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Thermodynamic and kinetic aspects of metal complexes We use terms to describe the Thermodynamic and Kinetic aspects of reactivity. Thermodynamic. Stable or Unstable Kinetic. Inert or Labile An inert compound is not “inert” in the usual sense that no reaction will occur. Rather, the reaction takes place slower than for labile compounds. There is NO connection between Thermodynamic Stability/Instability of a complex and its Lability/Inertness toward substitution. For example: Stable …but labile [Ni(CN)4]2- + 413CN[Ni(CN)4]2Unstable but inert [Co(NH3)6]3+ + 6H2O [Ni(13CN)4]2- + 4CNNi2+(aq) + 4CN-(aq) [Co(OH2)6]3++ 6NH4+ t1/2 ~ 30sec. Keq = 1 x 10-30 t1/2 ~ days. Keq = 1 x 1025 Stable complexes have a large POSITIVE GoRXN for ligand substitution and Inert complexes have a large POSITIVE G‡ (activation). Stability and Coordination Complexes ([MLn]x+) Typically expressed in terms of an overall formation or stability constant. (This is Kst on the Chemistry Data sheet you receive with exams) [M]x+ + nL [MLn ]x K st x [M(aq) ][L]n [MLn]x+ BUT, this does not occur in one fell swoop!! Water molecules do not just all fly off and are immediately replaced by nL ligands. [M] x+(aq) + L [ML(n-1)]x+ + L [ML]x+ [MLn]x+ K1 Kn Ks are the stepwise formation constants and provide insight into the solution species present as a function of [L]. These formation constants provide valuable information given that different species may have VERY DIFFERENT properties…including environmental impact. Such information provides selective isolation of metal ions from solution through reaction with ligands. For formation of divalent alkaline earth and 3d M2+ TM ions the IrvingWilliams Series holds true. Ba<Sr<Ca<Mg<Mn<Fe<Co<Ni<Cu>Zn What is contributing to this trend? 1. 2. 3. Charge to radius ratio. CFSE (beyond Mn2+) Jahn-Teller Distortion Hard-Soft Acids/Bases See R-C p 450-451. ML5X + Y ML5Y + X Step 1. Dissociation of X to yield a 5 coordinate intermediate. K1 ML5X ML5 + X M-X bond is broken L L L M L L L L M L L L Trigonal Bipyramidal Slow and rate determining The rate of D is only depends on the conc. of ML5X Square Pyramidal Step 2. Coordination of Y to the ML5 intermediate. ML5 + Y K2 ML5Y This mechanism is independent of [Y] fast The rate law for this process is rate = K1[ML5X] (the units of K1 are sec-1) If we find a reaction follows this rate law we conclude it is dissociative. ML5X + Y ML5Y + X Step 1. Collision of ML5X with Y to yield a 7-coordinate intermediate. (slow) K1 ML5X + Y ML5XY (slow, rate determining) X Y L L M L L Capped Octahedron Pentagonal Bipyramid L L M L L Y L L X Step 2. Cleavage of the M-X bond. (fast) ML5XY ML5Y + X (fast) The rate law for this process is rate = K1[ML5X][Y] (the units of K1 are sec-1Mole-1) If we find a reaction follows this rate law we conclude it is associative. Ligand substitution reactions 21.1 Rates of ligand substitution 21.2 The classification of mechanisms Ligand substitution in square planar complexes 21.3 The shape of the transition state Ligand substitution in octahedral complexes 21.5 Rate law and their interpretation 21.6 The activation of octahedral complexes 21.7 Base hydrolysis 21.8 Stereochemistry 21.9 Isomerization reactions Redox Reactions 21.10 Classification of redox reactions 21.11 The inner sphere mechanism 21.12 The outter sphere mechanism Substitution reactions MLn-1L' + L MLn + L' Labile complexes <==> Fast substitution reactions (< few min) Inert complexes <==> Slow substitution reactions (>h) a kinetic concept Not to be confused with stable and unstable (a thermodynamic concept Gf <0) Inert Intermediate d3, low spin d4-d6& d8 d8 (high spin) Labile d1, d2, low spin d4-d6& d7-d10 