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Inorganic Chemistry Basics Lewis acid = electron pair acceptor (e.g. H+, Al3+, BF3, CO2, SiF4) Lewis base = electron pair donor (e.g. NH3, PF3, Hal-, HS-, H2O, OH-) Lewis acids and bases form Lewis acid/base adducts (e.g. BF3←NH3) All metal ions (Mn+) are Lewis acids Ligands are Lewis bases Pearson’s concept of hard and soft acids and bases (HSAB): Hard: less easily polarizable (usually ions of high charge and/or small radius) Soft: more easily polarizable (usually ions of low charge and/or large radius) Hard acids prefer hard bases, soft acids prefer soft bases i.e. more stable acid-base complexes are formed with hard/hard or soft/soft combinations 1 The HSAB concept is useful for predicting stability and reactivity: CuF + HI s h CuI + HF hs s s h h Periodic trends for acids (simplified): Increasing hardness Increasing e.g. Mg2+, Al3+, Si4+ softness e.g. Mg2+, Ca2+, Sr2+, Ba2+ 2 1 Acids H+, Li+, Na+, K+ Be2+, Mg2+, Ca2+, Sr2+, Mn2+ Hard Sc3+, La3+, Co3+, Cr3+, Fe3+, Al3+, Ga3+, As3+ Ti4+, Zr4+, Th4+, U4+, Pu4+ BF3, BCl3, AlCl3, SO3 Fe2+, Co2+, Ni2+, Cu2+, Zn2+, Sn2+, Pb2+ Borderline Rh3+, Ir3+, Bi3+ SO2 Pd2+, Pt2+, Pt4+ Soft Cu+, Ag+, Au+, Cd2+, Hg2+, CH3Hg+, Tl+ Br2, Br+, I2, I+ 3 Bases NH3, RNH2, N2H4 Hard H2O, OH-, O2-, ROH, RO-, R2O CH3COO-, CO32-, NO3-, PO43-, SO42-, ClO4F-, (Cl-) Borderline Soft C6H5NH2, N3-, NO2-, SO32-, BrH-, R-, C2H4, C6H6, CO SCN-, R3P, R2S, RSH, RS-, S2O32-, I- 4 2 Absolute hardness, (I – A) 2 I = Ionization energy A = Electron affinity 5 Plot of charge/radius ratio against the ionization energy (M to M2+) for some divalent metal ions Biologically relevant AE elements Biologically relevant TMs toxic 6 3 Biologically relevant ligands (bases) 7 8 4 pKa Values of Coordinating Ligands 9 Thermodynamics of Metal Ion Complexation Formation (stability) constants Overall stability constants n = K1 x K2 x … Kn) 10 5 Chelate effect Chelation refers to coordination of two or more donor atoms from a single ligand to a central metal ion The resulting complex is characterized by an unusual thermodynamic stability The gain in stability upon chelation is usually ascribed to a significant gain in entropy (however: this is not always the reason as enthalpy can be the determining factor) Example: [Co(H2O)6]3+ + EDTA [Co(edta)]- + 6 H2O 11 Examples of biologically relevant chelating ligands/chelates The most advanced chelates are proteins! 12 6 Structure of valinomycin (K+-specific ionophore) Monensin Cyclic polyether Antibiotic with specificity for Na+ 13 Kinetic Considerations Terminology: Thermodynamic terms: STABLE and UNSTABLE Kinetic terms: INERT and LABILE Definition of labile (Taube): Reaction half-life (i.e. the time of disappearance of half of the initial compound) of 1 minute or less All of the following cyano-complexes are extremely stable! (Dissociation constant for the hydrolysis of [Ni(CN)4]2- to [Ni(H2O)6]2+ is 10-22 M-2) 14 7 Water Exchange Rates Diffusion controlled rates of water exchange for alkali metal ions Calcium has the highest rate constant for abundant non-alkali metal ions (Role as second messenger) 15 8