CEM3005W Inorganic+Bonding Handout-1
CEM3005W Inorganic+Bonding Handout-1
CEM3005W Inorganic+Bonding Handout-1
Inorganic Bonding
Professor Greg Smith
12 lectures
1 Tutorial
▪ Prescribed Text:
– C. E. Housecroft and A. G. Sharpe, Inorganic Chemistry (Pearson,
3rd ed., 2008; 4th ed., 2012; 5th ed., 2018).
Excellent general-purpose text which covers (in detail) most of the
3rd-year course.
▪ Recommended Texts:
– G.L. Miessler, P.J. Fischer and D.A. Tarr, Inorganic Chemistry
(Prentice Hall, 5th ed., 2014).
– D. F. Shriver and P. W. Atkins, Inorganic Chemistry (OUP, 3rd
ed.,1999).
From the 2nd Year (CEM2005W)
• Revise lectures on “Introduction to Coordination Chemistry of
the Transition Metals”.
Bond
strengths
Chirality
Inorganic Chemistry
Bonding in Coordination Complexes
• Introduction - d-block ions
- Lewis acids/bases and dative bonds
- common ligands
- common geometries of complexes
- HSAB
- d-orbitals
• UV-visible spectra and magnetic properties
• Crystal field theory - octahedral complexes
- crystal field stabilisation E
- tetragonal, square planar and Td
- strengths and limitations
• MO theory - introduction
- ligand group orbitals
- Oh complexes, bonding only
- Oh complexes with -bonding
1. Introduction 1.1 d-Block ions
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12
4 K Ca Sc Ti V Cr Mn Fe Co Ni Cu Zn
5 Rb Sr Y Zr Nb Mo Tc Ru Rh Pd Ag Cd
6 Cs Ba La Hf Ta W Re Os Ir Pt Au Hg
Exercise
Write down the number of d electrons for the following
ions: V3+, Cr3+, Mn2+, Fe2+, Fe3+, Cu+, Sc3+, Pt2+
V2+ > Cr2+> Mn2+ > Fe2+ > Co2+ > Ni2+ < Cu2+ < Zn2+
Sc3+ > Ti3+ > V3+ > Cr3+ > Mn3+ Fe3+ > Co3+ > Ni3+
Ionic size differs mainly with the charge on the ion and with
magnetic properties (spin state).
1.1.3 Multiple Oxidation States
Sc Ti V Cr Mn Fe Co Ni Cu Zn
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 [0]
1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 [1]
2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2
3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3
4 4 4 4 4 4 4 [4]
5 5 5
6 6 6
7
Common oxidation states:
Loss of all d electrons common for first 5 elements, does
not occur for the last 5 – range from M3+ to M7+
M3+ common for four elements V3+, Cr3+, Fe3+ and Co3+
Brønsted-Lowry:
Base: an H+ acceptor
Acid: an H+ donor
Lewis:
Base: an electron pair donor
Acid: an electron pair acceptor
:
E.g. H2O: + H+ → H3O+
:
: :
HO:− + H+ → H2O:
:NH3 + H+ → NH4+
O O
acetylacetonate (acac)
N N
1,10-phenanthroline (phen)
Bonding through multiple donor atoms (multidentate)
tridentate
NH
NH HN
NH2 NH2
1,4,7-triazaheptane
or diethylenetriamine (dien) NH HN
NH NH
hexadentate
O
NH2 H2 N O
-
1,4,7,10-tetraazadecane O N
-
or triethylenetetramine (trien) N O
O
-
O O
-
O
ethylenediaminetetraacetate
(EDTA4−)
Open chain bidentate and multidentate ligands: chelators or
chelating agents. Complexes are chelates.
e.g. ox, en, dien, trien, EDTA etc.
