetism
- Highlights the effects on the d-orbital
energies of the metal ion as the ligands approach
73Transition Elements TheirCoordination Compounds
- Crystal Field Theory
- What is Color?
- White light is electromagnetic radiation
consisting of all wavelengths (?) in the
visible range - Objects appear colored in white light because
they absorb certain wavelengths and reflect or
transmit others - Opaque objects reflect light
- Clear objects transmit light
- If the object absorbs all visible wavelengths, it
appears black - If the object reflects all visible wavelengths,
it appears white
74Transition Elements TheirCoordination Compounds
- Crystal Field Theory
- What is Color?
- Each color has a complimentary color
- An object has a particular color for two reasons
- It reflects (or transmits) light of that color or
- It absorbs light of the complimentary color
- Ex. If an object absorbs only red (compliment of
green), it is interpreted as green
Colors with approximate wavelength
ranges Complimentary colors, such as red and
green,lie opposite each other
75Transition Elements TheirCoordination Compounds
- Crystal Field Theory
- In CF Theory, the properties of complexes result
from the splitting of d-orbital energies - Split d-orbital energies arise from
electrostatic interactions between the
positively charged metal ion cation and the
negative charge of the ligands - The negative charge of the ligand is either
partial as in a polar neutral ligand like NH3, or
full, as in an anionic ligand like Cl-
76Transition Elements TheirCoordination Compounds
- Crystal Field Theory
- The ligands approach the metal ion along the
mutually perpendicular x, y, and z axes
(octahedral orientation), minimizing the overall
energy of the system - B C Lobes of the dx2-y2 and dz2 orbitals lie
directly in line with the approaching ligands and
have stronger repulsions - D, E, F lobes of the dxy, dxz, and dyz orbitals
lie between the approaching ligands, so the
repulsion are weaker
77Transition Elements TheirCoordination Compounds
- Crystal Field Theory
- An energy diagram of the orbitals shows all five
d orbitals are higher in energy in the forming
complex than in the free metal ion, because of
the repulsions from the approaching ligands - Crystal Field Splitting Energy - The d orbital
energies aresplit with the two dx2-y2 and dz2
orbitals (eg orbital set) higher in energy than
the dxy, dxz, and dyz orbitals (t2g orbital set) - Strong-field ligands, such as CN- lead to larger
splitting energy - Weak-field ligands such as H2O lead to smaller
splitting energy
Crystal Field Splitting Energy
Forming Complex
78Transition Elements TheirCoordination Compounds
- Crystal Field Theory
- Explaining the Colors of Transition Metals
- Diversity in colors is determined by the energy
difference (?) between the t2g and eg orbital
sets in complex ions - When the ions absorbs light in the visible range,
electrons move from the lower energy t2g level to
the higher eg level, i.e., they are excited and
jump to a higher energy level - ? E electron Ephoton hv hc/?
- The substance has a color because only certain
wavelengths of the incoming white light are
absorbed
79Transition Elements TheirCoordination Compounds
- Crystal Field Theory
- Example Consider the Ti(H2O)63 ion Purple
in aqueous solution - Hydrated Ti3 is a d1 ion, with the d electron in
one of the three lower energy t2g orbitals - The energy difference (?A) between the t2g and eg
orbitals corresponds to the energy of photons
spanning the green and yellow range - These colors are absorbed and the electron jumps
to one of the eg orbitals - Red, blue, and violet light are transmitted as
purple
80Transition Elements TheirCoordination Compounds
- Crystal Field Theory
- For a given ligand, the color depends on the
oxidation state of the metal ion the number of
d orbital electrons available - A solution of V(H2O)62 ion is violet
- A solution of V(H2O)63 ion is yellow
- For a given metal, the color depends on the
ligand - Cr(NH3)63 (yellow-orange)
- Cr(NH3)52 (Purple)
- Even a single ligand is enough to change the color
81Transition Elements TheirCoordination Compounds
- Crystal Field Theory
- Spectrochemical Series
- The Spectrochemical Series is a ranking of
ligands with regard to their ability to split
d-orbital energies - For a given ligand, the color depends on the
oxidation state of the metal ion - For a given metal ion, the color depends on the
ligand - As the crystal field strength of the ligand
increases, the splitting energy (?) increases
(shorter wavelengths of light must be absorbed to
excite the electrons
82Practice Problem
- Rank the following ions in terms of the relative
value of ? and of the energy of visible light
absorbed - Ti(H2O)63 Ti(NH3)63 Ti(CN)63
- Ans
- Oxidation State of Ti is 3 in all formulas
- From the spectrochemical series table, the ligand
strength is in the order - CN- gt NH3 gt H2O
- Relative size of ?, thus, the energy of light
absorbed is - Ti(CN)63 gt Ti(NH3)63 gt Ti(H2O)63
-
83Transition Elements TheirCoordination Compounds
- Explaining the Magnetic Properties of Transition
Metal Complexes - The splitting of energy levels influence magnetic
properties - Affects the number of unpaired electrons in the
metal ion d orbitals - According to Hunds rules, electrons occupy
orbitals one at a time as long as orbitals of
equal energy are available - When all lower energy orbitals are half-filled
(all ½ spin state), the next electron can - Enter a half-filled orbital and pair up (with a
½ spin state electron) by overcoming a repulsive
pairing energy (Epairing) - or
- Enter an empty, higher energy orbital by
overcoming the crystal field splitting energy (?) - The relative sizes of Epairing and (?) determine
the occupancy of the d orbitals
84Transition Elements TheirCoordination Compounds
- Crystal Field Theory
- Explanation of Magnetic Properties
- The occupancy of d orbitals, in turn,
determines the number of unpaired electrons,
thus, the paramagnetic behavior of the ion - Ex. Mn2 ion (Ar 3d5) has 5 unpaired
electrons in 3d orbitals of equal energy - In an octahedral field of ligands, the orbital
energies split - The orbital occupancy is affected in two ways
- Weak-Field ligands (low ?) and High-Spin
complexes - Strong-Field ligands (high ?) and Low-Spin
complexes - (from spectrochemical series)
85Transition Elements TheirCoordination Compounds
- Crystal Field Theory
- Explanation of Magnetic Properties
- Weak-Field ligands and High-Spin complexes
- Ex. Mn(H2O)62 Mn2 (Ar 3d5)
- A weak-field ligand, such as H2O, has a small
crystal field splitting energy (?) - It takes less energy for d electrons to move
tothe eg set (remaining unpaired) rather
thanpairing up in the t2g set with its
higherrepulsive pairing energy (Epairing) - Thus, the number of unpaired electrons in
aweak-field ligand complex is the same as inthe
free ion - Weak-Field Ligands create high-spin
complexes,those with a maximum of unpaired
electrons - Generally Paramagnetic
86Transition Elements TheirCoordination Compounds
- Crystal Field Theory
- Explanation of Magnetic Properties
- Strong-Field Ligands and Low-Spin Complexes
- Ex. Mn(CN)64-
- Strong-Field Ligands, such CN-, cause large
crystal field splitting of the d-orbital
energies, i.e., higher (?) - (?) is larger than (Epairing)
- Thus, it takes less energy to pair up in the
t2g set than would be required to move up to
the eg set