Title: Bonding in Coordination Compounds
1Bonding in Coordination Compounds
- Valence-Bond Theory
- Explain structure and magnetic properties of
complex in terms of hybrid orbitals - Ex Co(NH3)63 is diamagnetic (no unpaired e)
- Co Ar4s23d7
- Co3 Ar3d6
- Principles a) Pairs of ligand electrons
donated into vacant metal orbitals
2- b) Metal d-electrons arranged to agree with
observed magnetic properties - Recall that Hunds rule says to leave es
unpaired as long as possible within a subshell.
Now we will sometimes violate Hunds rule. -
- 3d 4s
4p - Orbitals available for ligand electron pairs are
d2sp3 set. - This hybridization leads to octahedral geometry.
3Hybridization and Geometry (Review)
- sp linear
- sp2 trigonal planar
- sp3 tetrahedral
- dsp2 square planar
- sp3d or dsp3 trigonal bipyramidal
- sp3d2 or d2sp3 octahedral
4Figure 20.18Hybrid Orbitals on Co3
5- Ex CoF63 has 4 unpaired electrons (d6 ion).
-
- 3d 4s
4p - __ __ __
- 4d
- Ligands use sp3d2 hybrid orbital set.
- Geometry is octahedral.
-
6- Ex NiCl42 has 2 unpaired electrons
- Ni Ar4s23d8
- Ni2 Ar3d8
-
- 3d 4s
4p - 4 ligand pairs use sp3 hybrid orbitals.
- Geometry is tetrahedral.
7- Ex PtCl42 is diamagnetic.
- Pt2 is d8 ion like Ni2.
-
__ - 5d 6s
6p - Ligand electron pairs use dsp2 hybrid orbitals.
- Geometry is square planar.
- Use dx2y2, px, and py orbitals to direct
electron density along the x- and y-axes.
8- Ex Ag(NH3)2 is diamagnetic
- Ag Kr5s14d10
- Ag Kr4d10
-
__ __ - 4d 5s
5p - Ligand electron pairs use sp hybrid orbitals.
- Geometry is linear.
-
9Figure 20.19The Hybrid Orbitals Required for
Tetrahedral, Square Planar, and Linear Complex
Ions
10Crystal-Field Theory
- Accounts for magnetic spectral properties in
terms of splitting of the d-orbital energies - Ex Consider an octahedral complex, ML6n
- We place the ligands along the x-, y-, and
z-axes. - Now, which d-orbitals on the metal will be
repelled most strongly by the negative charge of
the ligands (which are closest to the ligands)?
11Figure 20.20 An Octahedral Arrangement of
Point-Charge Ligands and the Orientation of the
3d Orbitals
12- The dx2y2 and dz2 orbitals point directly along
the x-, y-, and z-axes, right at the ligands. - Thus, these two orbitals experience a great deal
of repulsion and are raised in energy. - These two orbitals are called the t2g set.
- The other three d-orbitals point in between the
ligands (little repulsion). - Since the total energy of the d-orbitals must be
conserved, these three orbitals are lowered in
energy. - These three orbitals are called the eg set.
13Figure 20.21 The Energies of the 3d Orbitals for
a Metal Ion in an Octahedral Complex
14- Strong-field and Weak-field Cases
- The splitting ?o between the t2g and eg orbitals
depends on metal size, metal charge, and the
nature of the ligand. - Strong-field Case ? is large, electrons prefer
to populate the lower-energy set (t2g) as long as
possible. - Weak-field Case ? is small, electrons prefer to
stay unpaired in the t2g and eg sets as long as
possible (as in Hunds rule)
15- Predicting Strong- or Weak-Field Cases
- 2nd and 3rd transition series tend to be
strong-field cases (4d and 5d metals) - Metal charge 3 and higher tends to be
strong-field. Charge 2 and lower, weak-field. - Effect of ligands the spectrochemical series.
- CN gt NO2 gt en gt NH3 gt H2O gt OH gt F gt Cl gt
Br gt I -
16- Magnetic Properties
- High-spin complex has the maximum number of
unpaired d-electrons (weak-field case) - Low-spin complex has the minimum number of
unpaired d-electrons (strong-field case)
17- Ex Co(NH3)63 d6 ion
- 3 charge and relatively strong ligand suggest
strong-field case. Therefore, low-spin. - __ __ eg
- t2g
- So the complex is diamagnetic.
18- Ex CoF63 d6 ion
- 3 charge suggests strong-field, but very weak
ligand and 1st-row metal suggest weak-field.
Therefore, high-spin. - eg
- t2g
- Therefore, 4 unpaired electrons
19Color Spectroscopy
- Figure 20.23 The Visible Spectrum
- Observed color is the complement of absorbed
color. - Ex A red substance absorbs short wavelengths
(v, b, g). - A violet substance absorbs long wavelengths (r,
o, y).
20- Figure 21.24 (a) When white light shines on a
filter that absorbs in the yellow-green region,
the emerging light is violet. (b) Because the
complex ion Ti(H2O)63 absorbs yellow-green
light, a solution of it is violet.
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22- Strong-field Cases
- ? is large, short-wavelength light is absorbed.
- Colors tend toward the red end of the spectrum.
- Weak-field Cases
- ? is small, long-wavelength light is absorbed.
- Colors tend toward the blue end of the spectrum.
- Ex Co(NH3)63 yellow (absorb
violet) - Co(NH3)4Cl2 green (absorb red)
23Other Geometries
- d-orbitals closer to ligands will be higher in
energy - d-orbitals farther from ligands will be lower.
- Tetrahedral Complexes
- Metal is at center of a cube, ligands are at the
alternate corners. Axes come out of the center
of the faces of the cube. - Which d-orbitals are closest to the ligands?
24- Figure 21.26 (a) Tetrahedral and octahedral
arrangements of ligands shown inscribed in
cubes.(b) The orientations of the 3d orbitals
relative to the tetrahedral set of point charges.
25- In this case, the dxy, dxz, and dyz orbitals are
closest to the ligands. However, they do not
point directly at the ligands. These are called
the t2 orbitals. - The dz2 and dx2y2 orbitals are farther from the
ligands. These are called the e orbitals. - The energy-level splitting pattern will be
- Inverted from the octahedral pattern
- Have a smaller splitting ?t 4/9 ?o
26Figure 21.27 The crystal field diagrams for
octahedral and tetrahedral complexes.
27- Ex. What is the d-electron configuration for
CoCl42-? - We have Co2, a d7 ion.
- Note that tetrahedral cases are always high-spin
(weak-field) since ?t is so much smaller than ?o. - t2
- e 3
unpaired electrons