Cyclic multidentate ligands: macrocycles
e.g. cyclam
• Coordination Number = 2
– Not a common coordination number
– Occurs for Au(I), Ag(I) and also Cu(I)
– Linear arrangement
– Hybridisation: sp or sdz2
• Coordination Number = 3
– Very rare
– Spatial arrangement is trigonal planar or
can also be trigonal pyramidal
22
Stereochemistry of Coordination
Compounds
• Coordination Number = 4
– Two stereochemistries possible:
i) Tetrahedral geometry ii) Square Planar
• Coordination Number = 5
– Not as common as CN 4 or 6
i) Trigonal bipyramid ii) Square Pyramid
23
Stereochemistry of Coordination
Compounds
• Coordination Number = 6
– Most common stereochemistry is octahedral
24
Most are octahedral.
octahedral pseudo-octahedral
With larger ligands such as halide ions and smaller metal
ions (e.g. Ni(II), Zn(II), d0 ions such as V5+, Cr6+, Mn7+ etc)
tetrahedral coordination occurs
[Cr2O7]2−
[Mn(NtBu)3(O2CMe)]
Tetragonal and square planar geometries occur for
electronic reasons. Tetragonal for d4 high spin, d7 low spin
and d9 ions. Square planar for d8 ions.
[Mn(N3)(acac)2] [Pt(NH3)2Cl2]
d4 d8
1.5 Hard/Soft Acid/Base (HSAB) Theory
K1
M2+ + X− MX+
log K1
M/X F– Cl– Br– I–
Zn2+ 0.8 -0.2 -0.6 -1.3
Hg2+ 1.0 6.7 8.9 12.9
Fe3+ 6.0 1.4 0.5 –
Pb2+ 0.3 1.0 1.2 1.3
Ligands with O- and N-donor atoms form stable
complexes with light s- & p-block metal cations, early
d-block metal cations and f-block metal ions.
He then used the principle of hard and soft acids and bases
(HSAB) to rationalise these observed patterns in complex
stability.
HSAB Principle
Hard acids (hard metal cations) form more stable
complexes with hard bases (hard ligands), while soft acids
(soft metal cations) show a preference for soft bases (soft
ligands).
Fe3+ + I– Fe2+ + ½ I2
dx2–y2 is related to dxy except that it lies along the x and y axes
We might then expect an orbital related to dxz but lying
along the x and z axes and another related to dyz along the y
and z axes.
This would give us six orbitals, but there are only five,
corresponding to ml = –2, –1, 0, +1, +2!
A Gouy balance
A Faraday balance
A SQUID magnetometer
Exercise
At room temp. the magnetic moment observed for
[Cr(en)3]Br2 is 4.75 BM. How many unpaired electrons
does the complex have?
The observed value of eff for [VCl4(MeCN)2] at 293 K is
1.77 BM. Deduce the number of unpaired electrons. Is
this consistent with the oxidation state of V?
Ni(II) is a d8 metal ion 3d
First consider a free d10 metal ion (e.g. Cu(I)) in the gas phase
+
Surround this ion by a sphere of negative charge of the same
magnitude as the 6 ligands (e.g. 6 −) at the same distance.
6-
− −
− − − −
− −
− − −
− − −
− − − − −
−
− − −
− − −
53
Crystal field splitting diagram
The dz2 and dx2–y2 orbitals form a doubly degenerate set,
while the dxy, dxz and dyz form a triply degenerate set.
The E difference between t2g and eg levels explains the fact that
many complexes are coloured. Visible photons carry the right
energy to excite electrons from t2g to eg levels.
h eg
t2g
d9
62
The color of [Ti(H2O)6]3+
63
Colours of transition metal complexes
• Since for the absorption of a light photon:
o = E = h = hc/l
64
Some overall features of the visible spectra of d block metal
complexes can now be explained:
3. [Mn(OH2)6]2+ is a d5 ion:
h eg
t2g
I– < Br– < –SCN < Cl– < NO3– < F– < (O2– ≈ –OH ≈ H2O)
< –NCS < NH3 < bipy < –CN < PR3 < CO
Strong Field (large o)
68
The Spectrochemical series.
• For a given ligand, the color depends on the oxidation state of the
metal ion.
I- < Cl- < F- < OH- < H2O < SCN- < NH3 < en < NO2- < CN- < CO
SMALLER LARGER
LONGER l SHORTER l
69
Other Factors Affecting Crystal Field
Splitting
− O values increase with an increase in the oxidation state of
the metal ion.
