Isomerism: two main kinds

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Metal Complexes -- Chapter 24
Advertisements

Transition Metals and Coordination Chemistry
Chapter 24 Chemistry of Coordination Compounds
Chapter 24 Chemistry of Coordination Compounds
Complex Ions.
Mysteries of polarized light Enantiomers have identical properties except in one respect: the rotation of the plane of polarization of light Enantiomers.
COLOR OF THE TRANSITION ELEMENTS
Transition Metals & Coordination Compounds
Transition Metals and Coordination Chemistry
Transition Metal Chemistry and Coordination Compounds
Copyright©2000 by Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved. 1 Chemistry FIFTH EDITION by Steven S. Zumdahl University of Illinois.
CHAPTER 3: COORDINATION CHEMISTRY CHEM210/Chapter 3/2014/01 A coordination compound, sometimes called a coordination complex, contains a central metal.
Prentice-Hall © 2002 Complex Ions and Coordination Compounds.
Coordination Chemistry ligands bonding to metals.
Chapter 21 Transition Metals and Coordination Chemistry
Review of variable valence  Transition metal ions have variable oxidation state  Electron configurations 4s 2 3d n with some exceptions 4s 2 3d n with.
1 Chapter 19Coordination Complexes 19.1The Formation of Coordination Complexes 19.2Structures of Coordination Complexes 19.3Crystal-Field Theory and Magnetic.
Crystal Field Theory Focus: energies of the d orbitals Assumptions
Chapter 24 Transition Metals and Coordination Compounds 2007, Prentice Hall Chemistry: A Molecular Approach, 1 st Ed. Nivaldo Tro Roy Kennedy Massachusetts.
TRANSITION METALS AND COORDINATION CHEMISTRY
Crystal Field Theory i) Separate metal and ligands have high energy ii) Coordinated Metal - ligand get stabilized iii) Metal and Ligands act as point charges.
Zumdahl’s Chapter 20 Transition Metals Chapter Contents  e – configuration  Oxidation #s & IP  Coordination Compounds  Coordination #  Ligands 
Chapter 21(a) Transition Metals and Coordination Chemistry.
Transition Metals and Coordination Chemistry
LO 1.10 Students can justify with evidence the arrangement of the periodic table and can apply periodic properties to chemical reactivity. (Sec 21.1) LO.
Chapter 21 Transition Metals and Coordination Chemistry.
Coordination Complexes Chapter 20. Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.20 | 2 What we learn from Chap 20 We begin the chapter with.
COORDINATION COMPOUNDS
1 The d block metal form coordination complexes with molecules and ions.
Transition Metal Chemistry and Coordination Compounds
Transition Metals and Coordination Compounds. Transition Metals The transition metals are the d-block elements. The Inner Transitions metals are the lanthanides.
Transition Metal Chemistry and Coordination Compounds Chapter 20 Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display.
CHEM 522 Chapter 01 Introduction. Transition Metal Organometallic Chemistry Organic versus inorganic chemistry Transition metals –Oxidation state –d orbitals.
Chapter 21 Transition Metals and Coordination Chemistry.
The Chemistry of Coordination Compounds Chapter 20 Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display.
Chemistry of Coordination Compounds © 2009, Prentice-Hall, Inc. Sections Chemistry of Coordination Compounds Chemistry, The Central Science,
1 Transition Metal Chemistry and Coordination Compounds Chapter 22 Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or.
Copyright©2000 by Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved. 1 Transition Metals...show great similarities within a given period as well as within.
Isomerism & Crystal Field Theory Chapter 24 – Lecture 3
Transition Metals and Coordination Chemistry
COORDINATION COMPOUNDS
Transition Metals and Coordination Compounds
Chem. 1B – 11/15 Lecture.
Metal-Ligand bonding in transition metal complexes
Some Coordination Compounds of Cobalt Studied by Werner
Molecular Orbital Theory
Chapter 9 Chemical Bonding Theories
Chapter 6 Bonds.
Chapter 21 Transition Metals and Coordination Chemistry...show great similarities within a given period as well as within a given vertical group. Key reason:
The Chemistry of Coordination Compounds
The Chemistry of Coordination Compounds
Coordination Chemistry
Co-ordination compounds or complexes
Structural Isomerism 1 Coordination isomerism: Composition of the complex ion varies. [Cr(NH3)5SO4]Br and [Cr(NH3)5Br]SO4.
Metal Complexes -- Chapter 24
Drill: Determine the Ksp for Mn2S3 when the solubility is 1 x
Chapter 9 Chemical Bonding Theories
Transition Metals and Coordination Chemistry
Chemical bonding II UNIT 8
Transition Metals Their Coordination Compounds & Isomers
Example 24.1 Writing Electron Configurations for Transition Metals
Transition Metals and Coordination Chemistry
Coordination Chemistry
CHEMISTRY OF COORDINATION COMPOUNDS
Hybridization vs. MO for Methane
Physical Chemistry Chapter V Polyatomic Molecular Structure 2019/4/10
Exam I Thursday, February 14, 7:00-9:00 pm; rooms are on the website.
MT 2 Chemical Bonds Terms.
Covalent bonding review
Chapter 9 Chemical Bonding Theories
Presentation transcript:

Isomerism: two main kinds

Structural Isomers: Coordination Isomerism

Structural Isomers: Linkage Isomerism

Stereo Isomers: Geometric (cis-trans) square planar octahedral

Stereo Isomers: Geometric (cis-trans)

Stereo Isomers: Optical Optical activity: opposite effects on plane-polarized light. Molecules have nonsuperimposable mirror images.

Stereo Isomers: Optical

Stereo Isomers: Optical

The Localized Electron Model The cobalt(III) ion possesses empty hybrid orbitals which can accept electrons. The metal ion is considered a Lewis Acid. The ligands possess lone pairs of electrons which can be donated to form coordinate covalent bonds. The ligands are considered Lewis Bases.

MO Diagram (octahedral) Orbitals with lone pairs on the ligands overlap with the metal ion orbitals. Only sigma bonds are considered here. The 3d is lower in energy than the 4s for transition metal ions. For reference we have kept the d-orbital labels on this diagram. Note the non-bonding d-orbitals.

MO Energy Diagram for [Co(NH3)6]3+ If ligands are “lone pairs”, with 6 lone pairs (octahedral) we always have 12 electrons from the ligands. Thus, the number of electrons in the “d-orbital” range of the MO = the number of electrons in the metal ion.

MOs: What Do We Notice?

Crystal Field Theory: Important Points We only need concern ourselves with the “d-orbitals” as seen in our consideration of MO theory. Consider ligands to be negative point charges. Bonding is considered to be ionic (with the metal ion the cation and the ligand the anion – even neutral ligands). Electron-electron repulsion causes an increase in energy in the d-orbitals on the metal. The greater the overlap, the greater the repulsion, the higher the energy (overlap = “bad”). We don’t “need” hybrid orbitals or MOs – we assume the d-orbitals are unchanged.

CFT: Color?

CFT: Ligands affect splitting Consider Co3+ (d?).

MOs: What Do We Notice?