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Synthesis How do I make it? Modeling How do I explain it?

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Presentation on theme: "Synthesis How do I make it? Modeling How do I explain it?"— Presentation transcript:

1 Synthesis How do I make it? Modeling How do I explain it?
Chemistry Analysis What is this? Synthesis How do I make it? Three central goals Modeling How do I explain it?

2 A Chemist’s View- How we think Three different perspectives
Macroscopic Microscopic or Particulate Three different perspectives Symbolic NaCl

3 The Period 4 transition metals

4 Colors of representative compounds of the Period 4 transition metals
nickel(II) nitrate hexahydrate sodium chromate zinc sulfate heptahydrate potassium ferricyanide titanium oxide scandium oxide manganese(II) chloride tetrahydrate copper(II) sulfate pentahydrate vanadyl sulfate dihydrate cobalt(II) chloride hexahydrate Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display.

5 Aqueous oxoanions of transition elements
Mn(II) Mn(VI) Mn(VII) One of the most characteristic chemical properties of these elements is the occurrence of multiple oxidation states. V(V) Cr(VI) Mn(VII) Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display.

6 Effects of the metal oxidation state and of ligand identity on color
[V(H2O)6]3+ [V(H2O)6]2+ [Cr(NH3)6]3+ [Cr(NH3)5Cl ]2+ Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display.

7 Linkage isomers

8 An artist’s wheel

9

10 Splitting of d-orbital energies by an octahedral field of ligands
D is the splitting energy

11 The effect of ligand on splitting energy

12 The spectrochemical series
For a given ligand, the color depends on the oxidation state of the metal ion. For a given metal ion, the color depends on the ligand. I- < Cl- < F- < OH- < H2O < SCN- < NH3 < en < NO2- < CN- < CO WEAKER FIELD STRONGER FIELD LARGER D SMALLER D LONGER  SHORTER  Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display.

13 The color of [Ti(H2O)6]3+ Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display.

14 High-spin and low-spin complex ions of Mn2+
Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display.

15 high spin: weak-field ligand low spin: strong-field ligand
Orbital occupancy for high- and low-spin complexes of d4 through d7 metal ions high spin: weak-field ligand low spin: strong-field ligand high spin: weak-field ligand low spin: strong-field ligand Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display.

16 What is electronic spectroscopy?
Absorption of radiation leading to electronic transitions within a molecule or complex Absorption Absorption [Ru(bpy)3]2+ [Ni(H2O)6]2+ 104 10 ~14 000 25 000 50 000 200 400 700 visible UV UV visible n / cm-1 (frequency) - l / nm (wavelength) UV = higher energy transitions - between ligand orbitals visible = lower energy transitions - between d-orbitals of transition metals - between metal and ligand orbitals

17 Absorption maxima in a visible spectrum have three important characteristics
number (how many there are) This depends on the electron configuration of the metal centre 2. position (what wavelength/energy) This depends on the ligand field splitting parameter, Doct or Dtet and on the degree of inter-electron repulsion intensity This depends on the "allowedness" of the transitions which is described by two selection rules

18 [Ti(OH2)6]3+ lmax = 510 nm Do is  243 kJ mol-1 20 300 cm-1
The energy of the absorption by [Ti(OH2)6]3+ is the ligand-field splitting, Do ES ES eg eg hn Do GS GS t2g t2g d-d transition complex in electronic Ground State (GS) complex in electronic excited state (ES) [Ti(OH2)6]3+ lmax = 510 nm Do is  243 kJ mol-1 cm-1 An electron changes orbital; the ion changes energy state

19 Degenerate electronic ground state: T or E
The Jahn-Teller Distortion: Any non-linear molecule in a degenerate electronic state will undergo distortion to lower it's symmetry and lift the degeneracy Degenerate electronic ground state: T or E Non-degenerate ground state: A d3 4A2g d5 (high spin) 6A1g d6 (low spin) 1A1g d8 3A2g 2B1g A 2Eg [Ti(H2O)6]3+, d1 2A1g 2T2g n / cm-1 - 10 000 20 000 30 000

20 Limitations of ligand field theory
[Ni(OH2)6]2+ = d8 ion 3 absorption bands 2+ Ni eg A t2g 25 000 15 000 n / cm-1 - LFT assumes there is no inter-electron repulsion Repulsion between electrons in d-orbitals has an effect on the energy of the whole ion

21 d2 ion Electron-electron repulsion eg eg z2 x2-y2 z2 x2-y2 t2g t2g xy xz yz xy xz yz xy + z2 xz + z2 z z y y x x lobes overlap, large electron repulsion lobes far apart, small electron repulsion These two electron configurations do not have the same energy

22 The Nephelauxetic Effect
cloud expanding some covalency in M-L bonds – M and L share electrons effective size of metal orbitals increases electron-electron repulsion decreases Nephelauxetic series of ligands F- < H2O < NH3 < en < [oxalate]2- < [NCS]- < Cl- < Br- < I- Nephelauxetic series of metal ions Mn(II) < Ni(II) Co(II) < Mo(II) > Re (IV) < Fe(III) < Ir(III) < Co(III) < Mn(IV)

23 Transition e complexes
Selection Rules Transition e complexes Spin forbidden 10-3 – 1 Many d5 Oh cxs Laporte forbidden [Mn(OH2)6]2+ Spin allowed Laporte forbidden 1 – 10 Many Oh cxs [Ni(OH2)6]2+ 10 – 100 Some square planar cxs [PdCl4]2- 100 – coordinate complexes of low symmetry, many square planar cxs particularly with organic ligands Spin allowed 102 – 103 Some MLCT bands in cxs with unsaturated ligands Laporte allowed 102 – 104 Acentric complexes with ligands such as acac, or with P donor atoms 103 – 106 Many CT bands, transitions in organic species


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