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Transition Metal Chemistry Transition metals exhibit: 1. Multiple oxidation states 2. Metal complex formation 3. Colours 4. Catalytic properties 5. Magnetic properties 1. Multiple oxidation states Sc Ti V Cr Mn Fe Co +3 +2 +3 +4 +2 +3 +4 +5 +2 +3 +2 +3 +4 +6 +7 +2 +3 +6 +2 +3 +6 Ni +1 +2 +3 Cu Zn +2 +2 +2 oxidation state due to 4s2 electrons being lost. As you go from left to right it is easier to remove e- from the 4s orbital vs. the 3d orbitals L R decreasing stability of maximum oxidation state Increasing stability of +2 oxidation state 4s higher Free neutral metal: 4s filled, then 3d Ion formation gap L to R due to Zeff 3d Why? Increasing Zeff from L to R pulls 3d orbitals closer. Therefore the gap between 4s & 3d becomes larger and more difficult to remove d e-. Mn atom B/c p+ > e- energy levels pulled in closer Mn 2+ ion Multiple oxidation states attainable via ionization energies. In order to have higher oxidation states, there needs to be greater packets of (single) energy. Note: removal of successive e-'s Zeff, therefore higher amounts of energy required. 2. Complex formation Metal complexes are also called coordination compounds - consist of a metal bonded to electron rich molecules or ions. Eg. [Ag(NH3)2]+ diamine silver (I) ion complex Or [Co(NH3)5Cl]Cl2 Metals due to their small size and positive charge, will attract –ve species and form dative bonds (coordinate) with species that are electron rich (ligands). Lewis acid – electron pair acceptor (M+) Lewis base – electron pair donator (L) Alfred Werner – known as the father of coordinate chemistry proposed an explanation of how stoichiometric quantities of a small neutral molecule is incorporated into metal compounds. -Depending on the types and number of molecules bonded to a metal ion, different shapes of molecules will be created. M+ + 6L ML6+ octahedral M+ + 4L ML4+ tetrahedral square planar (Pt group) M+ + 2L ML2+ linear The coordination #: # of lone pairs (ligands) bonded to a metal or # of ligands inside the brackets in a formula -ranges between 2 to 9, but 4 or 6 most common Eg. [Cu(NH3)4]2+ [Fe(CN)6]4[Co(NH3)5Cl]Cl2 coord. # = coord. # = coord. # = Note: Complexes can have a negative or positive charge (ion complexes) or have no charge (neutral). How can the overall charge of a complex be determined? Charge of complex = sum of charge + ligands on central atom Examples: Complex Shape Coordination # [Cu(NH3)4]2+ [Co(NH3)5Cl](NO3)2 [Pt(NH3)2]Br2] [Ag(NH3)2]1+ Types of ligands: 1. monodentate (one-toothed): NH3, Cl-occupy only one site on coordination sphere. 2. Polydentate (many-toothed): b/c they appear to clutch the metal like a claw Therefore called a chelating agent -occupy 2 or more coordination sites Ex. NH3 F1OH2 CN1SCN1- - monodentate - monodentate - monodentate - monodentate - monodentate, but can form bonds via S or N [ S = C = N ] Ethylenediamine (en) -bidentate Oxalate ion (C2O4)2- EDTA4- (ethylenediaminetetraacetate ion) - food additive Chelating agents – prevent rxns that may interfere by chelating to unwanted metals Eg. Na2[Ca(EDTA)] used in lead poisoning. Porphyrins: porphine + Fe = heme Chelate effect: chelating agents form more stable complex than just monodentates Naming – brief overview 1. cation first and 2nd anion 2. ligands in alpha order ending in "o" before metals 3. anion ligands end in "ate" [Co(NH3)5Cl]Cl2 - pentaminechlorocobalt (III) chloride Na2[MoOCl4] - sodium tetrachlorooxomolybdate (IV) -due to the various numbers of ligands bonded to the central metal – isomerism is also exhibited in complexes Isomers Structural isomers Linkage Coordination sphere Stereoisomers Geometric Optical Linkage isomerism (rare) – same lewis bases linked but not same atom - ligand capable of coordinating to a metal in 2 different ways Eg. NO2 Nitro (NO2)- nitrito (ONO)- Yellow red Coordination sphere isomers – ligands directly bonded to metal as opposed to being outside coordination sphere in solid lattice. [Cr(H2O)6]Cl3 [Cr(H2O)5Cl]Cl2 . H2O [Cr(H2O)4Cl2]Cl . 2H2O violet green green or [Co(NH3)4Cl2]Br [Co(NH3)4ClBr]Cl Geometric isomers Cis-platin Also, Trans-platin Cis MA4B2 – cis/trans in octahedral MA3B3 – mer/fac in octahedral fac – facial mer- meridinal Trans Optical Isomers – chiral complexes that are non-superimposable (mirror images) Ex. [Co(en)3]3+ Enantiomers -affect polarized light by rotating it to the left (lerorotary) or the right (dextrorotary) -regular rxns produce racemic mixture of the isomers. Therefore, D & L made is 50:50 3. Colours What causes colour? a. type of transition metal (d-orbital splitting energies) b. oxidation state of transition metal c. type of ligand 4. Catalytic Properties - speed up rxn rate without being consumed (an alternative pathway for rxn) - Lower Ea Heterogeneous Catalysts – catalyst in a different phase from reactants and products Ex. Nickel metal and ethane Homogeneous – same phase (reactants and products) 5. Magnetism -compounds with one or more unpaired e- are paramagnetic (attracted to a pole of a magnet) -force of attraction between complex & magnet of unpaired e- in complex