Chapter 14 Inorganic Chemistry
Example 14.1
CoBr
is a green solid while CoCl 2
is a blue solid. Which is a stronger field ligand, 2
chloride ion or bromide ion? The stronger field ligand is the one with the larger value of
Δ. CoBr
appears green, which 2
means that it absorbs red light. CoCl
appears blue, so it absorbs orange photons. 2
Orange photons have more energy than red photons, so
Δ is larger for CoCl
, and 2
chloride is the stronger fiel
d ligand. [Note that the Co
2+ ion is octahedral and surrounded
by six anions in the solid, even though the formula indicates only two per cobalt. This is analogous to NaCl where each Na
1+ is surrounded by six Cl
1- ions.]
The magnitude of
can also influence the number of unpaired electrons on the metal, Δ
which is usually designated by the spin of the atom, ion, or molecule. The
spin
of a
species is the sum of the individual electron spins. If there are no unpaired electrons, then there is no spin because the sum of the m
quantum numbers of pairs
ed electrons is zero (
1 /^2
(^1) -
/); that is, the two spins cancel because thei^2
r magnetic fields are opposed. However, if
the two electrons have the same spin, then they sum as:
1 /^2
- (^1)
/ = 1. Similarly, three^2
electrons with the same spin resu
lt in a species with a spin of (3)(
1 /^2
) =
3 /^2
. As we shall see
in Section 14.6, it is the spin associated with an atom, molecule, or ion that dictates its magnetic properties.
Consider the case of Mn
2+
, which has a 3d
5 valence electron configuration. In the
absence of any ligands, the five d orbitals all have the same energy; and the five electrons would be unpaired, as shown in
Figure 14.5a. However, in
the presence of ligands the
(^) d
orbitals no longer have the same energy. Elect
rons seek the lowest energy situation, but
the orbital energy is not the only consideration. Recall that Hund's rule states that electrons remain unpaired in a sublevel as long as empty orbitals are available. They do not pair because paired electrons are closer than unpaired electrons and the energy of two negatively charged electrons increases when th
ey are close (like charges repel). The
amount by which their energy increases is called the
pairing energy
(PE)
. Thus, three
electrons enter the three low-energy d orbitals
without pairing, but the other two electrons
can either pair with the first set at the cost of the pairing energy (PE) or they can remain unpaired and enter the set of orbitals at highe
r energy at the cost of the orbital energy
difference (
). If Δ
< PE, it costs less energy for the elΔ
ectrons to occupy the higher energy
orbitals (Figure 14.5b). However, when
PE, it costs less energy for the electrons to Δ
pair (Figure 14.5c). Consequently, when Mn
2+ is surrounded by weak-field ligands, such
Δ > PE
Δ < PE
no ligand field weak ligand field strong ligand field high spin Mn
2+ low spin Mn
2+
Energy
ligand field strength
(a)
(b)
(c)
Figure 14.5 High and low spin Mn(II) Δ and the number of unpaired electrons in a Mn
2+ ion as a function
of ligand field strength. PE is the pairing energy.
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