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Ligand field theory was developed during the thirties and fourties of the twentieth century as an expansion of the electrostatic crystal field theory, which offered a good description of the electronic structure of metal ions in coordination complexes but was not able to provide a proper explanation for their bonding. It was created by combining crystal field theory with molecular orbital theory. // Events and trends The 1930s were spent struggling for a solution to the global depression. ...
Events and trends The 1940s were dominated by World War II, the most destructive armed conflict in history. ...
(19th century - 20th century - 21st century - more centuries) Decades: 1900s 1910s 1920s 1930s 1940s 1950s 1960s 1970s 1980s 1990s As a means of recording the passage of time, the 20th century was that century which lasted from 1901–2000 in the sense of the Gregorian calendar (1900–1999 in the...
Crystal field theory is used to describe the electronic structure of transition metal complexes. ...
A complex is a whole that comprehends a number of parts, especially one with interconnected or mutually related parts. ...
In quantum chemistry, molecular orbitals are the statistical states electrons can have within molecules. ...
Ligand field theory in octahedral complexes Like crystal field theory, ligand field theory is most easily understood by picturing ligands approaching the central metal and visualising the resulting orbital overlap. In an octahedral complex, six ligands coordinate on the central atom. In chemistry, a ligand is an atom, ion or functional group that is bonded to one or more central atoms or ions, usually metals generally through co-ordinate covalent bond. ...
An atomic orbital is the description of the behavior of an electron in an atom according to quantum mechanics. ...
An octahedron (plural: octahedra) is a polyhedron with eight faces. ...
σ-bonding The molecular orbitals created by coordination can be seen as resulting from the donation of two electrons by each of six σ-donor ligands to the d-orbitals on the metal. In octahedral complexes, ligands approach along the x-, y- and z-axes, so their σ-symmetrical orbitals form bonding orbitals with the dz2 and dx2−y2 orbitals. The dxy, dxz and dyz orbitals remain non-bonding orbitals. Some weak bonding interactions with the s and p orbitals of the metal also occur. Properties The electron is a subatomic particle. ...
Hot metal work from a blacksmith In chemistry, a metal (Greek: Metallon) is an element that readily forms ions (cations) and has metallic bonds, and metals are sometimes described as a lattice of positive ions (cations) in a cloud of electrons. ...
High and low spin The six bonding molecular orbitals that are formed are filled with the electrons from the ligands, and electrons from the d-orbitals of the metal ion occupy the non-bonding and anti-bonding molecular orbitals. The energy difference between the latter two types of molecular orbitals is called ΔO (O stands for octahedral) and is determined by the interaction of the ligand orbitals with the d-orbitals on the central atom, as described in crystal field theory. Ligands that interact strongly with the metal orbitals are called strong-field ligands and cause a relatively large ΔO. Weakly interacting ligands are called weak-field ligands: they cause a relatively small splitting between the non-bonding and anti-bonding molecular orbitals (and hence, a small ΔO) in the complex. An ion is an elementary particle or system of elementary particles with a net electric charge. ...
Crystal field theory is used to describe the electronic structure of transition metal complexes. ...
The size of ΔO determines the electronic structure of the d4 - d7 ions. In complexes of metals with these oxidation states, the non-bonding and anti-bonding molecular orbitals can be filled in two ways: one in which as many electrons as possible are put in the non-bonding orbitals before filling the anti-bonding orbitals, and one in which as many electrons as possible are put in the unpaired spin state. The former case is called low-spin, while the latter is called high-spin. A small ΔO can be overcome by the energetic gain from not pairing the electrons, leading to high-spin. When ΔO is large, however, the spin-pairing energy becomes negligible and a low-spin state arises. The oxidation state or oxidation number is defined as the sum of negative and positive charges in an atom, which indirectly indicates the number of electrons it has accepted or donated. ...
In physics, spin is an intrinsic angular momentum associated with microscopic particles. ...
π-bonding π bonding in octahedral complexes occurs in two ways: via those ligand's p-orbitals that are not used in σ bonding and via any π* molecular orbitals present on the ligand. The p-orbitals of the metal are used for σ bonding, so the π interactions take place with its appropriate d-orbitals, i.e. dxy, dxz and dyz. These are the orbitals that are non-bonding when only σ bonding takes place. The most important π bonding in coordination complexes is metal-to-ligand π bonding, also called π backbonding. It occurs when the LUMO of the ligand are anti-bonding π (π*) orbitals. These orbitals are close in energy to the dxy, dxz and dyz orbitals, with which they combine to form bonding orbitals (i.e. orbitals of lower energy than the aforementioned set of d-orbitals). The corresponding anti-bonding orbitals are higher in energy than the anti-bonding orbitals from σ bonding so, after the new π bonding orbitals are filled with electrons from the metal d-orbitals, ΔO has increased and the bond between the ligand and the metal strengthens. The ligands end with electrons in their π* molecular orbital, so the corresponding π bond within the ligand weakens. The title given to this article is incorrect due to technical limitations. ...
HOMO and LUMO are acronyms for Highest Occupied Molecular Orbitals and Lowest Unoccupied Molecular Orbitals respectively. ...
The other form of coordination π bonding is ligand-to-metal bonding. This happens when the π-symmetric p-orbitals from the ligands are filled. They combine with the dxy, dxz and dyz orbitals on the metal and donate electrons to the resulting π-symmetric bonding orbital between them and the metal. The metal-ligand bond is somewhat strengthened by this interaction, but the complementary anti-bonding molecular orbital from ligand-to-metal bonding is not higher in energy than the anti-bonding molecular orbital from the σ bonding. It is filled with electrons from the metal d-orbitals, however, becoming the HOMO of the complex. For that reason, ΔO decreases when ligand-to-metal bonding occurs. Homo can refer to multiple things: The Latin word for man or human The genus Homo (see also hominid) The Greek word for same, usually as prefix in compound words, e. ...
The greater stabilisation that results from metal-to-ligand bonding is caused by the donation of negative charge away from the metal ion, towards the ligands. This allows the metal to accept the σ bonds more easily.
Ligand field stabilisation energy To determine the stabilisation of d-electrons that follows from the bonding of ligands, a quantity known as Ligand Field Stabilisation Energy (LFSE) was introduced. The LFSE is given by the equation: - LFSE = Es − Ee
In which Es is the relative energy (in terms of ΔO) if splitting of d-orbitals is taken into account, and Ee is the relative energy (again, in terms of ΔO) if the d-electron are spread uniformly among the orbitals (which means 1/5 of all available d-electrons is put in all orbitals). For example, take the simple case where only one d-electron is available: Es equals zero, as the one electron is put in one of the three degenerate, lower-lying orbitals. Ee, however, equals 2/5ΔO: 3 times 1/5 electron in the lower orbitals, plus 2 times 1/5 electron in the orbitals with energy ΔO. The LFSE therfore equal −2/5ΔO in this case. For determination of Es, the high or low spin character of the complex under consideration must be taken into account. |