Utilisateur
The 6 ligand σ-donor atomic orbitals are lower in energy than the metal valence atomic orbitals, and donation into the metal generates 6 σ-bonding molecular orbitals.
One comes mainly from metal (n+1)s, three from metal (n+1)px, py, pz, and two from metal ndz2 and ndx2−y2.
They occupy the 6 σ-bonding MOs.
The d electrons occupy the nonbonding dxy, dxz, dyz orbitals and, if necessary, the higher dx2−y2* and dz2* orbitals.
Lower set: dxy, dxz, dyz. Higher set: dx2−y2* and dz2*.
The number of d electrons in M(compound) is found from the metal oxidation state, which comes from the formal charges on the ligands and the overall compound charge.
Ligands are assigned stable p-electron or noble-gas-like configurations.
Either pair electrons in the lower dxy, dxz, dyz orbitals or promote electrons into the higher dx2−y2* and dz2* orbitals.
When the electron pairing energy is less than the energy gap between the lower dxy, dxz, dyz set and the higher dx2−y2* and dz2* set.
Metal compounds with strong M–L bonds.
Because strong bonding lowers the σ-bonding orbitals and raises the σ* antibonding orbitals, making the splitting large.
σ bonding becomes lower in energy and σ* antibonding becomes higher in energy, so the gap becomes large.
PR3, SR2, R3N, certain nitrogen compounds, and also CO and CN− because of π back-bonding.
Because π back-bonding strengthens the interaction and contributes to large splitting.
They are high in energy.
Low spin.
M–OH2, M–OCH3, and etc.
The splitting is smaller and electrons can occupy the higher orbitals before pairing.
Four electrons in the lower dxy, dxz, dyz set are not all paired first; instead electrons occupy the higher orbitals to reduce pairing.
They can be either low spin or high spin.
The HOMO is the t2g set.
The LUMO is the eg* set.
The occupied t2g and eg* levels can both be relevant, with singly occupied orbitals appearing in the higher set.
eg and t2g.
The lower set of three d orbitals: dxy, dxz, dyz.
The higher antibonding set: dx2−y2* and dz2*.
Number of d electrons on the metal plus number of electrons donated by ligands.
If the total is 18, you generally have a stable transition-metal compound.
Because they have 6 electrons from the metal d orbitals and 12 electrons from 6 ligands donating lone pairs.
18 electrons.
16 electrons.
They are generally electron deficient.
They can be good electron acceptors or may form ML7 if the metal is large and the ligand is small.
They tend to be labile because antibonding orbitals such as eg* become partially occupied.
Because partially occupied antibonding orbitals weaken bonding and can make the complex a good electron donor.
ML6(19e−) → ML6+(18e−) + e−
They are stable.
ML6 ⇌ ML5 + :L
To the left, toward ML6.
8 electrons from the metal plus 10 electrons from 5 ligands.
Square pyramidal and trigonal bipyramidal.
ML4 species.
Usually tetrahedral.
10 electrons from the metal plus 8 electrons from 4 ligands gives 18 electrons.
Because they reach 18 electrons with four ligands.
Square planar compounds.
Because square planar ML4 is more crowded than tetrahedral ML4 and d8 ML4 are only 16-electron compounds, so there must be special stabilization.
The orbital ordering makes the strongly antibonding dx2−y2* orbital remain empty, which stabilizes the structure.
Highest is dx2−y2*; below that are dz2 and dxy in varying order; lowest are dxz and dyz.
It is strongly antibonding.
Because the z axis points above and below the ML4 plane.
s-dz2 mixing.
Sometimes the order is reversed.
They occupy the 4 σ-bonding molecular orbitals.
They occupy the nonbonding dxz, dyz, dz2, and dxy orbitals, leaving dx2−y2* empty.
16 electrons.
Because it would require occupying the strongly antibonding dx2−y2* orbital.
They are a stable low point.
PtCl2(NH3)2 with Pt(II), d8.
16-electron square planar compound.
They are isomers that differ by the relative placement of ligands in the same square planar coordination geometry.
The NH3 ligands and the Cl ligands are on the same side of the square plane, meaning like ligands are adjacent.
The NH3 ligands and the Cl ligands are on opposite sides of the square plane.
Isomers can have vastly different chemistry.
cis-PtCl2(NH3)2, cis-platin.
Strong anticancer properties.
It is a toxin with weak anticancer properties.
Because only cis-platin has the strong desired anticancer activity.
cis-platin is not readily dissolved in water.
People used to heat water and cis-platin to speed up dissolution.
Strong M–L bonds give large splitting and low spin; weak M–L bonds give small splitting and high spin.
t2g is the lower set and eg* is the upper antibonding set.
When the bonding and nonbonding levels are filled without putting electrons into strongly antibonding orbitals.
d6 low-spin octahedral plus 6 ligands gives 18 electrons, so it is especially stable.
d10 ML4 is usually tetrahedral.
d8 ML4 is often square planar because keeping dx2−y2* empty is stabilizing.
cis = like ligands adjacent; trans = like ligands opposite.
cis-platin works as an anticancer drug; trans-platin does not.
A complex is written as M(L)n.
n is the coordination number, largely determined by electron counting such as the 18-electron rule.
Ligands are groups bonded to the metal.
A ligand that donates a lone pair into an empty σ-type orbital on the metal.
NH3, PR3, and related ligands.
Yes, σ-donor ligands can be strong or weak bonding.
A ligand with empty antibonding orbitals that can accept electron density from dπ orbitals on the metal.
CO, N2-related multiple-bond ligands, CN−, and related ligands.
They have empty antibonding orbitals that accept electron density from dπ orbitals on the metal.
Ru(CO)4.
Ru(0) is d8 and 4 CO ligands donate 8 electrons total, giving a 16-electron compound.
Square planar d8, 16-electron, with π bonding between Ru and CO.
As monodentate or poly-/multidentate.
A ligand that binds through one donor atom, written conceptually as :L.
A ligand that binds through two or more donor atoms.
A ligand that binds through two donor atoms to the same metal.
A ring structure involving a metal and a multidentate ligand.
The enhanced affinity of chelating ligands for a metal ion compared to similar nonchelating monodentate ligands for the same metal.
A positive entropy change, ΔS.
Because the reaction produces more molecules in the products than in the reactants.
Two monodentate ligands on a metal are replaced by one bidentate ligand, releasing two free monodentate ligands.
Because ΔG = ΔH − TΔS, and a positive ΔS makes −TΔS more negative.
