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CHEM 1311A Syllabus • Transition metals and Coordination Chemistry – Introduction to coordination compounds; stereochemistry, isomerism and nomenclature – Coordination compounds: bonding models and energetics – Coordination compounds: equilibria and substitution reactions • Bioinorganic chemistry Fourth Exam – Friday, November 30 What do these have in common? • • • • • • • • Hemoglobin Myoglobin Automobile paints Anti-cancer drugs (some) Industrial catalysts (many) Arthritis drugs Vitamin B12 Cytochromes • • • • • • • “Blue blood” Ferredoxins Rubies Emeralds Legumes (nitrogen fixers) Radiopharmaceuticals (some) MRI contrast agents All contain a transition metal!! All are coordination compounds Many are colored 1 Transition metal complex (coordination compound) terminology • Coordination compound, coordination complex, complex - a • • • compound containing a metal ion and appended groups, which are Lewis bases and may be monatomic or polyatomic, neutral or anionic. Ligand - Lewis base bonded (coordinated) to a metal ion in a coordination complex. –Those with only one point of attachment are monodentate ligands. –Ligands that can be bonded to the metal through more than one donor atom are termed bidentate (two points of attachment), tridentate, etc. Such ligands are termed chelating ligands. Coordination number - number of ligands coordinated to a metal ion, 2-12. Coordination geometry or stereochemistry (octahedral, tetrahedral, square planar) - geometrical arrangements of ligands (donor groups) about a metal ion. Effect of coordination number and geometry on absorption spectrum Comparison of electronic absorption spectral intensities for [Co(OH2)6]2+ (octahedral) and [CoCl4]2- (tetrahedral) 2 Transition metal complex (coordination compound) terminology • Isomers – Constitutional (structural) isomer - one of two or more compounds having the same composition but differing in their atom connectivities. – Stereoisomer - one of two or more compounds having the same atom connectivities but different spatial arrangements of atoms. ○ Diastereoisomer – stereoisomers not related by mirror images ○ Enantiomer - one of a pair of species that are nonsuperimposable mirror images. Types of Isomerism Constitutional (structural) Stereo Linkage Diastereomers (geometric) Ionization Enantiomers (optical) Hydration ● Constitutional (structural) isomers – same composition, different atom connectivities ● Stereoisomers – same composition, same atom connectivities, different spatial arrangements 3 Stereoisomers: Diastereoisomers • Compounds that have the same atom connectivities, but which are not mirror images are diastereoisomers. X M L L L L X M cis X X L X X M trans L square planar tetrahedral Stereoisomers: Diastereoisomers • Compounds that have the same atom connectivities, but which are not mirror images are diastereoisomers. L ML4X2 L L M L X L X L X L M L L L M L cis M L trans L X L X X X L X L X L L L M L X L L X M X L trans L 4 Stereoisomers: Diastereoisomers • Compounds that have the same atom connectivities, but which are not mirror images are diastereoisomers. ML3X3 X L L M X L L X L X L M L L mer X X X L M X X L X L M X fac X L Stereoisomers: Enantiomers • Compounds that have no center or plane of symmetry exist in non-superimposable, mirror-image forms. Rotate by 180E F F C Br H Cl Cl C Br H 5 Stereoisomers: Enantiomers • Compounds that have no center or plane of symmetry exist in non-superimposable, mirror-image forms. H2 N H2N Co N H2 H N 2 NH2 3+ NH2 How many diastereoisomers can exist for the complex ion [Co(H2NCH2CH2NH2)(NH3)2Cl2]+ ? How many of these diastereoisomers have nonsuperimposable mirror image forms? 