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Chapter 5: Coordination Chemistry and Crystal Field Theory

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    Coordination compounds (or complexes) are molecules and extended solids that contain bonds between a transition metal ion and one or more ligands. In forming these coordinate covalent bonds, the metal ions act as Lewis acids and the ligands act as Lewis bases. Typically, the ligand has a lone pair of electrons, and the bond is formed by overlap of the molecular orbital containing this electron pair with the d-orbitals of the metal ion. Ligands that are commonly found in coordination complexes are neutral molecules (H2O, NH3, organic bases such as pyridine, CO, NO, H2, ethylene, and phosphines PR3) and anions (halides, CN-, SCN-, cyclopentadienide (C5H5-), H-, etc.). The resulting complexes can be cationic (e.g., [Cu(NH3)4]2+), neutral ([Pt(NH3)2Cl2]) or anionic ([Fe(CN)6]4-). As we will see below, ligands that have weak or negligible strength as Brønsted bases (for example, CO, CN-, H2O, and Cl-) can still be potent Lewis bases in forming transition metal complexes.

    Learning goals for Chapter 5:

    • Determine oxidation states and assign d-electron counts for transition metals in complexes.
    • Derive the d-orbital splitting patterns for octahedral, elongated octahedral, square pyramidal, square planar, and tetrahedral complexes.
    • For octahedral and tetrahedral complexes, determine the number of unpaired electrons and calculate the crystal field stabilization energy.
    • Know the spectrochemical series, rationalize why different classes of ligands impact the crystal field splitting energy as they do, and use it to predict high vs. low spin complexes, and the colors of transition metal complexes.
    • Use the magnetic moment of transition metal complexes to determine their spin state.
    • Understand the origin of the Jahn-Teller effect and its consequences for complex shape, color, and reactivity.
    • Understand the extra stability of complexes formed by chelating and macrocyclic ligands.


    Chapter 5: Coordination Chemistry and Crystal Field Theory is shared under a CC BY-SA license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by LibreTexts.

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