Title: 6 s ligands x 2e each
1ML6 s-only bonding
d0-d10 electrons
The bonding orbitals, essentially the ligand lone
pairs, will not be worked with further.
6 s ligands x 2e each
2p-bonding may be introduced as a perturbation of
the t2g/eg set Case 1 (CN-, CO, C2H4) empty
p-orbitals on the ligands M?L p-bonding (p-back
bonding)
These are the SALC formed from the p orbitals of
the ligands that can interac with the d on the
metal.
t2g (p)
t2g
eg
eg
t2g
t2g (p)
ML6 s-only
ML6 s p
(empty p-orbitals on ligands)
3p-bonding may be introduced as a perturbation of
the t2g/eg set. Case 2 (Cl-, F-) filled
p-orbitals on the ligands L?M p-bonding
eg
eg
t2g (p)
t2g
t2g
t2g (p)
ML6 s-only
ML6 s p
(filled p-orbitals)
4Putting it all on one diagram.
5Spectrochemical Series
Purely s ligands D en gt NH3 (order of proton
basicity)
- donating which decreases splitting and causes
high spin - D H2O gt F gt RCO2 gt OH gt Cl gt Br gt I (also proton
basicity)
p accepting ligands increase splitting and may be
low spin
D CO, CN-, gt phenanthroline gt NO2- gt NCS-
6Merging to get spectrochemical series
CO, CN- gt phen gt en gt NH3 gt NCS- gt H2O gt F- gt
RCO2- gt OH- gt Cl- gt Br- gt I-
Weak field, p donors small D high spin
Strong field, p acceptors large D low
spin
s only
7Turning to Square Planar Complexes
Most convenient to use a local coordinate system
on each ligand with y pointing in towards the
metal. py to be used for s bonding. z being
perpendicular to the molecular plane. pz to be
used for p bonding perpendicular to the plane,
p. x lying in the molecular plane. px to be
used for p bonding in the molecular plane, p.
8ML4 square planar complexes ligand group orbitals
and matching metal orbitals
s bonding
p bonding (in)
p bonding (perp)
9ML4 square planar complexes MO diagram
eg
s-only bonding
10A crystal-field approach from octahedral to sq
planar
Less repulsions along the axes where ligands are
missing
11A crystal-field aproach from octahedral to sq
planar
12The Jahn-Teller effect
Jahn-Teller theorem there cannot be unequal
occupation of orbitals with identical energy
Molecules will distort to eliminate the degeneracy
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14Angular Overlap Method
An attempt to systematize the interactions for
all geometries.
The various complexes may be fashioned out of the
ligands above
Linear 1,6 Trigonal 2,11,12 T-shape 1,3,5
Square pyramid 1,2,3,4,5 Octahedral 1,2,3,4,5,6
Tetrahedral 7,8,9,10 Square planar
2,3,4,5 Trigonal bipyramid 1,2,6,11,12
15Contd
All s interactions with the ligands are
stabilizing to the ligands and destabilizing to
the d orbitals. The interaction of a ligand with
a d orbital depends on their orientation with
respect to each other, estimated by their overlap
which can be calculated. The total
destabilization of a d orbital comes from all the
interactions with the set of ligands. For any
particular complex geometry we can obtain the
overlaps of a particular d orbital with all the
various ligands and thus the destabilization.
16ligand dz2 dx2-y2 dxy dxz dyz
1 1 es 0 0 0 0
2 ¼ ¾ 0 0 0
3 ¼ ¾ 0 0 0
4 ¼ ¾ 0 0 0
5 ¼ ¾ 0 0 0
6 1 0 0 0 0
7 0 0 1/3 1/3 1/3
8 0 0 1/3 1/3 1/3
9 0 0 1/3 1/3 1/3
10 0 0 1/3 1/3 1/3
11 ¼ 3/16 9/16 0 0
12 1/4 3/16 9/16 0 0
Thus, for example a dx2-y2 orbital is
destabilized by (3/4 6/16) es 18/16 es in a
trigonal bipyramid complex due to s interaction.
The dxy, equivalent by symmetry, is destabilized
by the same amount. The dz2 is destabililzed by
11/4 es.