– Smaller ion occurs with a higher oxidation state
– Smaller ion leads to shorter M-L bond distances
Mn(II) < Ni(II) < Co(II) < Fe(III) < Cr(III) < Co(III) < Ru(III)
< Mo(III) < Rh(III) < Pd(II) < Ir(III) < Pt(IV)
Exercise
The wavelength maximum of [Ti(OH2)6]Cl3 dissolved in water
occurs at 493 nm. What is the value of oct in cm−1 and kJmol-1?
What colour will this solution be?
When K3[TiF6] and K3[Ti(CN)6] are dissolved in water one
gives a blue solution and the other a yellow solution. Which
complexes do these correspond to? Explain your reasoning.
What is eff for these complexes?
Implications and Magnitude of the
Crystal Field Splitting
[Ti(H2O)6]3+
eg
d1
t2g
eg
+ 0.6oct
d2 CFSE = 2 −0.4oct = −0.8oct
t2g - 0.4oct
eg
+ 0.6oct
d3 CFSE = 3 −0.4oct = −1.2oct
t2g - 0.4oct
d1 (Ti3+) d2 (V3+) d? (Cr3+)
eg eg eg
t2g t2g
t2g
CFSE = -2/5O CFSE = -4/5O CFSE = ?O
[Ti(H2O)6]3+ [V(H2O)6]3+ [Cr(H2O)6]3+
d? (Mn3+) d? (Fe3+)
eg eg
t2g t2g
The low spin case would seem favourable: the 4th electron
occupies the lower energy level - t2g.
But, spin pairing involves loss of exchange energy and
electrostatic repulsion. There is a positive spin-pairing
energy P.
The magnetic properties of d-block metal complexes are now
explained.
If oct < P, then the complex is high spin, and if
oct > P, it is low spin.
For the high spin complex
CFSE = 3 −0.4oct + 0.6oct = −0.6oct
For the low spin complex
CFSE = 4 −0.4oct + P = −1.6oct + P
High and low spin states also occur for octahedral complexes
of d5, d6 and d7 ions.
eg eg Note that d-d
d5 or transitions are only
t2g t2g spin forbidden for
high spin the high spin case
low spin
eg eg
d6 or
t2g t2g
eg
d9
t2g
eg
d10
t2g
High or low spin state is thus determined by the crystal
field strength.
eg
4
d
eg d4
HIGH SPIN LOW SPIN
Weak field Strong field
Spin-free Spin-paired
t2g
t2g
Ligands with strong interactions to the metal are called strong field ligands.
85
Ligands with small interactions with the metal are called weak-field ligands.
The effect of ligand on splitting energy.
86
High-spin and low-spin complex ions of Mn2+.
88
Orbital occupancy for high- and low-spin complexes
of d4 through d7 metal ions.
89
Problem-Solving in Coordination
Chemistry
The following order is observed in the
spectrochemical series for the ligands listed,
I– < Br– < –SCN < Cl– < NO3– < F– < (O2– ≈ –OH ≈ H2O)
< –NCS < NH3 < bipy < –CN < PR3 < CO
It was observed that for the two 6-coordinate
cobalt complexes, [CoF6]3- and [Co(NH3)6]3+, one
is diamagnetic and one is paramagnetic. How
many unpaired electrons are there in the
paramagnetic complex ion?
91
• The magnetic moment of the complex
[Mn(NCS)6]4- is found to be 6.06 B.
What is its electron configuration?
93
Exercise
eg*
t2g
• There are two ways of arranging the eg* electrons (which are
antibonding and not pure d, but the result is the same)
– (dz2)2(dx2-y2)1 - leads to more antibonding character on the z
axis and hence elongation of bonds in that direction
– (dz2)1(dx2-y2)2 - leads to more antibonding character in the xy
plane and hence elongation of bonds in that direction
96
eg eg eg
d4 d7 d9
dx2-y2
dz2
distortion
dxy
dxz, dyz
98
L
n+
L n+
a L
a L
L L
M e a>e M e a<e
L L
L L
L
d(z2) d(z2)
d(xy)
d(xy)
d(xz), d(yz)
d(xz), d(yz)
Square planar
Regular octahedron
Axial elongation
Best way of optimising CFSE for d8 configuration (sq. pl. d8 has
higher CFSE than octahedral d8 - octahedral is higher for all other
104
configurations)
Square Planar Complexes
• Why does square planar geometry not always occur for d8?
