transition metals and coordination chemistry dr. k. kalpanadevi · 2019. 12. 3. · 20.2 the...
TRANSCRIPT
Transition Metals and Coordination
Chemistry
Dr. K. Kalpanadevi
20.1 The Transition Metals: A Survey
20.2 The First-Row Transition Metals
20.3 Coordination Compounds
20.4 Isomerism
20.5 Bonding in Complex Ions:
The Localized Electron Model
20.6 The Crystal Field Model
20.7 The Molecular Orbital Model
20.8 The Biological Importance of
Coordination Complexes
Transition Metals and Coordination Chemistry
Vanadium metal (center) and in solution as
V2+(aq), V3+(aq), VO2+(aq), and VO2+(aq),
(left to right).
Figure 18.1: The periodic table.
Figure 12.39: Special names for groups
in the periodic table
Figure 12.39: Special names for groups
in the periodic table (cont’d)
Figure 20.1: Transition elements on the periodic table
Figure 12.28: The orbitals filled for
elements in various parts
Some Transition Metals Important to the U.S. Economy and Defense
20.1 A Survey of the Transition Metals
→ Recall the Representative Elements, Groups 1A – 8A:
• Chemical similarities occur within the vertical groups E.g. LiCl
NaCl
KCl
RbCl
CsCl
all ionic compounds
• Large changes in chemistry across a given period as the number of valence
electrons changes
E.g. Na Mg Al Si P S Cl Ar
— increasing metallic character
— decreasing ionization energy
NaCl MgCl2 AlCl3 … PCl5
Ionic Covalent
molecules
→ Transition Metals
• Similarities within a given period as well as within a given vertical group.
this huge contrast with the representative elements is due to the fact that the
last electrons added to the transition metal elements are inner electrons:
• d electrons in d – block transition metals
• f electrons in the lanthanides and actinides
– the inner d and f electrons cannot participate in bonding as readily as
the s and p electrons.
• Characteristics of the transition metals
– typical metals
• metallic luster
• high electrical and thermal conductivities
• Differences in Physical Properties among the transition metals can be large
– E.g. W, tungsten (mp = 3400℃) vs Hg, mercury (mp < 25℃)
– hard and high strength vs soft
Fe, iron and Ti Cu, Au, Ag
– ready rxn w/ O2 to form oxides vs no rxn with O2
Cr, Ni, Co, Al, Fe Au, Ag, Pt, Pd
• Ionic compounds with nonmetals
– Often more than one oxidation state
E.g. FeCl2 FeCl3
+2 +3
– the cations are often complex ions, species in which the transition
metal ion is surrounded by a number of ligands.
Molecular model: The CO(NH3)63+ ion
— Ligands are molecules or ions that behave
as Lewis bases, i.e. have a lone pair of electrons.
• Most compounds of the transition metals are colored.
— the transition metal ion can absorb visible light.
• Many transition metal compounds are paramagnetic.
— because they contain unpaired electrons
Electron Configurations (See Section 12.13)
• The 3d orbitals begin to fill after the 4s orbital is complete.
e.g. Sc: [Ar]4s23d1
Ti: 4s23d2
Y: 4s23d3
Cr: 4s13d5
Mn: 4s23d5
:
Cu: 4s13d10
Zn: 4s23d10
• for most elements of the first-row transition metals 4s23dn has a lower energy
than 4s13dn+1 except chromium and copper.
•The 4s and 3d orbital energies are very similar.
(See Table 20.2)
4s13dn+1 exceptions to 4s23dn electron
configuration
Co2+, Mn2+, Cr3+, Fe3+, & Ni2+
Table 20.2 Selected Properties of the First-Row Transition Metals
• Electron configurations of ions of the first-row transition metals
— the energy of the 3d orbitals is significantly less than that of the 4s orbital.
E.g. Sc: 4s23d1 Sc2+: 3d1
Ti: 4s23d2 Ti3+: 3d1
Zn: 4s23d10 Zn2+: 3d10
— these ions do not have 4s electrons (since the 3d orbitals are lower in energy)
• Oxidation States and Ionization Energies
• Various ions formed by losing electrons
E.g. Ti → Ti2+, Ti3+, Ti4+
4s23d2 most common
(See Table 20.2)
— to the right of the row the higher oxidation states are not observed because the
3d orbitals become lower in energy as the nuclear charge increases, making
electrons difficult to remove.
e.g. Zn → Zn2+ {Zn3+, Zn6+, Zn10+, etc ← NOT OBSERVED}
4s23d10 observed
(See Figure 20.2)
Figure 20.2: plots of the first (red dots) and third (blue
dots) ionization energies for the first-row transition metals
Standard Reduction Potentials
• The potential of the half-reaction
M(s) → Mn+ + ne-
characterizes the reducing ability of the metal.
• this is the reverse of usually
tabulated half-reactions and the
potentials are opposite in sign to
tabulated values in Table 20.2.
