1 / 23

Unless otherwise stated, all images in this file have been reproduced from:

Unless otherwise stated, all images in this file have been reproduced from: Blackman, Bottle, Schmid, Mocerino and Wille, Chemistry , 2007 (John Wiley)      ISBN: 9 78047081 0866. CHEM1002 [Part 2]. Dr Michela Simone Lecturer BSc (I Hons ), MSc , D.Phil. (Oxon), MRSC, MRACI

tam
Download Presentation

Unless otherwise stated, all images in this file have been reproduced from:

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Unless otherwise stated, all images in this file have been reproduced from: Blackman, Bottle, Schmid, Mocerino and Wille,Chemistry, 2007 (John Wiley)     ISBN: 9 78047081 0866

  2. CHEM1002 [Part 2] Dr Michela Simone Lecturer BSc (I Hons), MSc, D.Phil. (Oxon), MRSC, MRACI Weeks 8 – 13 Office Hours: Monday 3-5, Friday 4-5 Room: 412A (or 416) Phone: 93512830 e-mail:michela.simone@sydney.edu.au

  3. Summary of Last Lecture • Solubility Equilibria II • The solubility of a salt MmXn is reduced by the addition or presence in solution of either Mn+ or Xm- from another source – the common ion effect • The solubility of hydroxides is very sensitive to pH since this controls [OH-(aq)] • The solubility of a salt in the presence of a common ion can be calculated from the solubility product as this gives the maximum concentrations of the ions that are allowed

  4. Complexes I • Lecture 12 • Hydrolysis of Metal Ions • Metal Complexes • Ligands • Blackman Chapter 13, Sections 13.1-13.4 • Lecture 13 • Isomerism • Stability • Blackman Chapter 13, Sections 13.1-13.4

  5. Hydrolysis of Metal Ions + M(H2O)42+(aq) M2+ H2O(l) adduct • Metal cations act as Lewis acids (electron pair acceptor) • Water is the Lewis base (electron pair donor)

  6. Acidity of Aqueous Transition Metal Ions [Fe(OH2)5(OH)]2+ + H+ [Fe(OH2)6]3+

  7. ACID STRENGTH Metal Ion Hydrolysis • The higher the metal charge, the greater the hydrolysis • The smaller the metal ion, the greater the hydrolysis

  8. The Coordination Bond L L Mn+ • A ligand donates an electron pair to the metal ion to form a coordinate or dative bond. • All ligands have at least one lone pair • some ligands have more than one lone pair and can bond to two or more metal ions • Usually more than one ligand binds to the metal ion • commonly 4 or 6 ligands coordinate to a metal

  9. Metal Complexes • A coordination compound: • a complex ion (the metal and its ligands) • counter ions to balance its charge • The metal ion has a positive charge (Co3+, Fe2+, Cu2+ etc) • The ligands can be: • neutral (NH3, OH2, pyridine, amines etc), giving rise to positively charged complexes (e.g. [Co(NH3)6]3+) • negatively charged (Cl-, OH-, CN- etc), giving rise to negatively charged complexes (e.g. [Co(CN)6]3-) • a mixture of these, giving rise to positive, negative or neutral complexes (e.g. [Co(NH3)3(CN)3]

  10. Metal Complexes [Co(NH3)6]Cl3 • Square brackets indicate the complex ion: • [Co(NH3)]3+ • Co3+ with six neutral NH3ligands • Three Cl- counter ions to balance the charge • When dissolved in water, the complex ions and counter ions are separate [Co(NH3)6]Cl3 [Co(NH3)6]3+(aq) + 3Cl-(aq)

  11. Typical coordination number for some metal ions. M+ CN M2+ CN M3+ CN Cu+ 2,4 Mn2+ 4,6 Sc3+ 6 Ag+ 2 Fe2+ 6 Cr3+ 6 Au+ 2,4 Co2+ 4,6 Co3+ 6 Ni2+ 4,6 Au3+ 4 Cu2+ 4,6 Zn2+ 4,6 Coordination Number • The number of ligands bonded to the metal ion • varies from 2 - 8 depending on the metal and ligand sizes and charges • 4 and 6 are the most common

  12. Complex Geometry

  13. Chelate Ligands • Unidentate or monodentate) ligand – forms one bond • Bidentate ligand – can form two bonds • Polydentate ligand – can form > two bonds • tridentate • tetradentate • pentadentate • hexadentate • etc ... CHELATE LIGANDS • Chelate effect: complexes with chelate ligands are usually more stable than those with monodentate ligands of the same type:

  14. Some Chelate Ligands • Bidendate • ethane-1,2-diamine (en)

  15. Some Chelate Ligands • Hexadendate • ethane-1,2-diaminetetraacetic acid(H4EDTA) EDTA4- [Co(EDTA)]- • EDTA is used to treat severe lead poisoning...and to soften water in shampoo and soaps

  16. Summary: Complexes I • Learning Outcomes - you should now be able to: • Complete the worksheet • Explain why solutions of metal ions are acidic • Identify the complex ion and ligands in a coordination compound • Draw representations of octahedral, tetrahedral and square planar complexes using tapered bonds • Answer review problems 13.51-13.58 in Blackman • Next lecture: • Isomerism and stability of complexes

  17. Practice Examples • What are the possible geometries of a metal complex complex with a coordination number of 4? • square planar or tetrahedral or octahedral • square planar or tetrahedral • octahedral only • tetrahedral only • square planar only

  18. Naming Metal Complexes: (i) Ligands • The normal chemical name is used unless the ligand is negatively charged in which cases “o” is used as the suffix Special Cases

  19. Naming Metal Complexes: (i) Ligands • The number of ligands of any one type is indicated with the appropriate Greek prefix • monodentate: di, tri, tetra, penta, hexa, etc e.g. dichlorido, tetraaqua, hexaamine • polydentate: bis, tris, tetrakis etc • If there is more than one ligand type • Listed in alphabetical order with no space between them! • Prefixes do not affect the order diamminedichloridodifluorido A < C < F triamminedichloridofluorido A < C < F

  20. Naming Metal Complexes: (ii) Metal • If the complex is neutral or positively charged the normal metal name is used • If the complex is negatively charged, ‘ate’ is added to the metal name • Co: cobaltate • Zn: zincate • Exceptions (historic):

  21. Naming Metal Complexes: (iii) Metal • Metal is named after ligands with no space between them! • The oxidation state of the metal is indicated by Roman numerals • Fe3+ is given as iron(III) • Mn7+ is given as manganese(VII)

  22. Naming Metal Complexes • Counter ions are named as separate words and are not numbered • cations before the complex ion K3[Co(CN)6] potassium hexacyandidocobaltate(III) • anions after the complex ion [Co(NH3)4Cl2]Cl tetraamminedichloridocobalt(III) chloride

  23. Naming Metal Complexes • Indicating the presence of solvent molecules • Water of crystallisation (hydration) is indicated separately at the end of the name • [Co(NH3)4Cl2]Cl·2H2O tetraamminedichlorocobalt(III) chloride-2-water

More Related