Mechanisms of ligand exchange reactions in octahedral complexes MLnY + X MLnX + Y Dissociative (D) MLn Y MLn X X Associative (A) MLn MLn Y MLn X Y Y MLn XY Interchange (I) MLn X MLn Y Y Ia if association is more important [ML n]° X Y X Id if dissociation is more important X Kinetics of dissociative reactions Kinetics of interchange reactions Fast equilibrium K1 = k1/k-1 k2 << k-1 For [Y] >> [ML5X] Kinetics of associative reactions Principal mechanisms of ligand exchange in octahedral complexes Dissociative Associative Dissociative pathway (5-coordinated intermediate) MOST COMMON Associative pathway (7-coordinated intermediate) Experimental evidence for dissociative mechanisms Rate is independent of the nature of L Experimental evidence for dissociative mechanisms Rate is dependent on the nature of L Labile or inert? L L L M L L Ea L L L L M L L M L L L X L X G LFAE = LFSE(sq pyr) - LFSE(oct) Why are some configurations inert and some are labile? Inert ! Substitution reactions in square-planar complexes the trans effect L X M T L +X, -Y L Y M T (the ability of T to labilize X) L effect is more pronounced for s donor as follows: OH-<NH3<Cl-<Br-<CN-,CO, CH3-<I-<PR3 • Trans effect is more pronounced for a ð acceptor as follows: Br-<Cl-<NCS-<NO2-<CN-<CO Trans Synthetic applications of the trans effect Mechanisms of ligand exchange reactions in square planar complexes L L X L S +S M L L M X L +Y -X Y L L L -d[ML3X]/dt = (ks + ky [Y]) [ML3X] M X L L M S L +Y Y L -X L L L L M Y -S L M S better complementarity Topological Effects The Chelate Effect Two donor atoms linked together = a chelate (claw) Chelate ligands form much more stable metal complexes 5 NH ligands (upHto H2N NH2than H 2N monodentate related 2N 10 times as NH NH2 NH NH stable) trien en 2,3,2 Ni2+ + L Formation Constants: L = NH3 en trien 2,3,2 log b 8.12 13.54 13.8 16.4 B. H2N NH3 + M H2N M + NH3 H2N H2N c) Thermodynamic Reasons for the Chelate Effect = Entropy 2 particles 3 particles 2 NH3 NH2 M G H S Ni(NH3)22+ -6.93 -7.8 -3 Ni(NH3)42+ -11.08 -15.6 -15 Ni(NH3)62+ -12.39 -24 -39 Ni(en)2+ -10.3 -9.8 Ni(en)22+ -18.47 Ni(en)32+ -24.16 OH2 + k1 (G) (H) (S) +4 -3.1 -1.2 +7 -18.3 +3 -7.4 -2.7 +18 -28.0 -10 -11.8 -4 +29 ~1.3/ring (small) Largest Effect k2 OH2 L L M OH2 L -1 d) Kinetics and thek Chelate Effect Chelate complex formation A B AB L k -2 L M L C dC k1k 2 [A][B] k -1k -2 [C] dt k -1 k 2 k -1 k 2 ii. The Steady-State Approximation yields: k 1k 2 k -1k -2 dC kf and k d k f [A][B] - k d [C] k -1 dissociation k 2 (k ) constants:k -1 k 2 dt Or rewriting with formation (k ) and f d k 1k 2 kf k1a chelate (the effect, samekas>>kfor monodentat e ligands) iii. Assuming k -1 k 2 2 -1 k -1k -2 k -1k -2 kd k -1 k 2 k2 iv. kf is not the source of the chelate effect. It is the same as other ligands NH3+ N M N H+ Ni(trien)(H2O)22+ Ni(Htrien)(H2O)23+ H+ H+ H+ v.15ksd-1must be the source of 4the effect s-1 chelate 2 s-1 2 s-1 (dissociation is slow!) k-1 is the same as for monodentate ligands + H4trien4+ k-2 (ring opening) is the same as for monodentate ligands: N N Pt N Ni(H2O)62+ N + NH2 ka Cl NH kb N Pt N 3 + k (ring closing) Data 2 Pt(NH ) Clfor 3 3 N 2+ ka = 0.73 s-1 N Pt(NH3)4+2 kb = 5.4 x 10-4 M-1s-1 ka 0.73 s 1 3 1.4 x 10 M Effective Concentrat ion 4 1 1 k b 5.4 x 10 M s Huge Concentration! NH3 NH2 k2, the formation of the second M—L bond, has been shown to be extremely large compared to a second monodentate M toNH ligand binding. This is due the3 large “effective M NH 2 concentration” of the second donor atom of a chelate chelate monodentate IfM k2+ is large, kd must L be small; kf kd Very fast bond reformation after the first donor dissociates Feis2+the kinetic HCO 7 x 103effect 10 source 2 of the chelate Fe2+ vi. Data