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Chem 324 Midterm 2 Fall 2011 Page 1 of 10 Chemistry 324 Midterm 2 Version 1 Friday, November 18, 2011 Instructor: D. J. Berg Name: KEY Answer all questions on the paper (use the back if necessary). There are 50 minutes and 47 marks so ration your time accordingly. A periodic table and ORGEL diagram are included with this examination. There are 10 pages including the additional resources. 1 (a) Explain why the energy states of a d2 ion in an octahedral field are not adequately represented by t2g2eg0 (at least as far as electronic spectroscopy is concerned). [4 pts] While the t2g2eg0 designation does take crystal field effects into account it ignores electron-electron repulsion effects (Russell-Saunders splitting). This is not reasonable for multi-electron first row transition metals where the crystal field is weak or moderate (it is much better if the crystal field is strong). This is particularly important in electronic spectroscopy because the observed transitions are best understood in terms of transitions between Russell-Saunders states split by a smaller crystal field effect. Chem 324 Midterm 2 Fall 2011 Page 2 of 10 (b) What is the Russell-Saunders ground state term for an f8 ion? [3 pts] S = 3 and L = 3 so this is a 7F term. (c) What is the highest possible L value Russell-Saunders term for an f2 ion? [2 pts] Highest possible L value will have both electrons in the ml = +3 orbital so it would be L = 6 (or an I term) (d) Determine (i) the ground state of an f7 ion and (ii) how it splits in a trigonal planar field. [4 pts] (i) 8S (ii) Not split since L = 0 (S term) Chem 324 Midterm 2 Fall 2011 Page 3 of 10 2 The electronic spectrum of [VCl4(bipy)] shows a single asymmetric band at 21,300 cm-1 (ca. 470 nm) of moderate intensity (ε < 800 L mol-1) with a shoulder at lower energy (17,400 cm-1 or ca. 575 nm). (a) How many absorption bands are expected if this complex is regarded as a perfect Oh? Show explicitly what gives rise to the band(s) observed. [3 pts] The electronic transitions here are far too weak to be charge transfer transitions, despite the fact that bipy often shows such transitions. This means they must be d→d transitions of some type. This is an octahedral V4+ (d1) complex so we expect a 2D Russell-Saunders ground state term that will be split into a lower energy 2T2g and a higher energy 2Eg state by the octahedral field. There are no higher lying terms for a d1 ion so the only possible transitions are from 2T2g to 2Eg giving rise to a single transition in the UV-visible region. (b) Propose an explanation for the presence of the lower energy absorption. (There are at least two possibilities here but one will do). [3 pts] The lower energy transition must also arise from a d→d transition due to its weak intensity. The most likely way to get more than one transition is if the degeneracy of the 2T2g or 2Eg levels is somehow broken. There are a number of ways this could happen but the two most likely explanations are: 1. the actual ground state symmetry of the complex in not Oh so this will split the T2g state into an E and an A state. This immediately gives rise to more bands in the spectrum. 2. the excited state effectively has a single electron in the eg set of orbitals (those that are directed right at the ligands) so this should result in a Jahn-Teller distortion in the excited state that breaks the Eg degeneracy and gives rise to two bands. Chem 324 Midterm 2 Fall 2011 (c) Page 4 of 10 Reduction of this complex with sodium metal produces the intensely green, but somewhat unstable, complex Na+ [VCl4(bipy)]-. Suggest explanations for the observations that it is: (i) intensely green in colour [2 pts] The intense colour is strongly suggestive of a charge transfer transition. Assuming reduction occurs at the metal, then the most likely transition is from a metal-based orbital to a bipy π* level. (ii) somewhat unstable [1 pt] Reduction puts a negative charge on the complex and since this is 6coordinate, loss of Cl- could occur to generate a neutral 5-coordinate complex, VCl3(bipy). [I was looking for any reasonable explanation here] 3 Consider a LMCT transition when answering the following questions: (a) What characteristic distinguishes this type of transition from a d→d or f→f transition? [2 pts] High molar extinction coefficient (molar absorptivity); that is, intense colours. (b) Explain why MnO4- is intensely purple coloured while ReO4- is not highly coloured. [2 pts] These are both M7+ species and the intense colour of MnO4- suggests a charge transfer band that must be LMCT. The question is