6 How many diastereoisomers can exist for [Co(dien)(Cl)(NO2)2]? dien = H2N NH2 NH H N = NH2 H2N How many of the diastereoisomers that can exist for [Co(dien)(Cl)(NO2)2] have non-superimposable mirror images, i.e., are enantiomeric? N N N O2N Co Cl NO2 N N Cl Co NO2 N NO2 N N N Co NO2 N Cl N NO2 N Co Cl NO2 NO2 7 How many stereoisomers (diastereoisomers and enantiomeric forms) can exist for [Co(H2NCH2CH2O)3]? The tetradentate ligand shown below forms six-coordinate complexes with Co(III) having the composition [CoLX2]+ where X is a mondentate ligand. HN NH2 N N N N = HN NH2 How many diastereoisomers can be formed? How many are enantiomeric? 8 Energy changes for formation of ML6n+ n+ M +6L n+ n+ ML6 ML6 (octahedral) E d z 2 d x2 - y 2 e-e replusion d xz dxy dyz )E differential replusions of d orbitals electrostatic attraction Magnetic properties • High spin – maximum number of unpaired electrons for dn – Spin pairing energy is greater than ∆E (∆o) • Low spin – minimum number of unpaired electrons for dn – Spin pairing energy is less than ∆E (∆o) 9 Dependence of magnetic and spectral properties on ligand type • Spectrochemical series – I– < Br– < Cl– < SCN– < F–, OH– < NO2– < H2O < SCN– < NH3 < en < NO2– < PR3 < P(OR)3, C2H4< PF3, CO, CN– Energy level diagram for complex with F donor ligands F* np F* ns eg * ) (n-1) d t2g F* n L orbitals F F F 10 Metal-ligand B-bonding interactions dB-pB donor interactions; halide, hydroxide dB-pB acceptor interactions (rare) dB-dB acceptor interactions; phosphorus, arsenic dB-B* acceptor interactions; CO, CN-, NO, RNC dB-B* acceptor interactions; olefins (C=C) Energy level diagram for complex with F and B donor ligands F* np F* eg * ns ) t 2g F* B* (n-1) d n B F F F L orbitals 11 Comparison of level diagrams for complexes with F only and F plus B donor ligands np ns ) ) (n-1) d L orbitals Energy level diagram for complex with F and B acceptor ligands F* np ns F* B* n eg * F* L pi acceptor orbitals ) (n-1) d t2g B L orbitals F F F 12 Comparison of level diagrams for complexes with F only and F plus B acceptor ligands np L pi acceptor orbitals ns ) ) (n-1) d L orbitals Energy level diagrams for complexes with F only, F plus B donor, and F plus B acceptor ligands np L pi acceptor orbitals ns ) ) ) (n-1) d L orbitals 13 HOMO and LUMO for cyanide ion p p E s s Effect of B-donor and B-acceptor interactions on ) in octahedral complexes eg * eg * ) eg * ) t2g ) t2g t2g energy of d-orbitals prior to interaction with ligands F bonding only F + B donor intermediate field ligands weak field ligands F + B acceptor strong field ligands 14 Dependence of magnetic and spectral properties on ligand type • Spectrochemical series – I– < Br– < Cl– < SCN– < F–, OH– < NO2– < H2O < SCN– < NH3 < en < NO2– < PR3 < P(OR)3, C2H4< PF3, CO, CN– • Strong field ligands = low-spin complexes – have B-acceptor orbitals: B* as in CO or CN–, B*as in CH2=CH2, low lying d as in PR3, PF3 • Weak field ligands = high-spin complexes – have B-donor orbitals: usually multiple p orbitals as in X • Intermediate field ligands = usually high spin for +2 ions, low-spin for +3 ions – have few, or no, B -donor or acceptor orbitals, or there is a poor match in energy of available B orbitals: NH3, H2O, pyridine Variation of )O in octahedral Ti(III) complexes Ti(III) is a d1 ion and exhibits one absorption in the electronic spectrum of its metal complexes due to transition of the electron from the t2g (lower energy) orbitals to the eg (higher energy) orbitals. The energy of the absorption corresponds to )O. Ligand BrCl(H2N)2C=O NCSFH2O CN*E = h< = hc/8 )O/cm-1* 11,400 13,000 17,550 18,400 18,900 20,100 22,300 15 Electronic absorption spectra • Selection rules – Transitions that occur without change in number of unpaired electrons (spin multiplicity) are allowed – Transitions that involve a change in the number of • • unpaired spins are “forbidden” and are therefore of low intensity. > solutions of high-spin d5, e.g., Mn(II), complexes are lightly colored Absorption bands are broad because metal-ligand bonds are constantly changing distance (vibration) and since electronic transitions occur faster than atomic motions this means that there are effectively many values of ∆o. d1 and d9, and high-spin d4 and d6 ions have only one spinallowed transition; high-spin d2, d3, d7 and d8 have three spinallowed transitions Allowed vs forbidden transitions dx2-y2 dz2 E dxz dxy dyz dx2-y2 dz2 dxz dxy dyz dx2-y2 dz2 dxz dxy dyz dx2-y2 dz2 dxz dxy dyz 16 Effect of ligand on absorption spectra (and color) Number of d electrons and spectral intensity [Mn(OH2)6]2+ 17 Transitions in d1 and d2 complexes dx2-y2 dz2 dxz dxy dyz dx2-y2 dz2 dx2-y2 dz2 E dx2-y2 dz2 dxz dxy dxz dyz dxz dx2-y2 dz2 dxz dxy dyz dxy dxy dyz dxy1 dx2-y21 dxz1dz21 dyz1dz21 dxz1 dx2-y21 dxy1dz21 dyz1dx2-y21 dyz dx2-y2 dz2 dxz dxy dyz Comparison of crystal field splittings for octahedral, square planar and tetrahedral ligand fields 18 Crystal field splitting in tetrahedral complexes • • • Tetrahedral arrangement of four ligands showing their orientation relative to the Cartesian axes and the dyz orbital. The orientation with respect to dxz and dxy is identical and the interaction with these orbitals is considerably greater than with the dz2 and dx2- y2 orbitals; therefore the dyz, dxz and dxy orbitals are higher in energy than dz2 and dx2- y2 . Because there are only four ligands and the ligand electron pairs do not point directly at the orbitals, ∆t ~4/9 ∆o. As a result the spin-pairing energy is always greater than ∆ and tetrahedral complexes are always high spin. Factors affecting the magnitude of ) (Crystal Field Splitting) • Charge on the metal. For first row transition elements )O varies from about 7,500 cm-1 to 12,500 cm-1 for divalent ions and 14,000 cm-1 to 25,000 cm-1 for trivalent ions. • Position in a group. )O values for analogous complexes of metal ions in a group increase by 25% to 50% on going from one transition series to the next. This is illustrated by the complexes [M(NH3)6]3+ where ) values are 23,000 cm-1 for M=Co; 34,000 cm1 for M=Rh and 41,000 cm-1 for M=Ir. • Geometry and coordination number. For similar ligands )t will be about 4/9 )O. This is a result of the reduced number of ligands and their orientation relative to the d orbitals. Recall that the energy ordering of the orbitals is reversed in tetrahedral complexes relative to that in the octahedral case. • Identity of the ligand. The dependence of ) on the nature of the ligand follows a regular order, known as the spectrochemical series, for all metals in all oxidation states and geometries. 19 Thermodynamic vs kinetic stability • Stability in a thermodynamic sense refers to the energetics of a • • • • formation or decomposition reaction )G = )H + T)S Stability in a reactivity sense refers to the rate with which a given reaction occurs. Complexes that undergo substitution with half-lives less than about one minute are referred to as labile; those that are less reactive are termed inert. Complex stability and reactivity do not necessarily correlate with ligand field strength; the latter refers to spectroscopic and magnetic properties. Thermodynamic and kinetic stabilities sometimes parallel but often they do not. – [Ni(CN)4]2& illustrates the latter case; the overall equilibrium constant its formation is >1030 but the second order rate constant for CN& exchange is >5 x 105 M-1 