C2O42- 2 x 104 3 x 10-3 2) The Macrocycle Effect Macrocyclic chelate complexes are up 107 times more stable than noncyclic chelates with the same number of donors Ni(trien)2+ + H+ Ni2+ + H4trien4+ t½ = 2 seconds 2+ + 2+ 4+ Ni(cyclam) + H Ni + H4cyclam t½ = 2 years Connecting all of the donors (having no end group) makes k-2 important N Breaking the first M—L bond requires major ligand deformation NH2 The increase in Ea required greatly slows down k-2 N N N N N N M M M b) N N N N N N N chelate macrocycle c) A macrocycle is still a chelate, so it still has the k2 chelate effect going d) M The result is a very stable complex as kd becomes miniscule N R a) 3) b) N The Cryptate Effect NH HN HN N Additional connections between donor atoms in a macrocycle M M further enhance complex stability by making dissociation even more N difficult NH HN HN N R My own research and others’ seek to take advantage of this stability Data Cu(H2O)62+ water substitution t½ = 1.4 x 10-9 s Cu(Me4Cyclam) in 1 M H+ t½ = 2 s Cu(Bcyclam)Cl+ in 1 M H+ t½ > 6 years = 1.9 x 108 s d) Usefulness of such stable complexes Oxidation catalysis in harsh aqueous conditions (H + or OH-) MRI Contrast agents that must not dissociate toxic Gd 3+ M 2+ C. RigidityCu Effects L t½ en 0.006 s difference 2+ bipy 0.025 s x 3 more More Cu rigid ligands (assuming complementarity) make stableCucomplexes 2+ spartiene 295 min x 106 Data 2+ Ni dien 0.07 s Ni2+ tach 7 min x (6 x 103) Ni2+ TRI 90 days x 108 H2N NH2 en N N N N bipy spartiene N NH2 H2N NH dien N NH2 NH2 NH2 tach N TRI a) Retention of configuration with a square pyramidal intermediate B. Substitution in trans complexes 1) 3 possible substitution reactions for trans-[M(LL)2BX] + Y b) Trigonal bipyramidal intermediate with B in the plane gives a mixture of products c) Trigonal bipyramidal intermediate with B axial leads to cis product 2) Experimental Data Many factors determine the mixture of isomers in the product Example: Identity of X C. Prediction is very difficult without experimental data on related complexes Substitution in cis complexes The same 3 possibilities exist as for trans The products are just as hard to predict D. Isomerization of Chelate Complexes One mechanism is simple dissociation and reattachment of one donor of the ligand. This would be identical to any other substitution reaction Pseudorotation “Bailar Twist” = Trigonal twist = all three rings move together through a parallel intermediate Bailar Twist Tetragonal Twist Tetragonal Twists = one ring stays the same and the others move Tetragonal Twist Bailar Twist Electron transfer (redox) reactions -1e (oxidation) M1(x+)Ln + M2(y+)L’n M1(x +1)+Ln + M2(y-1)+L’n +1e (reduction) Very fast reactions (much faster than ligand exchange) May involve ligand exchange or not Very important in biological processes (metalloenzymes) Outer sphere mechanism [Fe(CN)6]3- + [IrCl6]3- [Fe(CN)6]4- + [IrCl6]2- [Co(NH3)5Cl]+ + [Ru(NH3)6]3+ [Co(NH3)5Cl]2+ + [Ru(NH3)6]2+ Reactions ca. 100 times faster than ligand exchange (coordination spheres remain the same) A B "solvent cage" r = k [A][B] Ea Tunneling mechanism A + B A' G + B' Inner sphere mechanism [Co(NH3)5Cl)]2+ + [Çr(H2O)6]2+ [Co(NH3)5Cl)]2+:::[Çr(H2O)6]2+ [CoIII(NH3)5(m-Cl)ÇrII(H2O)6]4+ [CoII(NH3)5(m-Cl)ÇrIII(H2O)6]4+ [CoII(NH3)5(H2O)]2+ [Co(NH3)5Cl)]2+:::[Çr(H2O)6]2+ [CoIII(NH3)5(m-Cl)ÇrII(H2O)6]4+ [CoII(NH3)5(m-Cl)ÇrIII(H2O)6]4+ [CoII(NH3)5(H2O)]2+ + [ÇrIII(H2O)5Cl]2+ [Ço(H2O)6]2+ + 5NH4+ Inner sphere mechanism Ox-X + Red k1 Ox-X-Red k2 Reactions much faster than outer sphere electron transfer (bridging ligand often exchanged) k3 k4 Ox(H2O)- + Red-X+ Ox-X-Red Tunneling through bridge mechanism r = k’ [Ox-X][Red] k’ = (k1k3/k2 + k3) Ea Ox-X + Red Ox(H2O) - + Red-X + G