17Coordination Chemistry Electronic Spectra of
Metal Complexes
18Electronic spectra (UV-vis spectroscopy)
19Electronic spectra (UV-vis spectroscopy)
hn
DE
20The colors of metal complexes
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22Electronic configurations of multi-electron atoms
What is a 2p2 configuration?
n 2 l 1 ml -1, 0, 1 ms 1/2
These configurations are called microstates and
they have different energies because of
inter-electronic repulsions
23Electronic configurations of multi-electron
atoms Russell-Saunders (or LS) coupling
For the multi-electron atom L total orbital
angular momentum quantum number S total spin
angular momentum quantum number Spin multiplicity
2S1 ML ?ml (-L,0,L) MS ?ms (S, S-1,
,0,-S)
For each 2p electron n 1 l 1 ml -1, 0,
1 ms 1/2
ML/MS define microstates and L/S define states
(collections of microstates) Groups of
microstates with the same energy are called terms
24Determining the microstates for p2
25Spin multiplicity 2S 1
26Determining the values of L, ML, S, Ms for
different terms
1S
1P
27Classifying the microstates for p2
Electrons must have different quantum numbers 1
1 illegal 1 1- is same as 1- 1
(indistinguishable)
Spin multiplicity columns of microstates
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29Energy of terms (Hunds rules)
Lowest energy (ground term) Highest spin
multiplicity 3P term for p2 case
3P has S 1, L 1
If two states have the same maximum spin
multiplicity Ground term is that of highest L
30Determining the microstates for s1p1
31Determining the terms for s1p1
Ground-state term
32Coordination Chemistry Electronic Spectra of
Metal Complexes cont.
33Electronic configurations of multi-electron
atoms Russell-Saunders (or LS) coupling
For the multi-electron atom L total orbital
angular momentum quantum number S total spin
angular momentum quantum number Spin multiplicity
2S1 ML ?ml (-L,0,L) MS ?ms (S, S-1,
,0,-S)
For each 2p electron n 1 l 1 ml -1, 0,
1 ms 1/2
ML/MS define microstates and L/S define states
(collections of microstates) Groups of
microstates with the same energy are called terms
34before we did
p2
35For metal complexes we need to consider d1-d10
For 3 or more electrons, this is a long tedious
process
But luckily this has been tabulated before
36Transitions between electronic terms will give
rise to spectra
37Selection rules (determine intensities)
Laporte rule g ? g forbidden (that is, d-d
forbidden) but g ? u allowed (that is, d-p
allowed)
Spin rule Transitions between states of different
multiplicities forbidden Transitions between
states of same multiplicities allowed
These rules are relaxed by molecular vibrations,
and spin-orbit coupling
38Group theory analysis of term splitting
39High Spin Ground States
An e electron superimposed on a spherical
distribution energies reversed because tetrahedral
dn Free ion GS Oct. complex Tet complex
d0 1S t2g0eg0 e0t20
d1 2D t2g1eg0 e1t20
d2 3F t2g2eg0 e2t20
d3 4F t2g3eg0 e2t21
d4 5D t2g3eg1 e2t22
d5 6S t2g3eg2 e2t23
d6 5D t2g4eg2 e3t23
d7 4F t2g5eg2 e4t23
d8 3F t2g6eg2 e4t24
d9 2D t2g6eg3 e4t25
d10 1S t2g6eg4 e4t26
Holes in d5 and d10, reversing energies relative
to d1
A t2 hole in d5, reversed energies, reversed
again relative to octahedral since tet.
Holes dn d10-n and neglecting spin dn d5n
same splitting but reversed energies because
positive.
Expect oct d1 and d6 to behave same as tet d4 and
d9
Expect oct d4 and d9 (holes), tet d1 and d6 to be
reverse of oct d1
40d1 ? d6 d4 ? d9
Orgel diagram for d1, d4, d6, d9
Energy
D
0
D
ligand field strength
41Orgel diagram for d2, d3, d7, d8 ions
Energy
A2 or A2g
T1 or T1g
T1 or T1g
P
T2 or T2g
T1 or T1g
F
T2 or T2g
T1 or T1g
A2 or A2g
d2, d7 tetrahedral d2, d7 octahedral d3, d8
octahedral d3, d8 tetrahedral
0
Ligand field strength (Dq)
42d2
43Tanabe-Sugano diagrams
44Electronic transitions and spectra
45Other configurations
46Other configurations
The limit between high spin and low spin
47Determining Do from spectra
d1
d9
One transition allowed of energy Do
48Determining Do from spectra
Lowest energy transition Do
49Ground state is mixing
E (T1g?A2g) - E (T1g?T2g) Do
50The d5 case
All possible transitions forbidden Very weak
signals, faint color
51Some examples of spectra
52Charge transfer spectra
Metal character
LMCT
Ligand character
Ligand character
MLCT
Metal character
Much more intense bands