105
Square Planar Complexes
• Small, strong field ligands favour square planar
• Large, weak field ligands will favour tetrahedral
– e.g. [NiCl4]2– tet. [Ni(CN)4]2– sq. pl.
NiCl2(PPh3)2 tet. Ni(NCS)2(PPh3)2 sq. pl.
– Pd(II) and Pt(II) are essentially always square planar
{larger CFSE and reduced steric effects (longer M–L
bonds) for 2nd/3rd row transition metals}
– Also Au(III), Rh(I) and Ir(I) are also d8 and often form
square planar complexes, e.g. [AuF4]– , [RhCl(PPh3)3]
106
Square Planar Complexes
– For Co(I), Rh(I) and Ir(I), d8 configuration is realised in
the +1 oxidation state; d8 configuration prefers square
planar geometry but the +1 oxidation state does not
accentuate this preference (low CFSE)
107
Square Planar Complexes
• Planar/octahedral equilibria
– The thermodynamic preference for square planar or
octahedral geometry can be finely balanced
– Dissolving planar Ni(II) complexes in a good donor
solvent (H2O, pyridine etc.) can give octahedral
complexes
S
L L L L Mixture of the two
Ni + 2S Ni forms can give
L L L L
S
anomalous magnetic
Square planar behaviour in solution
diamagnetic octahedral
paramagnetic
Note: orbitals lying on the axes are half a face (diagonal) from
the ligands, while the dxy, dxz and dyz orbitals are only half an
edge away.
The crystal field splitting diagram looks like the inverse of
the octahedral case, but tet is smaller than oct.
Note: energy levels are called t2 and e. A tetrahedron is not
centrosymmetric, therefore no subscript g. The t2 > e.
Since tet is only 4/9oct, tet is always < P, even for strong
fields and all tetrahedral complexes are high spin.
6 tetrahedral holes
The s, px, py, pz, dz2 and dx2–y2 all have suitable symmetry
to form bonding and antibonding orbitals with the
ligands.
134
Molecular orbital theory for octahedral complexes
bonding
• 6 of the metal orbitals are directed along the axes
and are capable of forming σ bonds with the ligands
• Metal s and p orbitals are clearly of the correct
symmetry to overlap with the ligands
z
z z z
y y y y
4s M
4px 4py 4pz
x x x x
135
Molecular orbital theory for octahedral complexes
bonding
• Of the metal d orbitals, two are correctly aligned to form
bonds; the remaining three orbitals will be non-bonding
z z
y y
3d(z2) 3d(x2-y2)
x x
BONDING
x
Using dxy
orbital as y
Overlap integral is zero
an example i.e. NON BONDING
The s orbital forms MOs with a totally symmetrical ligand
group orbital labelled a1g and a1g*
The dxy, dxz and dyz orbitals do not possess the correct
symmetry for overlap, forming a triply degenerate set of
non-bonding orbitals labelled t2g.
Molecular orbital diagram for ML6 ( bonding only)
a1g*
4p (t1u) t1u*
Antibonding
4s (a1g)
M
eg*
eg
t1u
Bonding
138
a1g
Molecular orbital diagram for ML6 ( bonding only)
• Now add electrons
• Each ligand will a1g*
donate 2e–, i.e. a
total of 12e– from 4p (t1u) t1u*
all 6 ligands
4s (a1g)
M
eg*
t2g
3d eg t1u a1g
(t2g + eg)
6L
eg
t1u
t2g
141
Molecular orbital theory for octahedral complexes
Bonding
142
Each ligand is an electron pair donor, so the six ligands
supply 12 electrons.
Note that the t2g and eg* orbitals in the MO approach can
be compared to the t2g and eg levels in CFT and LFT and
the energy difference between them is oct.