• Since by definition ξo = 0 for:
2H+ + 2e- → H2
all the first-row transition metals, except copper, can reduce H+ ions to hydrogen
gas in 1M aqueous solutions of strong acids:
M(s) + 2H+(aq) → H2 (g) + M2+
(aq)
The 4d and 5d Transition Series
• Comparison of the atomic radii of 3d, 4d, and 5d elements
See Figure 20.3
— general decrease in size in going from left to right across each
series
— significant increase in size from 3d to 4d
— 4d and 5d metals are very similar in size
this is due to the lanthanide contraction.
lanthanide series: elements between lanthanum (La) and
hafnium (Hf)
↑
filling of 4f orbitals which are in the interior of the atoms do
not affect size of the 5d elements
• 4d and 5d transition metals, though not as common as 3d metals,
have some very useful properties.
E.g. The platinum group metals – Ru, Os, Rh, Ir, Pd and Pt – are
widely used as catalysts in many industrial processes.
Figure 12.28: The orbitals filled for
elements in various parts
Figure 12.31: The positions of the elements considered
in Example 12.8
Figure 20.3: Atomic radii of the 3d, 4d,
and 5d transition series.
Figure 20.1: Transition elements on the periodic table
20.2 The First-Row Transition Metals Highlights of some properties or chemistry of the 10 3d transition metals.
1. Scandium, Sc
+3 oxidation state in compounds, e.g. ScCl3, Sc2O3, etc
most of its compounds are colorless and diamagnetic.
2. Titanium, Ti
fairly abundant (0.6% by mass of the earth’s crust) low density + high strength + high mp (1,672℃)
excellent structural material: jet engines, Boeing 747 jetliners, etc.
titanium (Ⅳ) oxide (or titanium dioxide), TiO2 is the most common
compound.
-- white pigment used in many products: paper,
paint, linoleum, plastics, cosmetics, etc.
3. Vanadium, V
The most common oxidation state is
+5 as in V2O5 (orange, mp =
650 ℃) and VF5.
Figure 20.4: Titanium bicycle
5. Manganese, Mn
– The only member of the 3d metals that can exist in all oxidation states from +2 to +7.
– Manganese (VII) ion: MnO4-
permanganate ion
( a strong oxidizing agent in solution)
Ferrochrome
added directly to iron in steel making process • common oxidation states in compounds: +2, +3, and +6
• Cr2+ (chromous ion)
• Cr3+ (chromic ion)
• chromium (IV) oxide + conc. sulfuric acid
cleaning solution
4. Chromium, Cr
– Main ore is chromite (FeCr2O4)
– FeCr2O4 (s) + 4 C (s) → 4 CO (g) + Fe (s) + 2Cr (s)
Manganese nodules on the sea floor
Source: Visuals Unlimited
6. Iron, Fe
• Quite abundant (4.7% of the
earth’s crust) • Its chemistry mainly involve its
+2 and +3 oxidation states.
7. Cobalt, Co
• mainly +2 and +3 states
• compounds with 0, +1 and +4
states are also known
8. Nickel, Ni
• mainly in the +2 oxidation state.
• aqueous solutions of nickel (II)
salts contain Ni(H2O)62+ ion,
— characteristic emerald
green color
Aqueous solution containing the Ni2+ ion
9. Copper, Cu
• widely available in ores (sulfides,
chlorides, carbonates etc.)
• used in electrical applications (wires,
cables, etc)
• also used in water pipes in homes
• many common alloys contain copper
e.g. brass, bronze, sterling silver, 18- and 14-
Karat gold
chemistry involves +2 oxidation state,
but also some compounds with the +1
oxidation state.
10. Zinc, Zn
• +2 oxidation state only
• used mainly for producing
galvanized steel.
• Zinc (II) salts are colorless.
20.3 Coordination Compounds
• A coordination compound consists of a complex ion and counter ions.
– it is an ionic compound, electrically neutral.
– complex ion = transition metal ion + attached ligands.
E.g. [Co(NH3)5Cl]Cl2
Co(NH3)5Cl2+ ← complex ion
2 Cl- ← counter ions (anions) – coordination compounds ionize in solutions (similar to simple salts)
[Co(NH3)5Cl]Cl2 (s) Co(NH3)5Cl2+(aq) + 2 Cl- (aq)
• Coordination Number of Metal Ions
– The number of bonds formed between a metal ion and the ligands in
the complex ion is termed the coordination number.
– depending on the size, charge, and electron configuration of the
transition metal ion, the coordination number can be from 2 to 8.
H2O
– many metal ions show more than one coordination number.
– for the typical geometries for the various typical coordination numbers
see Figure 20.6.
Ligands
– a neutral molecule or ion having a lone pair that can be used to form a
bond with a metal ion.
• Lewis bases by definition are ligands
• the metal ion is a Lewis acid
– a metal – ligand bond is called a coordinative covalent bond.
• it results from a Lewis acid – base interaction in which a ligand
donates an electron pair to an empty orbital on a metal ion.
Figure 20.6: Ligand
arrangements for
coordination numbers 2,
4, and 6