s-1 Stepwise formation of [Cu(NH3)4]2+ [Cu(OH2)4]2+ + NH3 W [Cu(OH2)3(NH3)]2+ + H2O [Cu(OH2)3(NH3)]2+ [Cu(OH2)2(NH3)2 [Cu(OH2)(NH3)3 ]2+ ]2+ + NH3 W [Cu(OH2)2(NH3)2]2+ + NH3 W [Cu(OH2)(NH3)3]2+ + NH3 W [Cu(NH3)4 ]2+ log K1 = 4.22 + H2O log K2 = 3.50 + H2O log K3 = 2.92 + H2O [Cu(OH2)4]2+ + 4 NH3 W [Cu(NH3)4]2+ + 4 H2O log K4 = 2.18 [Cu(NH ) 2+ ] 34 4 [Cu2+ ][NH ]4 3 β = 20 Speciation is determined by ligand concentration [Cu(OH2)4] 2+ 2+ + n NH3 = [Cu(OH2)4-n(NH3)n] 1.0 0.9 0.8 n=0 Fraction 0.7 0.6 n=1 0.5 n=4 n=2 n=3 0.4 0.3 0.2 0.1 0.0 6 4 2 0 -log[NH3] The Chelate Effect is largely entropic in origin [Cu(OH2)4]2+ + en W [Cu(OH2)2(en)]2+ + 2 H2O )H = -54 kJ mol-1, log K1 = 10.6 )S = 23 J K-1 mol-1 [Cu(OH2)4]2+ + 2 NH3 W [Cu(OH2)2(NH3)2]2+ + 2H2O )H = -46 kJ mol-1, log K2 = 7.7 )S = -8.4 J K-1 mol -1 21 Ligand substitution in coordination complexes • Arguably the most important reaction of coordination complexes • • is ligand substitution. There are two limiting mechanisms for substitution reactions – associative parallels the SN2 reaction in organic chemistry; the reaction involves an intermediate of higher coordination number. rate = k[complex][L] > associative reactions are more important for larger metal ions and for those that have vacancies in the t2g orbitals – dissociative parallels the SN1 reaction in organic chemistry; the reaction involves an intermediate of lower coordination number. rate = k[complex] The simplest substitution is ligand exchange which is not complicated by thermodynamics since ∆G = 0. – exchange rates of water have been most extensively studied – rate constants for water exchange range from 1.1x10-10 s-1 to 5x109 s-1 Observations on water exchange • An increase in oxidation state for the metal reduces the rate of • • • exchange Early (larger) elements in a period tend to have a greater contribution from associative processes Heavier (larger) elements in a family have a greater contribution from associative processes; also greater bond strengths decrease rate of dissociative processes Occupancy of (antibonding) eg orbitals increases the rate for all oxidation states 22 Water exchange rates in aquo metal ions 23 Rate constantsa for water exchange n+ [MLnn(OH2)]n+ k/s-1-1 n+ [MLnn(OH22)]n+ k/s-1 [Ti(OH2) 6]3+ 1.8 x 105 [V(OH2)6] 2+ 8.7 x 101 [V(OH2)6] 3+ 5.0 x 102 [Cr(OH2)6] 2+ >108 [Cr(OH2)6] 3+ 2.4 x 10-6 [Mn(OH2)6] 2+ 2.1 x 107 [Fe(OH2)6]2+ 4.4 x 106 [Fe(OH2 )6]3+ 1.2 x 102 [Ru(OH ) ] 1.8 x 10 -2 [Ru(OH ) ] 3.5 x 10-6 [Co(OH ) ] 3.2 x 10 6 [Ni(OH2)6] 2+ 3.2 x 104 [Pd(OH2) 4] 5.6 x 10-2 [Pt(OH2)4]2+ 3.9 x 10-4 [Cu(OH2)6]2+ >107 [Zn(OH2)6]2+ >107 [Cr(NH3)5OH2]3+ 5.2 x 10-5 [Co(NH3) 5OH2]3+ 5.7 x 10-6 [Rh(NH3) 5OH2]3+ 8.4 x 10-6 [Ir(NH3)5OH2]3+ 6.1 x 10-8 2 6 2+ 2 6 2+ 2+ 2 6 3+ aAll rate constants are expressed as first order rate constants for comparative purposes even though some reactions are associative. Electron transfer reactions: importance of orbital occupancy and spin state on rate • Electron transfer is second only to substitution in importance as a characteristic reaction of coordination complexes and especially in biological systems. • Again the simplest reaction is outer-sphere electron exchange where )G=0 • Rates of electron exchange vary enormously across the transition series, but two things are invariably true: – The rate of electron transfer is greatest when electrons are transferred from a t2g orbital on the reductant to a t2g orbital on the oxidant. – There is minimal change in bond distance in either oxidant or reductant upon electron transfer. e- config M-L BD, D kex, M-1 s-1 [Co(NH3)6]2+ t2g5eg2 2.114 # 10-9 [Co(NH3)6]3+ t2g6 1.936 [Ru(NH3)6]2+ t2g 6 2.144 t2g 5 2.104 Complex [Ru(NH3)6]3+ 8.2 x 102 24