Note: transitions can occur from energy levels with
predominantly ligand character and u symmetry to
predominantly metal t2g or eg* levels.
Ligands such as halide ions I−, Br− and Cl− have filled p
orbitals which can interact with dxy, dxz and dyz orbitals side-
on to form -bonds.
oct
18 lone
pair
orbitals
e.g. MCl6n-
15 filled,
non-
oct bonding
more M t2g*
orbitals on
character L 18 lone
pair
t2g orbitals
filled, more L
character
Mn+ 6L
The three metal d orbitals can form MOs with three filled
ligand group orbitals with a total of 6 electrons.
Thus: ligands with more than one lone pair on the donor
atom (e.g. halide ions) can -bond which will reduce oct
relative to ligands with donor atoms containing only one
lone pair (and no ligand * orbitals, e.g. NH3).
Ligands that contain -electron systems such as py, phen,
CN− and CO have empty * antibonding orbitals. These too
can interact with dxy, dxz and dyz orbitals on the metal ion to
form -bonds.
12 empty
C−O *
orbitals
oct
e.g. M(CO)6n+
9 empty,
non-bonding
empty more orbitals on L
t2g*
L character
12 empty
C−O *
orbitals
oct
more M t2g
character
Molecular orbital theory for octahedral complexes
Bonding
• effects are subdivided into two extreme cases
a1g*
t2g
3d
(t2g + eg)
The ligand orbitals
eg t1u a1g are filled and of
eg
relatively low energy
t1u - the ligand is a
donor
156
a1g
Molecular orbital theory for octahedral complexes
Bonding
• donor ligands
– e.g. Halide anions possess
lone pairs in orbitals
:
M Cl
eg* eg*
New o
t2g* (and hence the metal
Old o t2g* electrons) are raised in energy –
the orbital is now antibonding
t2g
filled, low energy
ligand orbitals
Ligand electrons t2g 157
lowered in energy
Molecular orbital theory for octahedral complexes
Bonding
• acceptor ligands
• e.g. CN–, CO (using * orbitals)
• e.g. PPh3 {using d orbitals (or more correctly * orbitals
but the symmetry is the same whichever)}
t2g*
Old o
t2g New o
t2g (and hence the metal
electrons) lowered in energy158
t2g
Molecular orbital theory for octahedral complexes
Bonding
159
Molecular orbital theory for octahedral complexes
Bonding
Metal d-orbital
Ligand p-orbital
d()–p() interaction (e.g. halide ligand)
Ligand * orbital
d()–p(*) interaction –
(e.g. CN , pyridine, CO...)
160
Molecular orbital theory for octahedral complexes
Bonding
• For -donors:
– Ligand has filled orbitals which overlap with the
metal t2g orbitals giving a bond
– Thus electron density is transferred from the
ligand to the metal
– Complexes are favoured when the central metal
has a high oxidation state and is ‘short of
electrons’
– Ligand orbitals are lower in energy than the
metal t2g orbitals
– Delocalising electrons from the ligand to the
metal reduces the value of
– E.g. Cl-, F-, Br-
161
Molecular orbital theory for octahedral complexes
Bonding
• For -acceptors:
– Ligands such as CO, CN- and NO+ have empty orbitals
with the correct symmetry to overlap with metal t2g orbitals,
forming bonds ➔ back bonding
162
Molecular orbital theory for octahedral complexes
Bonding
163
Molecular orbital theory for octahedral complexes
Bonding
164
Spectrochemical Series
• Points to note
• Series approximates to Gp 17 < Gp 16 < Gp 15 < Gp 14
• Strong field ligands are all acceptors
• NH3 > H2O as it is a better donor (less electronegative)
• Weak field ligands are donors
165
Note that we have now explained the outline of the
spectrochemical series:
The -donor ligands result in small oct values and are thus
more likely to give high spin complexes, while -acceptor
ligands give rise to large values of oct and are more likely to
lead to low spin complexes.
Note: -donor ligands supply 18 electrons which notionally
occupy the t1u, a1g, eg and t2g orbitals.