really why ReO4is not very coloured. Presumably this must mean that its LMCT band falls in the UV rather than in the visible. This makes sense because Re is less electronegative than Mn and as such will have higher energy metal orbitals so the gap between the O lone pair orbitals and metal orbitals is larger and the transition occurs at shorter wavelength. Chem 324 Midterm 2 Fall 2011 4. Page 5 of 10 Ni2+ is unusual in that it can form octahedral, tetrahedral or square planar complexes depending on the ligands involved. (a) Calculate the spin-only moment (μs) for the tetrahedral complex. [2 pts] If it is tetrahedral, it has 2 unpaired electrons in the t2 level so S = 1. This means the spin-only moment is: μs = 2[S(S+1)]1/2 = 2[2]1/2 = 2.83 BM (b) The actual moments observed for these complexes are: octahedral, 2.9 BM; tetrahedral, 4.1 BM; square planar, 0.0 BM. Rationalize the observed moments in terms of the electronic structure for EACH of the three geometries. [6 pts] From basic crystal field splitting, we expect Ni2+ to have 2 unpaired electrons in either a Td or Oh geometry but no unpaired electrons in a square planar geometry (because the highly destabilized dx2-y2 orbital is too high to be occupied). In order to explain why there is a deviation from the expected spin-only moments, we need to see whether there is likely to be any contribution from orbital angular momentum. This requires us to look more carefully at the ground state of each geometry taking both electron repulsion and crystal field effects into account. From the Orgel diagram we can see that a d8 ion has a T1 ground state in Td geometry but an A2g ground state in an Oh geometry. Orbital angular momentum is expected to be quenched for an A2g state so it is not surprising that the Oh complex is far closer to the expected spin-only moment. However, a significant orbital angular momentum contribution is expected for the degenerate T1 ground state of the Td geometry and this should result in a significant increase in μ compared to the spin-only moment prediction and this is in fact observed here. Chem 324 Midterm 2 Fall 2011 Page 6 of 10 (c) The values reported in (b) above have been corrected for the diamagnetic susceptibility. Explain: (i) what this contribution to the magnetic susceptibility of the complex is due to [1 pt] circulation of electrons in filled orbitals (ii) its sign [1 pt] negative (iii) its magnitude relative to the paramagnetic susceptibility in the octahedral or tetrahedral complexes. [1 pt] diamagnetic susceptibilities are between 1/100th and 1/10th the size of paramagnetic susceptibilities, depending on how many paired electrons there are in the molecule. Chem 324 Midterm 2 Fall 2011 5. Page 7 of 10 (a) Write the expression for the overall stability constant β3 in terms of the concentrations of the species shown in the following equilibrium. [3 pts] PMe2 [M(H2O)6]2+ + 3 [M(dmpe)3]2+ + 6 H2O PMe2 (dmpe) β = [M(dmpe)32+] / [M(OH2)62+][dmpe]3 (b) Would you expect the enthalpy contribution to be favourable (∆Ho < 0) or unfavourable (∆Ho > 0) for the equilibrium shown in (a) above if the metal is cobalt? Explain your answer. [2 pts] Cobalt in a relatively low oxidation state like 2+ is a fairly soft metal and as such should prefer binding the softer phosphines of dmpe over the harder O of H2O. I would therefore expect ΔH0 to be favourable for the forward direction (< 0). Chem 324 Midterm 2 Fall 2011 Page 8 of 10 (c) Would you expect the entropy contribution to be favourable (∆So > 0) or unfavourable (∆So < 0) for the equilibrium shown in (a) above? Explain your answer. [2 pts] The entropy contribution should definitely be favourable (positive) because the total number of particles goes from 4 to 7 in the forward direction. (d) Why does the lattice enthalpy become less favourable going from VCl2 to MnCl2, despite the fact that Mn2+ is smaller than V2+? [3 pts] The lattice enthalpy would be expected to be more favouarble (exothermic) for the smaller metal ion (Mn2+) based on charge/size arguments. However, electronic stabilization also play a role in the total enthalpy. V2+ is a d3 system with a total CFSE of -1.2Δo if it adopts an octahedral lattice. On the other hand Mn2+ is d5 high spin and will have a CFSE of 0 regardless of geometry. Thus, the CFSE effects outweigh the changes in ion size and result in a more negative lattice energy for VCl2 than for MnCl2. END (Orgel diagram and periodic table attached) General Orgel Diagram for Octahedral and Tetrahedral Complexes with Various d Counts Chem 324 Midterm 2 Fall 2011 Page 9 of 10 Chem 324 Midterm 2 Fall 2011 Page 10 of 10